But it’s crucial to remember, even in a pandemic casteism never takes a break.
The IIT Kharagpur prof who berated an entire class of SC/ST/OBC + PwD students as ‘bloody bastards’ was apparently Covid+.
But that didn’t stop her.
She continued to use her hyper nationalism (not ‘standing up for the national anthem’) to lash out on ‘quota’ students in her English class, where she gets to determine whether they even make it to any of the IITs next year.
This is how casteism opeates in university spaces
It’s not just the usage of casteist slurs or telling students they don’t belong
It’s also constant harassment of those who avail reservation by UC profs to remind them of their ‘place’ in the system.
It’s calling them + their parents ‘bloody bastards’ in an English class.
It’s exerting power over ‘quota students’ who as a result are pushed into suicide/dropping out at the highest rate.
It’s the open disgust towards Dalits Bahujans who are assumed to ‘not have merit’ to begin with.
And it’s the hubris to use your illness to conceal your casteism.
Caste & casteism doesn’t always look, seem, appear as what you know.
It’s constantly mutating, finding new ways to keep the ‘descending scale of contempt’ in place.
And it’s vital to recognize & call it out in each of its mutating forms.
Prof Seema Singh, as many intrepid Dalit Bahujan folks have already mentioned, is a grandstanding faculty member who has written several academic papers on the result of ‘inequality’ in the classroom.
But as the viral video shows, her academic discourse never translates IRL.
Caste in academia, a space that on paper favors equity and justice, takes grotesquely dangerous forms in person.
DBA students are often left to the mercy of such faculty members, intoxicated on their power & privilege.
Read/support this powerful statement by APPSC IIT Bombay.
Since calling out HAF for their motion in the Cisco case, a lot of seemingly Hindu Americans are ‘enraged’ about Dalits pointing out the obvious caste discrimination that happens to us.
Aside from the abuse, bullying & trolling, the worst are those trying to obfuscate the issue.
The ones who know how to skillfully shut down any call outs for casteism by waving their flag of religious freedom
Something that understandably scares most non-Indian Americans into silence
In the name of preserving religious sanctity they want to gag even the mention of caste
Like they did in 2016 in the California textbook case, where HAF argued that mentions of caste should be removed. And succeeded.
This idea of obfuscating caste by citing religious freedom is that is highly strategic, well thought & not an accident.
Despite obvious signs,many Indians still don’t believe that caste discrimination in the US is a lived reality for Dalits.
Wonder what they’d say to the Dalit couple who had ‘achoot’ - a slur for untouchable, scratched on their car while living in an Indian community in New York?
Reading @Isabelwilkerson’s Caste was an education in the racial heiarchy of the US. Her lucid writing & brilliance shines so powerfully that I often had to stop just to catch my breath.
But the book largely overlooks the current impact of a system that inspires its argument.
Wilkerson’s Caste not only makes visible the plainly manifest yet stubbornly obscured reality of racial suppression of African Americans but also supplies other people of color with a vocabulary to understand their place in the lattice of racial and social order in the US.
When researching Coming Out as Dalit, I often struggled to understand how exactly did 'upper' castes subterfuge caste discrimination as nonexistent not only in our society but internationally.
After spending 3 hours with @surajyengde's EXCELLENT treatise, I finally know. 1/n
They did that by dominating almost ALL positions of power and foreign policy, effectively eliminating Ambedkar, & nitpicking on the differences between Caste & Race to exclude it from international attention.
Why solidarity b/w Dalit Panthers & Black Panthers? This! 2/n
As we stand today in a crucial moment of America recokning (once again) of its racist origins, it's vital for Dalit and Black solidarity to take shape.
We NEED to counter the decades-long propoganda (which even Indians believe) that Caste is somehow not as savage as race 3/n
3. Dalit murders — for entering temples, for falling in love,for a mustache, for existing — are so routine & ‘expected’ that our deaths are the norm, not the exception.
4. The idea that mainstream = upper class, ‘upper’ caste lives is innate. So our deaths are forever the other.
It’s also easier for UCs to side with #BLM while ignoring Dalit, Adivasi, Muslim, working class lives is coz Black folks have been doing the difficult work of fighting for their right to be worthy for years.
Now the rest can just ride on the coattails of that ‘cool’ woke vibes.