Taylor

 

Super: Reporter GORDON TAYLOR

Taylor:  For thousands of years in rural India, the Hindu caste system has operated much like apartheid. Originally based on occupation, the Brahmin or priestly class is at the top of the caste ladder. Not even on the bottom rung are the untouchables who do the lowliest and dirtiest work.

02/40/07

 

This oppressive social system dictates that the castes live apart. Untouchables can't even share a meal with the higher castes, and are forced to have separate wells like this for fear of polluting the water of the higher castes.

 

 

Men on horse drawn cart

Taylor:  While many of the taboos are now disappearing what's still firmly in place is a strict feudal system with the untouchables as serfs and the upper castes as landlords.

03/09/04

 

The economic divide enforced by caste can be seen in any village.

 

 

Village man

Taylor:  The untouchables remain landless, earning a bare subsistence, working on the farms of the upper castes.

 

03/35/10

 

 

 

Village woman

Village woman:  There's a huge difference between the upper castes and us.

They have their farms while we do the work for them. Isn't that a difference?  We work for our food -  they can grow their own crops and feed themselves.

 

03/46/04

 

 

03/52/03

Archival footage of Gandhi

Taylor:  The untouchables have seen little change since independence. Mahatma Gandhi dubbed them Harijans or ‘Children of God.' But today they've rejected the term as patronising and prefer to be called Dalits or ‘The Oppressed.'

04/11/10

Rajmohan hands on typewriter

Many Dalits now accuse Gandhi of being part of the system that has oppressed them. Indeed Gandhi's grandson, and former politician, Rajmohan Gandhi, feels the caste divide in Indian society remains all too clear.

 

04/26/17

Rajmohan

Taylor:  Your grandfather is the father of modern India. He tried to do something for the untouchables, but many Dalits criticise him for not doing enough. Do you think that's the case?

 

04/50/02

Super:  RAJMOHAN GANDHI

Political Analyst

Rajmohan:  He did far more to make the higher castes ashamed of the wrongs of the caste system and untouchability than he was able to do for the lower caste of the Dalits. If the point is made that the Dalits, still after his influence, are still suffering, I think that is a legitimate point.

 

04/58/19

Taylor

Taylor:  Does it suggest that those who followed him haven't done enough?

 

05/25/00

Rajmohan

Rajmohan:  Yes, I think it does suggest that. Undoubtedly.

 

05/28/11

 

music

 

 

Interior of car

Taylor:  The caste system is still firmly entrenched in India, but the Dalits are fed up, and determined not to simply accept their miserable fate. Here in Bihar they formed the Untouchable's Army - the Dalit Sena - and are fighting back against centuries of oppression. I'm travelling with senior leaders of the Dalit army. I don't know where we're headed. We're travelling into the countryside to visit one of their underground military training camps.

 

05/53/16

Map

music

 

06/25/22

Taylor and man receiving signal

Taylor:  The camp's location is a closely guarded secret. Our journey there with Dalit Sena leader, Dr Sharma, became a cloak and dagger affair, with lookouts, special signals and endless waiting for the all clear.

 

06/38/09

Taylor and Sharma wading across river

Taylor:  But who is the danger? Why is it secretive? Why the secrecy?

 

06/59/10

 

Sharma:  Secrecy is a must for us. And a must for training.

 

 

 

Taylor:  Why?

 

 

 

Sharma:  For the safety of police, for the safety of administration.

 

 

 

Taylor:  So the police or the administration might attack you?

 

 

 

Sharma:  Yeah.

 

 

 

music

 

 

Sharma & Taylor

Taylor:  After a trek of several hours we've finally arrived to find that the untouchables army is no ordinary army.

 

07/32/01

Woman with gun

 

07/42/20

 

 

Taylor:  It's the village women, many as young as 16, who receive the military training, simply because in the war between castes, they are the most at risk.

 

07/53/24

 

 

 

Sharma

Sharma:  Only recently in the village of Varuna about seven or eight men raped a woman. Sixteen men stripped her and forced a stick through her vagina  into her stomach.  She was four months pregnant, and died.

 

08/19/11

Women training

Taylor:  The abuse of Dalit women is routine. A way for the upper castes to assert their superiority and maintain order on the caste ladder.

 

08/38/24

Sharma

 

Super:  Dr. SATYANAND SHARMA

President, Dalit Sena

Sharma:  They have guns. They force labourers to work for them.  Their wives and sisters will be raped or sexually humiliated if they refuse.  There used to be a tradition that a Dalit woman would have to spend the night before her wedding in the house of the landlord.  These were set traditions.

 

08/54/04

 

Taylor:  The women spend up to a fortnight here, sheltered and fed by nearby villagers, as they learn to use guns and make bombs. Their firing range doubles as pasture for the village goats and cattle.

 

 

Trainer

Trainer:   Hey kid!  Get rid of the goats quickly  because we're going to start shooting.

 

09/42/10

Devi with gun

Taylor:  Dalit women like Baby Devi are being taught self-respect, as well as how to kill.

 

09/58/04

 

Sharma:  You see, no one has any respect for Dalits.  Had they been respected they wouldn't have been abused.

 

10/35/15

 

Devi:  I have picked up my gun in order to defend myself - to protect my modesty and to make sure that no one comes close to me.

 

 

Taylor

Taylor:  Does the gun make you feel safe?

