Fighting caste system with a new caste system
On 10 April 2008, the Supreme Court of India upheld a law which provides for 27 percent reservation for the Socially and Educationally backward ‘castes’ of India (many communities have fought and are fighting to get their surname recognized as an OBC surname), termed OBCs, in premier educational institutions supported by Central Government, which includes the IITs, IIMs and AIIMS. This ruling takes the quota of reserved seats in India’s premier higher education institutes to 49.5%. In a balanced judgment, the creamy layer (or the rich) among the OBCs were excluded from the reservation. Government jobs already have had quotas implemented. Many political parties want to extend the quota and reservation to the private sector as well - which could mean that all MNCs coming to India may be expected to provide reservations based on the family name of the applicant.
Indian society, since ages, had been divided into 4 major ‘varnas’ or classes. These included, from the higest to the lowest - the Brahmin (the priest or the teacher or the scholar or the advisor), the Kshatriya (the warrior or the ruler or the king), the Vaishya (the trader, the businessman, the professional) and the Shudra (the lowest caste - service-providing groups, some artisan groups).
"The Manu Smriti claims that by the time it was written, Hindu society included another class (untouchables) of people without a position in any of the four Varnas and therefore associated with the lowest of the jobs. The upper classes, who were supposed to maintain ritual and corporal purity, came to regard them as untouchables. The people of this "fifth varna" are now called Dalits (the oppressed) or Harijans; they were formerly known as "untouchables" or "pariahs". However, this last addition social strata is not a part of the religion of Hinduism. Hinduism only categorizes occupations in to four categories" (Wikipedia - Varna in Hinduism).
The caste system was first introduced in India to promote division of labour as per one’s expertise. It was not supposed to be hereditary.
‘It is very clear that in the early Vedic times, the Varna system (if at all it existed) meant classes with free mobility of jobs and intermarriage’ (Wikipedia - Varna in Hinduism). One hymn of the Rig Veda states:
कारुरहं ततो भिषगुपलप्रक्षिणी नना । (RV 9.112.3)
"I am a bard, my father is a physician, my mother’s job is to grind the corn……"
The highest classes, in order to protect their status and their children, refused to let go and slowly people started identifying castes with their family name. The thousands of surnames attached to people’s names in India can roughly be slotted into any of the four varnas. ‘Offsprings of differnent ‘varnas’ belong to different ‘Jatis’ [or castes]’ (Wikipedia - Caste System in India). With independence in 1947, and a constitution providing equality for all, people started growing and developing irrespective of their castes. In KR Narayanan, India had its first Dalit president - a person of the lowest caste occupying the highest office of the land. Still social injustice prevails at various levels, especially in the villages. The rich and the poor in modern India can no longer be classified on the basis of the castes. There are rich Brahmins, and the poorest of Brahmins (no better than beggars, hoping for every person to give them 1-rupee for appying ’tilak’ or a red dot on a person’s forehead), the rich Kshatriyas and the poor Kshatriyas (in a democracy, monarchs anyways lost their traditional rights to rule on the basis of birth), the rich Vaishyas and the poor Vaishyas, and also the rich Shudras and the poor Shudras.
In 1947, reservation was provided to the lowest classes, to help in their social upliftment. It was intended to be for a period of 10 years, and slowly done away with. The vote bank politics of a democracy ensured that successive governments only increased the quantum of quota and spread the reservation/quota net far and wide (with more and more people clamouring for quota and reservation). Now, after 60 years of India’s independence, this reservation has increased to close to 50%.
The justification is a politics of revenge. It is way of fighting historical inequality not be providing equal opportunity to all or affirmative action on the basis of one’s financial condition (but making surname a criterion for admission into universities). It is like trying to fight dowry not by making it illegal, but by making it mandatory for the groom’s family to pay hefty amounts to the bride’s family (as a means to avenge historical wrongs where the bride’s family has to suffer due to demands from the groom’s family).
So looking to the future in a 21st century India (the largest democracy in the world and one of its fastest growing economies), the caste system of India has been hailed. The division in society has been kept, maintained, solidified and institutionalized. Only the order has been reversed. This is the new order:
1) Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes (SCs/STs) - highest caste (The new Brahmins)
2) The Other Backward Classes (OBCs) (without creamy layer) - the ruling class (The new Kshatriyas)
3) OBCs with creamy layer - the new Vaishyas (they may fight to be counted amongst the ruling class)
4) The General or Forward Class (people in India having surnames signifying higher caste) - the new Shudras (they will either suffer or flee to foreign lands and foreign Universities).
Their is no point lamenting over ‘brain drain’. It has been institutionalized!


well i think u should put the same caste system cause some1 has to pay for their ancestors crimes…..
Comment by Ren — April 21, 2008 @ 5:41 am