The Caste System of India
A Very Rudimentary Summary
Background
The caste system in India is an
important part of ancient Hindu tradition and dates back to 1200 BCE. The term
caste was first used by Portuguese travelers who came to India in the 16th century.
Caste comes from the Spanish and Portuguese word "casta" which means
"race", "breed", or "lineage". Many Indians use
the term "jati". There are 3,000 castes and 25,000 subcastes in
India, each related to a specific occupation. These different castes fall under
four basic varnas:
Brahmins--priests & teachers
Kshatryas--warriors & rulers
Vaishyas— farmers, traders & merchants
Shudras--laborers
Caste not only dictates one's occupation, but dietary habits
and interaction with members of other castes as well. Members of a high caste
enjoy more wealth and opportunities while members of a low caste perform menial
jobs. Outside of the caste system are the Untouchables. Untouchable jobs, such
as toilet cleaning and garbage removal, require them to be in contact with
bodily fluids. They are therefore cosidered polluted and not to be touched. The
importance of purity in the body and food is found in early Sanskrit
literature. Untouchables have separate entrances to homes and must drink from
seperate wells. They are considered to be in a permanent state of impurity.
Untouchables were named "Harijans" (Children of God) by Gandhi. He
tried to raise their status with symbolic gestures such as befriending and
eating with Untouchables. Upward mobility is very rare in the caste system.
Most people remain in one caste their entire life and marry within their caste.
The Beginning of the
caste system
There are different theories about the
establishment of the caste system. There are religious-mystical theories. There
are biological theories. And there are socio-historical theories.
The religious theories explain how the four
Varnas were founded, but they do not explain how the Jats in each Varna or the
untouchables were founded. According the Rig Veda, the ancient Hindu
book, the primal man - Purush - destroyed himself to create a human society.
The different Varnas were created from different parts of his body. The
Brahmans were created from his head; the Kshatrias from his hands; the Vaishias
from his thighs and the Sudras from his feet. The Varna hierarchy is determined
by the descending order of the different organs from which the Varnas were
created. Other religious theory claims that the Varnas were created from the body
organs of Brahma, who is the creator of the world.
The biological theory claims that all existing
things, animated and inanimated, inherent three qualities in different
apportionment. Sattva qualities include wisdom, intelligence, honesty, goodness
and other positive qualities. Rajas include qualities like passion, pride,
valour and other passionate qualities. Tamas qualities include dullness,
stupidity, lack of creativity and other negative qualities. People with
different doses of these inherent qualities adopted different types of
occupation.
According to this theory the Brahmans inherent
Sattva qualities. Kshatrias and Vaisias inherent Rajas qualities. And the
Sudras inherent Tamas qualities.
Like human beings, food also inherents
different dosage of these qualities and it affects its eater's intelligence.
The Brahmans and the Vaisias have Sattvic diet which includes fruits, milk,
honey, roots and vegetables. Most of the meats are considered to have Tamasic
qualities. Many Sudra communities eat different kinds of meat (but not beef)
and other Tamasic food. But the Kshatrias who had Rajasic diet eat some kinds
of meat like deer meat which is considered to have Rajasic qualities. Many
Marathas who claim to be Kshatrias eat mutton. The drawback of this theory is
that in different parts of India the same food was sometimes qualified to have
different dosage of inherent qualities. For example there were Brahmans who eat
meat which is considered Tamasic food.
The social historical theory explains the
creation of the Varnas, Jats and of the untouchables. According to this theory,
the caste system began with the arrival of the Aryans in India. The Aryans
arrived in India around 1500 BC. The fair skinned Aryans arrived in India from
south Europe and north Asia. Before the Aryans there were other communities in
India of other origins. Among them Negrito, Mongoloid, Austroloid and
Dravidian. The Negrito have physical features similar to people of Africa. The
Mongoloid have Chinese features. The Austroloids have features similar the
aboriginals of Australia. The Dravidians originate from the Mediterranean and
they were the largest community in India. When the Aryans arrived in India
their main contact was with the Dravidians and the Austroloids. The Aryans
disregarded the local cultures. They began conquering and taking control over
regions in north India and at the same time pushed the local people southwards
or towards the jungles and mountains in north India.
The Aryans organized among themselves in three
groups. The first group was of the warriors and they were called Rajayana,
later they changed their name Rajayana to Kshatria. The second group was of the
priests and they were called Brahmans. These two groups struggled politically
for leadership among the Aryans. In this struggle the Brahmans got to be the
leaders of the Aryan society. The third group was of the farmers and craftsmen
and they were called Vaisia. The Aryans who conquered and took control over
parts of north India subdued the locals and made them their servants. In this
process the Vaisias who were the farmers and the craftsmen became the landlords
and the businessmen of the society and the locals became the peasants and the
craftsmen of the society.
