by Anonymous

Recently, desi (specifically Indian-origin) twitter was abuzz with all-round praise for Shashi Tharoor following his speech at Oxford, upbraiding UK for colonialism, and making a case for reparations to its former colonies. Many famous desis on Twitter like Hari Kondabolu were tweeting quotes from Tharoor’s speech. It went viral. The demand of reparations to communities that have been victimized for centuries fit right into the ethos of progressive desis who have been vocal about their opposition to all kinds of oppression, whether their own, or that of African-Americans.

Nevertheless, what struck me was that this latest hero of desis had not seemed so eager on the issues of paying reparations to Dalits, the oppressed castes of India, who have been subjected to centuries of subjugation by caste-Hindus (savarnas). It must be acknowledged that Mr. Tharoor, who comes from a privileged caste, has never explicitly stated his opposition to caste-based affirmative action, because such a measure is directly contrary to the official stance of the political party of which he is a part. This is not an anomaly. Caste-based affirmative actions have always attracted the same kind of criticism from privileged-castes that they attract from White people in the U.S. The only difference is that India being a land where more than 50% of the population falls in the category of oppressed castes, no politician can air opposition to affirmative action openly. Nevertheless, Mr. Tharoor’s negative attitude towards it has time and again surfaced in the articles and columns he writes for various newspapers, for instance, when he joked about various castes fighting to be considered for affirmative action, remarking “In our country now, you can’t go forward unless you’re a backward” or when he rejected the idea of affirmative action for women.

This tendency to demand reparations from Britain while denying the same to Dalits is pretty common among the savarna desis. It is common to hear desis regularly criticize white people for colonizing bindis, yoga, and curry while maintaining a tight-lipped silence around the very troubling issue of caste privilege, which they have benefitted from. How do we make sense of this contradiction? It would be expected that people who are vocal about Whites not owning up to their white privilege would be equally vocal when it comes to acknowledging their caste privilege. Dalit-American artist Thenmozhi Soundararajan answered this questions thus:

I think sometimes South Asian organizers use black organizing as a release valve for their caste privilege. …For most South Asians in the diaspora, it’s a lot easier to talk about Blackness because then the people at the top of the race hierarchy are the white supremacists and you don’t have to look at the caste privilege that exists not just for your own identity but in your family as well. …It’s [easy] to say ‘Ferguson matters’ even as [you] ignore all of the massacres that their Savarna infrastructure has unleashed onto [Dalit] communities.”

In other words, the vociferous denunciations of white privilege and British colonialism to the exclusion of caste allows savarna desis the ability to couch their caste privilege comfortably within a vocabulary of postcolonial theory. This is not to say that our status as colonized subjects of the Empire is dishonest. Nor do I wish to dismiss the trauma of growing up as a person of color in the White supremacist society like the U.S.A. or the U.K. However, paying attention to only parts of ourselves that are oppressed can lead to a blind spot that hinders us from seeing the ways on which we are oppressors. And this is the scenario that seems to attract the most neurosis and silence within this community.

In 1989, Kimberle Crenshaw, an African-American legal scholar in the US, made a memorable case for intersectionality of different axes of oppression. Her primary thesis was that Black women, who are at the intersections of patriarchy and racism, suffer the most when theory takes the form of a single-issue analysis. A similar argument was made powerfully by bell hooks who narrated the violent exclusion that resulted when White feminists preferred silence on matters of race. Crenshaw’s analysis demonstrated that the beneficiaries of such non-intersectional praxis happen to be those who are privileged “but for” their race or gender.

The anti-colonial consciousness demonstrated by desi diaspora in their regular calling out of bindi-wearing White people, and demanding reparations from Britain, suffers from a similar pathology of non-intersectionalism. When those of us living in White societies construct ourselves solely as brown people, we invisibilize the caste privileges that allow us the luxury of practicing such obliviousness to the issue of caste in the first place.

Caste violence takes several lives every year. Dalits are regularly lynched, paraded naked, mutilated, or subjected to other forms of ritualistic humiliation for breaking the social laws of caste. On the other end of the spectrum, people of privileged castes, who form a tiny minority in India, occupy a disproportionately large number of positions in the academia, government, corporates, film industry, as well as in the middle-class desi diaspora living in the U.S.A. and U.K. Functioning similar to white supremacy, caste generates an invisibility of all narratives except those favored by the privileged castes, especially Brahmins.

caste picAn example of such a privileged-caste narrative that has become an axiomatic truth to various desis is the dominant narrative about colonialism that led Shashi Tharoor to demand reparations from Britain while maintaining an unspoken hostility to the idea of caste-based reparations. This narrative seeks to airbrush all the uncomfortable truths of caste from the story of South Asia’s struggle against British imperialism. In this narrative, all desis suffered equally under British colonialism, and found freedom in 1947 when British handed over the reins to “Indians”. The danger of this ‘single story’ is that it has drowned out all the other counter-narratives that have emerged from oppressed groups in India subcontinents. Many Dalits for instance do not view the history of colonialism in such linear terms. Dalit thinkers see 1947 as marking the year that power changed hands, from British to the caste-Hindus in India. While acknowledging the devastations wrought by the Empire, Dalits have acknowledged the role that British Empire played in outlawing some of the oppressive caste-based traditions. For instance, British intervention resulting in outlawing of a custom in South India which prohibited women of an oppressed caste from covering their upper bodies.

