From: Xavier William <varekatx@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Oct 1, 2010 at 3:56 PM
Subject: Fwd: [indiathinkersnet] US Senate on untouchability in India
To: india-unity@yahoogroups.com, indiathinkersnet@yahoogroups.com, KeralaDD@yahoogroups.co.uk, Mahajanapada@yahoogroups.com
Here is a forward from a Dalit oranization. Brahmanism talks of Sanadhana Dharma and the high philosophy of the Vedas. What was Brahminism able to accomplish in 5000 years of so called Indian culture except to trample on the rights of the Dalits and the Adivasis who number over 200 million and keep them subjugated? Why are the Hindutwa forces so touchy about conversions? It is because most if not all of the converts are Dalits and Adivasis and when they convert the high castes are losing their birthright to the slave labor of the Dalits. The likes of Venkat blames Christianity and Islam for all the aggression in the world. They also boast that Hindus had no part in global aggression. They did not take up any global aggression because they already had enslaved a large population in India itself and did not have to exploit any slave labor abroad. So it was not out humanism or high philosophy that Hinduism efrained from aggressions abroad. What is more the higher cases did not mind being ruled by aggressors as long as they could go on trampling on the rights of the Dalits and exploiting them inhumanely.
The real enemies of the Hindus are not the Christians or the Muslims or the Buddhists, they are themselves and thousands of years of inhuman exploitation
From: Joe Raju <aa5756@wayne.edu>
Date: Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 12:25 AM
Subject: [indiathinkersnet] US Senate on untouchability in India
To: indiathinkersnet@yahoogroups.com
 
 Dr. A. K. Biswas,
 Former Vice-Chancellor,
 B. R. Ambedkar University, Muzaffarpur, Bihar
 emial:born.bengali@gmail.com
 
 21st September 2010
 
 To 
 President Barak  Obama,
 United States of America,
 White House, 
 Washington DC,
 USA
 
 Dear President Obama, 
 
 Subject: Implementation of Concurrent Resolution of US Senate on 
 untouchability in India
 
 	We have learnt from media reports  that  accompanied by the US'
 First 
 Lady  Michelle Obama, you  are scheduled to  pay a State visit to India  
 in the forthcoming November.  I, on my own behalf as well as on behalf 
 of over three hundred million people belonging to the scheduled castes 
 (also called dalits) and scheduled tribe communities, who are the 
 underprivileged and discriminated humanity at the bottom of Indian 
 society,  extend a warm welcome to  you. On this occasion, we  
 respectfully remind you of the Concurrent  Resolution [H. Con. Res. 139: 
 110th session] of the US Senate expressing  a sense that the United 
 States should address the ongoing problem of untouchability afflicting a 
 population in India as large as the aggregate population of USA. As a 
 Senator, you are  too aware of the contents and connotations of the said 
 Resolution to warrant its reiteration. Nonetheless a brief reference to 
 the resolution would refresh you memory. 
 	The Concurrent Resolution of July 24, 2007 fully recognized that
 vast 
 multitude of  population of India are denied and deprived of their 
 fundamental rights including right to life, dignity and security, 
 equality of treatment due to widespread practice of untouchability. They 
 are discriminated in quality education; equitable employment 
 opportunities and subjected to brutal atrocities--- physical, mental as 
 well as psychological that block all avenues for their upward mobility 
 in life and station. The   aforesaid Concurrent Resolution  dwelt on the 
 atrocities as follows:
 
 1.	`.......Untouchables', now known as the Dalits, and the people of
 the 
 forest tribes of India, called Tribals, who together number 
 approximately 200,000,000 people, are the primary victims of caste 
 discrimination in India;
 2.	"......discrimination against the Dalits and Tribals has existed for
 
 more than 2,000 years and has included educational discrimination, 
 economic disenfranchisement, physical abuse, discrimination in medical 
 care, religious discrimination, and violence targeting Dalit  and Tribal 
 women; 
 3.	"......Article 17 of the Constitution of India outlaws 
 untouchability; 
 4.	"despite numerous laws enacted for the protection and betterment of 
 the Dalits and Tribals, they are still considered outcasts in Indian 
 society and are treated as such; moreover, in practice,  Dalits and 
 Tribals are frequently denied equal treatment under the law; 
 5.	"...... Dalit women suffer both caste and gender discrimination as a
 
 result of the deficient administration of justice and are often raped 
 and attacked with impunity; 
 6.	"......the National Commission on Scheduled Castes and Scheduled 
 Tribes has declared that many of the reported cases of atrocities 
 against Dalits  and Tribals end in acquittals; 
 7.	"......despite the fact that many Dalits  do not report crimes for 
 fear of reprisals by the dominant castes, national police statistics 
 averaged over the past five years by the National Commission on 
 Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes show that 13 Dalits  are murdered 
 every week, five Dalits' homes or possessions are burnt every week, six 
 Dalits are kidnapped or abducted every week, three Dalit  women are 
 raped every day, 11 Dalits  are beaten every day and a crime is 
 committed against a Dalit every 18 minutes; 
 8.	".......many Dalits girls are forced to become temple prostitutes
 who 
 are then unable to marry and may be auctioned to urban brothels, and 
 many women trafficked in India are Dalit women; 
 9.	".......low-caste unborn females are targeted for abortions; 
 10.	"according to Human Rights Watch and India's official National 
 Family Health Survey, most Dalits  and Tribals are among those poorest 
 of the poor living on less than $1 per day; most of India's bonded 
 laborers are Dalits; and half of India's Dalit children are 
 undernourished, 21 percent are `severely underweight', and 12 percent 
 die before their 5th birthday; 
 11.	".......Dalits and other low-caste individuals often suffer from 
 discrimination and segregation in government primary schools leading to 
 low enrollment, high drop-out, and low literacy rates, perhaps linked to 
 a perception that Dalits are not meant to be educated, are incapable of 
 being educated, or if educated, would pose a threat to village 
 hierarchies and power relations; 
 12.	".......the Dalits  and Tribals maintain higher illiteracy rates 
 than non-Dalit populations; and 
 13.	".......the HIV/AIDS epidemic is India is massive and Dalits and 
 Tribals are significantly affected by HIV/AIDS: 
 	In a nutshell, the instances explain and illustrate the predicaments
 