In order to secure their status the Aryans
resolved some social and religious rules which, allowed only them to be the
priests, warriors and the businesmen of the society. For example take
Maharashtra. Maharashtra is in west India. This region is known by this name
for hundreds of years. Many think that the meaning of the name Maharashtra is
in its name, Great Land. But there are some who claim that the name,
Maharashtra, is derived from the Jat called Mahar who are considered to be the
original people of this region. In the caste hierarchy the dark skinned Mahars
were outcasts. The skin color was an important factor in the caste system. The
meaning of the word "Varna" is not class or status but skin color.
Between the outcasts and the three Aryan
Varnas there is the Sudra Varna who are the simple workers of the society. The
Sudras consisted of two communities. One community was of the locals who were
subdued by the Aryans and the other were the descendants of Aryans with locals.
In Hindu religious stories there are many wars between the good Aryans and the
dark skinned demons and devils. The different Gods also have dark skinned
slaves. There are stories of demon women trying to seduce good Aryan men in
deceptive ways. There were also marriages between Aryan heroes and demon women.
Many believe that these incidences really occurred in which, the gods and the
positive heroes were people of Aryan origin. And the demons, the devils and the
dark skinned slaves were in fact the original residence of India whom the
Aryans coined as monsters, devil, demons and slaves.
As in most of the societies of the world, so
in India, the son inherited his father's profession. And so in India there
developed families, who professed the same family profession for generation in
which, the son continued his father's profession. Later on as these families
became larger, they were seen as communities or as they are called in Indian
languages, Jat. Different families who professed the same profession developed
social relations between them and organized as a common community, meaning Jat.
Later on the Aryans who created the caste
system, added to their system non-Aryans. Different Jats who professed
different professions were integrated in different Varnas according to their
profession. Other foreign invaders of ancient India - Greeks, Huns, Scythains
and others - who conquered parts of India and created kingdoms were integrated
in the Kshatria Varna (warrior castes). But probably the Aryan policy was not
to integrate original Indian communities within them and therefore many aristocratic
and warrior communities that were in India before the Aryans did not get the
Kshatria status.
Most of the communities that were in India
before the arrival of the Aryans were integrated in the Sudra Varna or were
made outcast depending on the professions of these communities. Communities who
professed non-polluting jobs were integrated in Sudra Varna. And communities
who professed polluting professions were made outcasts. The Brahmans are very
strict about cleanliness. In the past people believed that diseases can also
spread also through air and not only through physical touch. Perhaps because of
this reason the untouchables were not only disallowed to touch the high caste
communities but they also had to stand at a certain distance from the high castes.
The Religious form of
Caste System
In Hinduism
there exists four castes arranged in a hierarchy. Anyone who does not belong to
one of these castes is an outcast. The religious word for caste is 'Varna'.
Each Varna has certain duties and rights. Each Varna members have to work in
certain occupation which only that Varna members are allowed. Each Varna has
certain type of diet. The highest Varna is of the Brahman. Members of this
class are priests and the educated people of the society. The Varna after them
in hierarchy is Kshatria. The members of this class are the rulers and
aristocrats of the society. After them are the Vaisia. Members of this class
are the landlords and businessmen of the society. After them in hierarchy are
the Sudra. Members of this class are the peasants and working class of the
society who work in non-polluting jobs. The caste hierarchy ends here. Below
these castes are the outcasts who are untouchable to the four castes. These untouchables
worked in degrading jobs like cleaning, sewage etc.
The first three castes had social and
economical rights which the Sudra and the untouchables did not have. The first
three castes are also seen as 'twice born'. The intention in these two births
is to the natural birth and to the ceremonial entrance to the society at a much
later age.
Each Varna and also the untouchables are
divided into many communities. These communities are called Jat or Jati (The
caste is also used instead of Jat). For example the Brahmans have Jats called
Gaur, Konkanash, Sarasvat, Iyer and others. The outcasts have Jats like Mahar,
Dhed, Mala, Madiga and others. The Sudra is the largest Varna and it has the
largest number of communities. Each Jat is limited to professions worthy of
their Varna. Each Jat is limited to the Varna diet. Each Jat members are
allowed to marry only with their Jat members. People are born into their Jat
and it cannot be changed.
This is the how the caste system is supposed
to be in its religious form. But in reality it is much more complicated and
different from its religious form.