 

10/49/06

Woman with gun

Woman with gun:  Yes. I can defend my honour.

 

10/51/09

Children watching hopscotch game

Taylor:  Now that the Dalits are armed, they've grown bolder. In addition to the Dalit Sena, there are numerous gangs of Dalit bandits, who defy the authorities by terrorising high caste villages.

11/07/01

 

In many parts of Bihar, it's the upper castes who are now on the defensive.

 

 

This upper caste village has been attacked by armed Dalits on three occasions. The resulting gun fights left several injured and one man dead.

 

 

Kumar

 

Super:  RANA KUMAR SINGH

Village Leader

Rana Kumar:  We're not interested in fighting.  We are defending our rights. If they are denied, then we will fight back.

 

11/42/13

 

Taylor:  These Rajput, or warrior caste villagers are armed to the teeth, and determined to prepare the next generation for the struggle ahead.

 

 

Rena loading gun

Taylor:  Priti Rena is only 8 years old and not even strong enough to pull the trigger, let alone hold a shotgun without assistance.

12/14/06

 

Clearly on the back foot, this rag-tag force is a response to the anarchy in the countryside. In much of Bihar the rule of law is non-existent, the police are corrupt and hold no sway and the castes emerge as powerful groupings to defend property, power and one's fellow caste members.

 

 

Children with guns

Taylor:  You're even training the children here with guns. Why do they need to be trained?

 

12/56/12

Singh

Singh:  The problem is that we are getting old.  We've all fought the terrorists and criminals and if we don't train the new generation our arms will be captured, and we'll be killed.

 

13/00/17

 

music

 

 

 

Bicycle in silhouette

Taylor:  Until recently the upper castes used their muscle to rule Bihar. While over 80% of the population are lower caste, landlords often control the ballot box by force of arms. Those days are over.

 

13/27/08

Taylor

Taylor:  In a poor country like India, competition for jobs, wealth and education is inevitably fierce. There's always someone who misses out. In the past the caste system ensured stability, by making sure everyone knew their place. But now, after centuries of oppression, those at the bottom of the cast system are finally challenging those who benefit from it. The downtrodden are in the majority and using their new found political muscle to demand change.

 

13/54/05

Men chanting

Taylor:  In Bihar, as in many other states, India's lowly have made their influence felt in organised politics as never before. Certainly no political party can afford to ignore the lower castes by sheer virtue of their numbers.

 

Crowd:  Long live Laloo Yadav, son of Bihar!

 

14/20/11

Political rally

Taylor:  The state is run by Chief Minister, Laloo Prasad Yadav, himself from a low caste - the Yadavs or ‘Cattle Herders.'

14/45/21

 

Yadav's party has ruled Bihar for four turbulent years. All the while Laloo has thumbed his nose at the higher castes.

 

 

Laloo

Super:  LALOO PRASAD YADAV

Chief Minister of Bihar

Laloo:  This is because I command the full support of the poor and the backward.  All of them stand behind me.  I have identified myself with their causes.

 

15/06/17

Taylor

Taylor:  How important is it to have a low caste Chief Minister?

 

15/25/12

Laloo

Laloo:  When people see someone from their own caste become Chief Minister they say to themselves - "One day, I too could be Chief Minister."

 

15/29/07

Rajmohan

Taylor:  How has the change in the caste system changed politics in this country?

 

15/43/24

Super:  RAJMOHAN GANDHI

Political Analyst

Rajmohan:  Yes, well you have some states of India now that are ruled by parties that are committed to rule by some castes. So the caste divisions of Indian society have become political fault lines you might say, or political battle lines across India, and therefore parties are based on castes. That makes caste a very powerful political factor.

 

 

Riot

Taylor:  For six weeks, a student led revolt against the government's job quota plan has seen more than 40 people killed.

 

16/18/08

 

Taylor:  As Indian politicians know only too well, gaining power is one thing. Actually doing something once you're in government is an entirely different matter. In 1990, former Prime Minister VP Singh, promised to reserve 27% of all government jobs for the lower castes. The plan prompted an angry response from upper caste students.

16/26/10

 

Events turned nasty when this student leader tried to burn himself to death in protest at the quotas. More than 150 others followed his example. Many died from their burns.

 

 

Political rally

Taylor:  Job reservation continues to be the most explosive issue in the struggle to reform the caste system. Last month the government in Uttar Pradesh, next door to Bihar, sought to further increase the quotas. Riots broke out once again, and many demonstrators were killed by police.

 

17/17/00

 

music

 

 

Women with guns

Taylor:  The irony is that attempts to change the caste system have only succeeded in sharpening caste identity. This has in turn served to make the caste war even more intense. But Dr Sharma is convinced there's no alternative.

 

 

17/54/20

 

Sharma:  The caste system here is like a cancer - and the suffering this cancer causes is due to the hatred between the castes.  To end the suffering, we must root out the cancer.

 

 

 

music

 

 

 

AN ABC AUSTRALIA PRODUCTION

 

Reporter  GORDON TAYLOR

Camera    HEDLEY TRIGGE

Sound     CAROLYNN JACKSON

Editor    ANDREW BARNES

Producer  AMOS COHEN

 

 

 

© 2024 Journeyman Pictures
Journeyman Pictures Ltd. 4-6 High Street, Thames Ditton, Surrey, KT7 0RY, United Kingdom
Email: info@journeyman.tv

This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. For more info see our Cookies Policy