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Is caste prejudice still an issue? | Is caste prejudice still an issue? |
(5 days later) | |
| By John McManus BBC News |
Groups who say they face discrimination within their religions because of their ranking in society are gathering for a conference in London on the theme of "untouchability". But is the caste system still used as means of excluding people within some religious groups in Britain? | |
Caste consciousness is a feature of life for many Hindus and Sikhs | |
The first world conference on "untouchability" aims to draw together the experiences of people from as far afield as Nigeria, Britain, and Japan. | |
Such "untouchability" or social exclusion, based on membership of certain groups, is a continuing problem for sections of the population worldwide, say the conference organisers. | |
One of the most well-known forms is the caste system which is practised in the Indian sub-continent, but activists claim similar ways of organising people into higher and lower groups in society can be found throughout the world. | |
Is caste an issue in the UK? | |
They say that up to 250 million people are affected by the issue, and children of immigrants who settle in different parts of the world are not immune. | |
Reena Jaisiah is a 29-year-old teacher and arts director from Coventry. | |
She was raised by parents from a Punjabi background who were not particularly religious, but were from the Dalit community, a group of people who are considered to be ritually unclean by Hindus. | |
Dalit discrimination | |
In India, Dalits are often forced to take the worst kinds of jobs, and can live their lives in poverty because of a system that gives religious sanction to discrimination. | |
Reena's parents rejected the caste system, but did not tell her about her background - which led to questions from schoolmates and ultimately, bullying when they discovered that she was a Dalit. | |
She still refuses to take the change from my hand when I serve her Reena Jaisiah Read your comments | |
"People with a strong religious feeling always want to know what caste you are", she says. | |
"My parents encouraged me to conceal my background, but I felt inferior to children from other castes." | |
Reena also encountered prejudice while at university and says she can still see the caste system at work today amongst Hindu schoolchildren, with pupils exhibiting a form of "caste consciousness" by treating others according to their perceived place in society. | |
The caste system explained | |
The Indian government made caste discrimination unlawful in 1976, though it is still practised in some areas. | |
So why is the problem continuing, and will any Indian reform affect British communities? | |
Babu Gogineni is from the International Humanist and Ethical Association, one of the conference organisers. | |
He believes that political reform in India will not solve caste prejudice. | |
Reena Jaisiah has been questioned about her caste throughout her life | |
"There are Dalit politicians in India, but nothing has changed. The answer is to educate Dalits and empower them." | |
Mr Gogineni says that Dalits also discriminate amongst themselves; that there is in effect, a hierarchy even amongst the untouchables. | |
The National Secular Society however, does think that legislation can be used to tackle the problem in the UK. | |
The society's Keith Porteous-Wood wants the government to include a clause in the Equality Bill which is currently going through parliament, which would be enacted if subsequent research indicated that discrimination was apparent. | |
But the Hindu Forum of Britain says caste does not exist in the UK. | |
They maintain that the only remnant of the system is a tendency for like-minded people to seek each other out for social or marriage purposes. | |
Reena Jaisiah, however, is in no doubt that her Dalit origins still cast a shadow over her life. | |
"I own a shop in Coventry and there is one customer - who is from the higher Brahmin caste - who keeps asking me what caste I am. | |
"She still refuses to take the change from my hand when I serve her." |
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