The Confusing Caste
System

The confusion in the caste system begins by
the use of the word caste. The Indians in their different languages use the
word 'Jat' for any community who have something common like religion, language,
origin, similar geographical background and so on. The Indians also use the
word 'Jat' for Varna. The Portuguese who were the first European power to
arrive in India distorted the word 'Jat' into caste. The British who arrived to
India much later after the Portuguese also used the word caste. The British
used the word Caste instead of Jat and Varna. And so sometimes in English the
caste system is explained in a confusing way according to which, the caste
system consists of four castes which are divided into many castes. Sometimes in
English the word caste is used for Varna and the word sub-caste for Jat. In
this section to prevent confusion we will use the words Varna and Jat.
And now we will see the complication in the
caste system itself.
Each Varna consists of many communities called
Jats. Each Varna does consist of different Jats but many of these Jats break
up into more communities and each such community refers to itself as different
or unique Jat. There are different reasons for these different communities
within each Jat. One reason can be the different occupations each community
within the Jat professes. Other reasons can be inter-Jat political reasons.
Many Jats consists of millions of people and it also causes break up of the
larger community into smaller communities. There are also Jats which originate
from different parts of India and profess the same profession and therefore get
a common name, even though they are not one single community. For example the
Jats that profess cloth washing are called collectively as Dhobi. For non-
Dhobis the Dhobis are one Jat but within them they are not one community.
The hierarchy between the Varnas. All the Jats
accept that the Brahman Varna is the highest Varna in the hierarchy and the
untouchables are outcast and lowest in the hierarchy. But most of the Jats in
different Varnas claim to be superior and higher than other Jats. Some of the
Jats as stated earlier break up into smaller communities or Jats. In these Jats
that break up into different communities, there are communities that look at
themselves as superior or higher in hierarchy than other communities. Among the
Brahman Varna, there are Jats that consider themselves as superior than other Brahman
Jats. Some of the Brahman Jats break up into smaller communities, and between
these communities within the Jat there also exist a hierarchy.
Among the other Varnas there also exists
hierarchy phenomenon. Different Jats claim to be superior than the other Jats
in their Varna. Some Jats in the Vaisia and Sudra Varnas also claim to be
closer or equal in hierarchy to the Brahman Varna. These Jats that claim this
status adopted Brahman customs like vegetarian diet and strict observance of
purity and cleanliness. Some Jats claim to be closer to Kshatria, which is the
warrior class of the Indian society. The Marathas in west India and Reddys in
south India were among the Jats which claimed Kshatria status.
Among the outcast there was also the superior
status phenomenon in which one outcast Jat considered itself as superior and
did not have physically contact with other outcast Jats which it considered as
inferior. For example the Mahars in west India considered themselves superior
than Dhed and they did not mingle with the Dheds.
Each Jat professes an occupation worthy of its
Varna status. In most of the cases there was a connection between a persons
profession and his Varna. Among the different Varnas there also developed
guilds based on Jat lines, professing specific professions. In west India the
Jat that professed oil pressing were called Somwar Teli. Another Jat members
were the shepherds of the society and they were called Dhangar. Another Jat
members were the cowherds of the society and they were called Gaoli. The Kunbis
were the peasants of the society.
But some of the professions had different
status in different parts of India and they were located at different levels in
the caste hierarchy. For example Dhobis (washers) in north India were seen as
untouchables. While in west India they had Sudra status. The oil pressers in
east India were seen as untouchables, in central India they had a high status
while in west India they had Sudra status.
There were also many cases where the Jat
members did not profess occupation worthy of their Varna. Many Brahmans, who
are supposed to be the priest and learned of the society, did not find jobs as
priests or did not manage to feed their families as priests and therefore
worked as simple farmers. On the other hand there were many Brahmans who were
landlords and businessmen, professions supposed to belong to the Vaisia Varna.
Also among the other Varnas not all professed
the occupations worthy of their Varna. In west India the Maratha were the
warriors and the aristocracy. Originally the Marathas belonged to the different
Jats in west India. Most of these Jats were in Sudra level. But the Marathas
who became the aristocracy of west India claimed and acquired the Kshatria
status. In the 17th and the 18th century the Marathas
even established an empire which ruled large parts of India. During the Maratha
reign members of a Brahman Jat, Konkanash Brahman, were ministers. From 1750
these Brahmans became the rulers of the Maratha Empire.
Like the Marathas there were other communities
which, religiously did not belong to the Kshatria status but acquired this
status. The Reddy in Andra Pradesh and Nayar in Kerala are such two examples.