 encountering life of the scheduled castes and scheduled tribes in every 
 nook and corner of India. The  contents  of the Resolution  drive one to 
 believe like the British  philosopher Thomas Hobbes  that the life of  
 Dalit as well as  tribal communities in India is "solitary, nasty, 
 brutish and short." With unmitigated discrimination, exploitation and 
 inequality against so vast a population since ages,  no country can hope 
 to prosper and remain peaceful or attain peace and stability, essential 
 for growth and prosperity. This makes India the  darkest spot to warrant 
 attention for safeguarding human rights and dignity urgently. 
 	It hardly needs to be stressed that immediate solution to these 
 perilous problems calls for  global attention. The US Senate, in the 
 stated circumstances, adopted the following strategies on its part to 
 address these burning  issues in the interest of scheduled castes and 
 scheduled tribes of India: 
  
 (1)	raising the issues of caste discrimination, violence against women, 
 and untouchability through diplomatic channels both directly with the 
 Government of India and within the context of international bodies;
 (2)	encouraging the United States Agency for International Development 
 to ensure that the needs of Dalit organizations are incorporated in the 
 planning and implementation of development projects; 
 (3)	 ensuring that projects that positively impact Dalit and Tribal 
 communities, especially Dalit   women, are developed and implemented; 
 (4)	ensuring that cooperative research programs targeting rural health 
 care, the HIV/AIDS epidemic, and rural technology contain proper focus 
 on the Dalits  and Tribals; 
 (5)	 ensuring that anyone receiving funding in India from the United 
 States Government--
            (A) is aware that it is United States Government policy that 
 caste discrimination is unacceptable,     	and that the United States
 is 
 committed to eliminating it; and
            (B) treat all people equally without engaging in caste 
 discrimination;
       (6) ensuring that--
 (A) qualified Dalits  are in no way discouraged from working with 
 organizations receiving funding in India from the United States 
 Government, and that transparent and fair recruitment, selection, and 
 career development processes are implemented, with clear objective 
 criteria; and
 (B) procedures exist to detect and remedy any caste discrimination in 
 employment conditions, wages, benefits or job security for anyone 
 working with organizations receiving funding in India from the United 
 States Government; 
 (7)	encouraging United States citizens working in India to avoid 
 discrimination toward the  Dalits in all business interactions; and
 (8)	 discussing the issue of caste during bilateral and multilateral 
 meetings, including congressional delegations.
 	We, for whom these momentous Resolutions were adopted in the august 
 House, are completely unaware of  follow-up actions, if any, taken by 
 USA authorities in this behalf and  the outcome thereof. Your official 
 visit to India furnishes the perfect opportunity to acquaint and 
 appraise ourselves of the action on these resolutions that can go a 
 long, very long way to uplift the fate and fortune of three hundred  
 million Indians.  By adopting the Concurrent Resolution, the US  
 lawmakers and the people alike have befriended the faceless  Dalit  and 
 tribal communities. 
 	I can paraphrase the epoch-making  speech of  Rev. Dr. Martin Luther
 
 King, Jr and say I have a dream that my 300 million fellow  Dalit  and 
 tribal men and women  will one day live in a nation where they will not 
 be judged by the tag of their  caste or tribe  but by the content of 
 their character. We can never be satisfied as long as the Dalits and 
 tribal people are the victim of horrors of  social inequality and 
 deprivation; economic and educational discrimination, exploitation and 
 oppression. We can never be satisfied as long as our bodies, heavy with 
 the fatigue of harsh treatment and atrocities, cannot gain access to 
 every opportunity available to Indians in the high end of the social 
 ladder. We cannot be satisfied as long as the dalit and tribal 
 communities'  basic mobility from circumscribed social  ghetto to the 
 wider world of freedom are effected through equal opportunity for 
 education and employment. We are not satisfied and we will not be 
 satisfied until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a 
 mighty stream investing true meaning and new life to three hundred 
 million dalits and tribals of India.
  	We,  therefore, urge upon you to grant an appointment for
 interaction 
 with a delegation of dalits and tribal thinkers and activists during 
 your  forthcoming state visit to India. The proposed delegation, 
 comprising some 8-10 members, would wait upon you  for suitably  
 briefing the travails of their life and times obtaining in India. The 
 dalit and tribal communities of India expect as well as demand  full and 
 complete implementation  of the strategies adopted   by the august US 
 Senate in the interest of the downtrodden of India.
 	May I, on behalf of three hundred millions of  Indians, once again 
 request you  to please grant us an opportunity to call on your with a 
 delegation and brief their conditions during your forthcoming visit to 
 India? 
 	 With  regards,
 
 Yours most sincerely,
 
 A. K. Biswas
 
 
--
Xavier William |
--
Palash Biswas
Pl Read:
http://nandigramunited-banga.blogspot.com/
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