Given these facts, the silence of desi twitter on the issue of caste comes as no surprise. Acknowledging that savarna desis are beneficiaries of an oppressive system complicates the simple binary of colonized-colonizer that the desi twitter likes to inhabit. Acknowledging our caste histories and attendant privileges makes us aware that not all desis are equally oppressed, and that some of us are, in fact, oppressors too. In short, acknowledging caste forces us to relinquish the single story of colonialism and anti-brown racism, and embrace the complicated reality in which caste intersected with colonialism to create widely differing experiences for different groups within the caste hierarchy.

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6 thoughts on “Castelessness: The Pathology of Desi Twitter

  1. This writer is a main stream media person. She is just parroting what is told about us Indians, by the New York Times etc. that have no clue of what India is, and no conception of what being a Hindu (80% of us are Hindu) is. Please do due diligence before posting stuff here. If you are posting lies here about my country, I’m going to be suspecting your credibility on posts on other parts of the world.

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  2. I’m a third gen british indian and proud and would absolutely love to see more articles about whats going on in the motherland, my nana talks about caste in a very broad sense so I’ve never been totally clued up on it but I know we are of a “lower” caste so it would be cool to see some resources on this but I don’t get what this twitter side of it has to do with anything. I have been tweeting for years and follow hundreds of other south asians and I’ve never heard of desi twitter. don’t get me wrong, I would love for there to be something like that but it just doesn’t exist in the same way “black twitter” does for obvious reasons. a lot of this story goes all over the place and it’s difficult to make sense of what it is trying to say exactly besides pushing desi issues into black issues which I think is really problematic in itself. obviously I can’t speak too much about quality of writing myself because I’m totally not being clear either lol but I’m not a scholar, I’m just afraid it comes accross like when people say “what are you complaining about street harassment for when people are getting raped in india?” which is also problematic x

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    1. okay I read my message back and it sounds a bit harsh so I’m sorry if it does, I really respect what this website does so don’t take it the wrong way x

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  3. I’m struggling to see the overall point the writer’s trying to make here. Is he arguing Black Americans should shun solidarity from Indians in America? Is he suggesting the plight of minorities in India should talk precedence over them? Is he upset that some Indian people in foreign countries feel more kinship with minorities in their immediate vicinity than those in India itself? Why attack Indians who show solidarity with Black Americans specifically? He could have easily criticised Indians who are vocal about local LGBT+ issues while ignoring those in India or Indians in America who are critical of Islamophobia in America too but he chose to gun for solidarity with Black Americans. It’s shaky ground.

    Even more so given how the author channelled the words of Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw or Bell Hooks to drive his points home. So Black bodies shouldn’t take precedence over minorities in India but the words they’ve committed to paper and the framework they’ve created to fight oppression are fair game? If you wanted to discuss the problems facing oppressed groups in India, why not pen a piece on that and publish it here? Why not publish two or three? Why hop on in the midst of the #BlackLivesMatter? The author might as well have signed off with #AllLivesMatter as far as I’m concerned. I’m shocked that this got published.

    The only positive I took from this piece the Thenmozhi Soundararajan quote he cited because it actually offered insight into the issue in question. With that said, I was little uneasy about how she attached Ferguson to her point so I thought I’d look deeper into it, With this in mind I clicked on the link the author attached to her name but was surprised when I couldn’t see the quote anywhere. I decided to Google the passage and thankfully it took me to the piece in question:

    http://www.colorlines.com/articles/how-fight-deadly-caste-system

    It’s everything the author’s piece purported to be about and more. Not only did it present a problem, it offered a solution:

    “How can upper-caste people begin to challenge their privilege?

    For South Asians who are Savarna and upper-caste, being anti-caste is not about working in or studying Dalit communities. It’s about actually having these difficult conversations in your own networks and, most specifically, in your own families. This is the part that is the hardest for people because most of us feel we can’t talk to our families about these things. But this is also why caste-distress, [the trauma of caste oppression], is held by Dalits and not the upper caste. The reality is, however hard it is for Savarnas to start having these conversations, it is still going to be exponentially easier for them than it is for Dalits.”

    A solution that seems to be completely at odds with what the author is arguing. She outright said that Americans in India unpack this issue at home and not over a pile of Black American bodies. It’s kind of damning that the author of this took her quote about Indians and Ferguson out of context and used it in the way he did.

    Kal

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