Religiously marriage occurs within the Jat. The different
Jats members almost always respected this rule and people who dared break this
rule were outcasted. But this rule also had exceptions. Usually the higher
Varnas were very strict about this custom. But in some of the higher level Jats
of the society, they used to have polygamy. In these cases, because of scarcity
of women, men use to marry women from the lower levels of the society.
In some Indian societies between-jat marriage
was even an acceptable feature. One such example of marriages existed in
Kerala, in south India. In Kerala, Nayar women (aristocracy community) married
men from Numbodiri Brahman community.
Another problem considering the Jat marriage
was the internal structure of the Jats. As stated earlier some Jats break up
into smaller communities. In most of the cases each such community members
marry only with members of their own community and not with other community
members within the Jat. In some cases there is a hierarchy between the
different communities of the same Jat. In such cases a daughter from the lower
community could marry a son from the higher community but not vice versa.
Each Varna had different diet. Hinduism has
many strict dietary rules. In general the higher Jats are more strict about
their dietary customs than the lower Jats. The Brahman Jats have the most strict
dietary customs. They will not eat in lower Jats homes or even with lower Jats
(because of this reason many restaurants hired Brahman cooks). The Brahman diet
is supposed to include only vegetarian food. Jats who claimed Brahman status
also adopted vegetarian diet of the Brahmans. But there are some Brahman Jats
who traditionally eat meat, fish, chicken and egg (which is considered
non-vegetarian). Some Brahman Jats in Kashmir, Orissa, Bengal and Maharashtra
traditionally eat meat. But this meat was never cattle meat.
Jat is determined by birth and it cannot be
changed. In the beginning the caste system was not a strict system and people
could move from one Varna to another. Indologists give different dates to this
period of change. Some claim the change occurred around 500 B. C. and other
claim 500 A. D. Until then, communities and even singular person moved from one
Varna to another Varna, because of their desire to adopt different occupations.
There were some kings who belonged the Kshatria (warrior castes) and changed
their status to become religious Brahmans. There were also who changed their
status to become warriors. And even after the caste system was organized in a
strict manner there were many communities who did not always follow their status
occupations. There was a case of a Jat that lost its high status because they
did not profess the profession worthy of their Varna. The Kayastha of east and
north east India originally belonged to the Kshatria Varna (warrior caste).
Some time in the past among warriors communities, there developed a
bureaucratic unit whose job was writing and listing war events and they were
called Kayasthas. Because these unit members were not warriors, they were
excluded from the Kshatria status and were given a lower status. But the
Kayasthas even today claim Kshatria status.
The Jat status. Jats like
Kayastha, Reddy, Maratha, Nayar and others changed the basic four-fold
hierarchy caste system. These Jats had high status but their exact status is
not clear and different communities give different interpretations to their
status of different Jats. As stated earlier different Jats claim theirs to be
the superior than the other Jats and therefore the caste system even today is
not always interpreted objectively by Indians but subjectively. For example the
Kayastha claim themselves to be Kshatria while others do not always agree with
this claim. Among the Marathas the confusion is even greater. In the narrow
sense the Jat of Maratha applies to 96 clans who ruled and governed the parts
of west India. Originally the Maratha clans belonged to different levels of
Indian hierarchy. They mostly belonged to different Jats of Sudra. But many
Jats of west Maharashtra claim that they are Marathas too. Sometimes the
Konkanash Brahmans (who were ministers of Maratha empire in 18th
century and later on continued the Maratha Empire and their reign) are also
introduced as Marathas causing a greater confusion in Maratha definition.
The reasons stated above are among the few
reasons that causes confusion in caste system.
Untouchables
The untouchablity feature in the caste system
is one of the cruelest features of the caste system. It is seen by many as one
of the strongest racist phenomenon in the world.
In the Indian society people who worked in
ignominious, polluting and unclean occupations were seen as polluting peoples
and were therefore considered as untouchables. The untouchables had almost no
rights in the society. In different parts of India they were treated in
different ways. In some regions the attitude towards the untouchables was harsh
and strict. In other regions it was less strict.
In regions where the attitude was less strict
the untouchables were seen as polluting people and their dwellings were at a
distance from the settlements of the four Varna communities. The untouchables
were not allowed to touch people from the four Varnas. They were not allowed to
enter houses of the higher Varnas. They were not allowed to enter the temples.
They were not allowed to use the same wells used by the Varnas. In public
occasions they were compelled to sit at a distance from the four Varnas. In
regions where the attitude towards the untouchables were more severe, not only
touching them was seen polluting, but also even a contact with their shadow was
seen as polluting.
If, because of any reason, there was a contact
between an untouchable and a member of the Varnas, the Varna member became
defiled and had to immerse or wash himself with water to be purified. In strict
societies, especially among the 'Twice Born' (the three top Varnas) the touched
'Twice Born' also had to pass through some religious ceremonies to purify
himself from the pollution. If the untouchable entered a house and touched
things of a Varna member, the Varna members used to wash or clean the places
where the untouchable touched and stepped.
In some incidences the untouchables who
associated with the Varna members were beaten and even murdered for that
reason. Some higher hierarchy Jats also had servants whose job was to go or walk
before the high Jats members and announce their coming to the streets and to
see to it that the streets would be clear of untouchable people.
The orthodox Hindus treated anyone who worked
in any kind of polluting job as untouchable and did not have any contact with
them. According to orthodox rules any one who does not belong to the four
Varnas, meaning foreigners, are untouchables.
The non-Hindus in caste
system
Religiously anyone who does not belong to the
four Varnas is an outcast and untouchable. It means, all foreigners and
non-Hindus are all supposed to be untouchables. But in reality neither all
foreigners nor non-Hindus were treated as untouchables. Foreigners and
non-Hindus were treated differently in different parts of India. Some of the foreigners
adopted Hinduism and integrated in the upper level
of the Hindu hierarchy.
The Rajputs of Rajasthan belong to the
Kshatria Varna (warrior castes). The Rajputs, more than any other Indian Jat,
represent the warrior castes of India. Almost any Indian community which claims
to be a warrior community, claims a Rajput ancestry. But it is believed that
many foreign invaders of ancient India (see- India in the past), like Scythians; Huns; Greeks and others,
who adopted Hinduism, integrated in the Rajput community and acquired a
Kshatria status (see also Sati - burning of the widow).
The Konkanash Brahmans of west India are also
believed to have non- Indian descent. According to a Hindu legend, an
incarnation of Lord Vishnu, Parsuram, found on the Konkan beach some dead
bodies which were washed to the shore. In order to cremate them Parsuram gathered
them on a pyre. These dead bodies woke up on pyre, probably because they were
not dead in the first place but were only unconscious. Parsuram converted these
people to Hinduism and made them Brahmans. There are other theories about the
origins of these Konkanash Brahmans. Many of these Brahmans have gray-green
eyes. Some claim them to be Vikings or of other European origin. In the Konkan
coast there is Jewish community called Bene Israel. Some claim that these Jews
are from the 'Lost Tribes'. These Jews who arrived in India after their
ship-wrecked near the Konkan coast claim that they and the Konkanash Brahmans
are descendants of the survivals from the same ship. And in their version, it
was not an incarnation of Lord Vishnu who converted the Konkanash Brahmans but
a local Brahman. Anyway these Jews do not have gray-green eyes like the
Konkanash Brahmans.
Different religion followers got different
status in different parts of India. The Jews of west India (called Bene Israel)
had a different status from Jews of south India (Cochini Jews). In general the
Bene Israel had low status. The Bene Israels professed oil pressing and they
had a status equal to a Hindu Jat called Somvar Teli, which also professed oil
pressing and were part of Sudra Varna. Some orthodox Hindus treated anyone who
was a non-Hindu or doing any type as polluting job as untouchable and therefore
treated the Jews as untouchables. But even though the Jews in west India had
low status there were among them some who were landlords, businessmen and high
rank officers in local armies.
Comparing to the Bene Israels, the Jews in
south India had higher status. The Jews in Kerala were the business community
of Kerala. They even ruled a small kingdom. They had aristocratic rights, such
as use of elephants and sedans. They even had servants whose job was to
announce their coming to the streets so that the low castes could move away
from their way.
The relations between the Jewish communities
of India are sometimes explained as affected by the Indian caste system but
these relations can also be explained according to Jewish religious laws. There
were three main Jewish communities in India. The Baghdadis, the Bene Israels
and Cochinis. The Baghdadi Jews were much strict about religious laws than the
Bene Israel Jews. The Baghdadis did not mingle with Bene Israel Jews. The
Baghdadis did not allow marriages between their children and the children of
Bene Israel. They did not eat food prepared by Bene Israel and they refused to
count the Bene Israel as part of the Minyan (the ten necessary to start a
Jewish prayer). Many explain these relations as an influence of the Indian
caste system on the Jewish communities. According to this explanation, the
Baghdadi Jews referred to themselves as higher caste than the Bene Israel Jews
and therefore did not mingle with them. But these relations between the Jewish
communities can also be explained according to the Jewish Halacha laws. The
Baghdadi Jews who were much strict about Jewish laws and diet did not mingle
with the Bene Israels because the Bene Israels were secular Jews and they
perceived in Bene Israel Jews as impure Jews.
The Muslims who arrived in India were strong
and powerful to be treated as untouchables. Not only were they strong in the
military sense, they also tried to enforce their religion on the Indians. The
Indians who converted to Islam in most of the cases remained in the same social
status as they had before their conversion to Islam. Hindus from the higher
Varnas remained at the higher levels of Indian society. Hindus from the lower
levels of the hierarchy thought that by converting to Islam they would come out
from the Hindu hierarchy system, but in most of the cases they remained in the
same hierarchy level after they converted. Among the Muslims of India there has
developed a two-tier hierarchy. The upper class, called Sharif Jat, includes
Muslims who belonged to the higher levels in caste hierarchy and also Muslims
who arrived to India from foreign countries. The lower class, called Ajlaf Jat,
includes Muslim converts from lower castes. As in the world, the upper classes
do not have close social relations with lower classes, the same way the Sharif
Jat do not normally have close social relations with Ajlaf Jat.
The different Christian communities of India were treated in
different ways in different parts of India. The Syrian Christians of Kerala had
a high status. Along with the Jews, they were the business communities of
Kerala and they too had aristocratic rights. The Indians who were baptized from
the 16th century by Christian missionaries remained mostly in the
same status they had before. As in the Muslim community of India, the
Christians also have a two-tier social hierarchy. Many untouchables who
converted to Christianity are still treated as untouchables, sometimes by other
Christians.
The European Christians are also supposed to
be untouchables to Hindus. Some Europeans in the 17th and 18th
century even claimed that they were treated as untouchables. But later on with
British rule over India it were the upper level Hindu castes, specially the
Brahmans, who adopted the European democratic philosophy according to which all
are equal and they introduced it to other Indians.
Other religions which were established in
India - Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism - also have some marks of caste system,
even though they oppose caste system. Sikhism rejects caste system. But
different Jats who adopted Sikhism act according to traditional Jat lines. The
different Jats normally marry within caste lines. The Jats which were the elite
of the Punjab and converted to Sikhism do not give equal respect to Sikhs who
belong to the lower levels of Indian hierarchy. The Jains also have separate
communities who marry within the community lines. The Buddhist in India have a
two-tier hierarchy and just like in the cases of Christians and Muslims it is
also related to the status of the community to whom the person belongs. On the
other hand the Mahar community of west India, who were untouchables and
converted mostly to Buddhism, prefer, because of different political reasons to
recognize themselves as Mahars and not always as Buddhists.
Not all residents of India were part of the
caste system. About 7% of India's population are referred to as tribes and not
as castes or Jats. These tribes are scattered all around India and they are
descendants of communities who were not interested in the Varna hierarchy. They
preferred to live away from the main societies deep in the jungles, forests and
mountains of India. They survived mostly on fishing, hunting or simple
agriculture, and also from stealing, robbing and plundering. These tribes had
different religious beliefs and different gods. Some of them had simple
beliefs, but others use to sacrifice human beings in their ceremonies. One such
tribe, called Gond, had a strong kingdom in central India. Most of the tribes
adopted Hinduism, others adopted Islam or Christianity. Some tribes in East
India claim to Jewish origin.
A Former Practice: Sati - The burning of the widow
Sati is described as a Hindu custom in India
in which the widow was burnt to ashes on her dead husband's pyre. Basically the
custom of Sati was believed to be a voluntary Hindu act in which the woman
voluntary decides to end her life with her husband after his death. But there
were many incidences in which the women were forced to commit Sati, sometimes
even dragged against her wish to the lighted pyre.
Though Sati is considered a Hindu custom, the
women, known as Sati in Hindu religious literature, did not commit suicide on
their dead husband's pyre. The first woman known as Sati was the consort of
Lord Shiva. She burnt herself in fire as protest against her father who did not
give her consort Shiva the respect she thought he deserved, while burning
herself she prayed to reborn again as the new consort of Shiva, which she
became and her name in the new incarnation was Parvati.
Other famous woman in Hindu literature titled
Sati was Savitri. When Savitri's husband Satyavan died, the Lord of death, Yama
arrived to take his soul. Savitri begged Yama to restore Satyavan and take her
life instead, which he could not do. So Savitri followed Lord Yama a long way.
After a long way in which Yama noticed that Savitri was losing strength but was
still following him and her dead husband, Yama offered Savitri a boon, anything
other than her husband's life. Savitri asked to have children from Satyavan. In
order to give Savitri her boon, Lord Yama had no choice but to restore Satyavan
to life and so Savitri gained her husband back.
These two women along with other women in
Hindu mythology who were exceptionally devoted to their husbands symbolized the
truthful Indian wife who would do everything for their husband and they were
named Sati. The meaning of the word sati is righteous. But as written earlier
the women named Sati, in Hindu religious literature, did not commit suicide on
their dead husband's pyre. Therefore the custom of burning the widow on her
dead husband's pyre probably did not evolve from religious background but from
social background.
There are different theories about the origins
of Sati. One theory says that Sati was introduced to prevent wives from
poisoning their wealthy husbands and marry their real lovers. Other theory says
that Sati began with a jealous queen who heard that dead kings were welcomed in
heaven by hundreds of beautiful women, called Apsaras. And therefore when her
husband died, she demanded to be burnt on her dead husband's pyre and so to
arrive with him to heaven and this way to prevent the Apsaras from consorting
with her husband. There are also other theories about the origins of Sati.
Even though Sati is considered an Indian
custom or a Hindu custom it was not practiced all over India by all Hindus but
only among certain communities of India. On the other hand, sacrificing the
widow in her dead husband's funeral or pyre was not unique only to India. In
many ancient communities it was an acceptable feature. This custom was
prevalent among Egyptians, Greek, Goths, Scythians and others. Among these
communities it was a custom to bury the dead king with his mistresses or wives,
servants and other things so that they could continue to serve him in the next
world.
Another theory claims that Sati was probably
brought to India by the Scythians invaders of India. When these Scythians
arrived in India, they adopted the Indian system of funeral, which was
cremating the dead. And so instead of burying their kings and his servers they
started cremating their dead with his surviving lovers. The Scythians were
warrior tribes and they were given a status of warrior castes in Hindu
religious hierarchy. Many of the Rajput clans are believed to originate from
the Scythians. Later on other castes who claimed warrior status or higher
also adopted this custom.
This custom was more dominant among the
warrior communities in north India, especially in Rajasthan and also among the
higher castes in Bengal in east India. Among the Rajputs of Rajasthan, who gave
lot of importance to valor and self sacrifice, wives and concubines of the
nobles even committed suicide, when they came to know that their beloved died
in battlefield. In other parts of India it was comparatively low. And among the
majority of Indian communities it did not exist at all.
A few rulers of India tried to ban this
custom. The Mughals tried to ban it. The British, due to the efforts of Hindu
reformers like Raja Ram Mohan Roy outlawed this custom in 1829.
There aren't exact figures about the number of
Sati incidences. In general, before this custom was outlawed in 1829, there
were a few hundred officially recorded incidences each year. Even after the
custom was outlawed, this custom did not vanish completely. It took few decades
before this custom almost vanished. But still there are rare incidences in
which the widow demands to voluntary commit Sati. In 1987 an eighteen years old
widow committed Sati in a village of Rajasthan with the blessing of her family members.
In this incidence the villagers took part in the ceremony, praising and
supporting the widow for her act. In October 1999 a woman hysterically jumped
on her husband's pyre surprising everyone. But this incidence was declared
suicide and not Sati, because this woman was not compelled, forced or praised
to commit this act.
In different communities of India, Sati was
performed for different reasons and different manners. In communities where the
man was married to one wife, the wife put an end to her life on the pyre. But
even in these communities not all widows committed Sati. Those women who
committed Sati were highly honored and their families were given lot of
respect. It was believed that the woman who committed Sati blessed her family
for seven generations after her. Temples or other religious shrines were built
to honor the Sati.
In communities were the ruler was married to
more than one wife; in some cases only one wife was allowed to commit Sati.
This wife was normally the preferred wife of the husband. This was some kind of
honor for the chosen wife and some kind of disgrace for the other wives. In
other communities some or all of the wives and mistresses were immolated with
the husband. And in some cases even male servants were immolated with the
kings. This kind of Sati in which the wives and servants were treated as the
ruler's property intensifies the theory that Sati was introduced to India by
the Scythian invaders of India.
In some very rare incidences mothers committed
Sati on their son's pyre and in even more rare cases husbands committed Sati on
their wives pyres.
Caste system in modern India
The leaders of independent India decided that
India will be democratic, socialist and secular country. According to this
policy there is a separation between religion and state. Practicing
untouchability or discriminating a person based on his caste is legally
forbidden. Along with this law the government allows positive discrimination of
the depressed classes of India.
The Indians have also become more flexible in
their caste system customs. In general the urban people in India are less
strict about the caste system than the rural. In cities one can see different
caste people mingling with each other, while in some rural areas there is still
discrimination based on castes and sometimes also on untouchability. Sometimes
in villages or in the cities there are violent clashes which, are connected to
caste tensions. Sometimes the high castes strike the lower castes who dare to
uplift their status. Sometimes the lower caste get back on the higher castes.
In modern India the term caste is used for Jat
and also for Varna. The term, caste was used by the British who ruled India
until 1947. The British who wanted to rule India efficiently made lists of Indian
communities. They used two terms to describe Indian communities. Castes and
Tribes. The term caste was used for Jats and also for Varnas. Tribes were those
communities who lived deep in jungles, forests and mountains far away from the
main population and also communities who were hard to be defined as castes for
example communities who made a living from stealing or robbery. These lists,
which the British made, were used later on by the Indian governments to create
lists of communities who were entitled for positive discrimination.
The castes, which were the elite of the Indian
society, were classified as high castes. The other communities were classified
as lower castes or lower classes. The lower classes were listed in three
categories. The first category is called Scheduled Castes. This category
includes in it communities who were untouchables. In modern India,
untouchability exists at a very low extent. The untouchables call themselves
Dalit, meaning depressed. Until the late 1980s they were called Harijan,
meaning children of God. This title was given to them by Mahatma Gandhi who
wanted the society to accept untouchables within them.
The second category is Scheduled Tribes. This
category includes in it those communities who did not accept the caste system
and preferred to reside deep in the jungles, forests and mountains of India,
away from the main population. The Scheduled Tribes are also called Adivasi,
meaning aboriginals.
The third category is called sometimes Other
Backward Classes or Backward Classes. This category includes in it castes who
belong to Sudra Varna and also former untouchables who converted from Hinduism
to other religions. This category also includes in it nomads and tribes who
made a living from criminal acts.
According to the central government policy
these three categories are entitled for positive discrimination. Sometimes
these three categories are defined together as Backward Classes. 15% of India's
population are Scheduled Castes. According to central government policy 15% of
the government jobs and 15% of the students admitted to universities must be
from Scheduled Castes. For the Scheduled Tribes about 7.5% places are reserved
which is their proportion in Indian population. The Other Backwards Classes are
about 50% of India's population, but only 27% of government jobs are reserved
for them.
Along with the central government, the state
governments of India also follow a positive discrimination policy. Different
states have different figures of communities entitled for positive
discrimination based on the population of each state. Different state
governments have different lists of communities entitled for positive
discrimination. Sometimes a specific community is entitled for rights in a
particular state but not in another state of India.
In modern India new tensions were created
because of these positive discrimination policies. The high caste communities
feel discriminated by the government policy to reserve positions for the
Backward Classes. In many cases a large number of high caste members compete
for a few places reserved for them. While the Backward Classes members do not
have to compete at all because of the large number of reserved places for them
compared to the candidates. Sometimes in order to fill the quota, candidates
from the lower classes are accepted even though they are not suitable.
Sometimes some reserved positions remain unmanned because there were few
candidates from the lower classes causing more tension between the castes.
Between the lower castes there are also tensions over reservation.
In the order of priority for a reserved place
of the Backward Classes, candidate from the Scheduled castes is preferred over
a candidate from the Scheduled Tribes who is preferred over a candidate from
the other Backward Classes. As stated earlier Other Backward Classes are about
50% of India's population but only 27% of the Other Backward Classes are
entitled for positive discrimination according to central government policy.
Some Other Backward Classes communities are organizing politically to be
recognized as Backward Classes entitled for positive discrimination.
The Scheduled Tribes who are seen as the
aborigins of India got ownership and certain rights over Indian land. Many
communities in India claim also to be aborigins of India and they are claiming
the same rights as the Scheduled Tribes.
The caste identity has become a subject of
political, social and legal interpretation. Communities who get listed as
entitled for positive discrimination do not get out of this list even if their
social and political conditions get better. In many cases the legal system is
involved to decide if a certain person is entitled for positive discrimination.
But with all this positive discrimination policy,
most of the communities who were low in the caste hierarchy remain low in the
social order even today. And communities who were high in the social hierarchy
remain even today high in the social hierarchy. Most of the degrading jobs are
even today done by the Dalits, while the Brahmans remain at the top of the
hierar
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