The Untouchables - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 15
About This Presentation
Title:

The Untouchables

Description:

Most of the times they rinse or wash in water. ... Untouchable girls have been forced to become prostitutes for the upper-caste ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:5025
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: nab69
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Untouchables


1
The Untouchables
  • By Nabila Wadwani

2
What is an Untouchable?
  • Untouchables are members from a large variety of
    Hindu groups.
  • An Untouchable, now called harijan, in
    traditional Indian society, is a person outside
    the caste system.
  • These outcasts were greatly discriminated against
    until 1949 in India, when the use of the term
    Untouchable, and the social disabilities that
    were perceived along with the term were declared
    illegal.

3
"Caste System"
  • The four Caste
  • 1st) Consisted of Brahmans, which are teachers
    and priests
  • 2nd) Consisted of Kshatriyas, which are rulers
    and warriors
  • 3rd) Members were merchants and traders, and were
    known as Vaishyas
  • 4th) The last and lowest caste, which consisted
    of a great mass of peasants and workers, were
    known as Sudras.
  • Definition of Caste System
  • The caste system is a many layered social
    hierarchy developed several millenniums ago to
    which a person belongs by birth

4
What Went Wrong
  • The Untouchables fell below the fourth caste
  • As many as three thousand caste exist today,
    which is different from the original idea of four
    caste.
  • The Untouchables were considered the extreme
    lowest social class in India. The total number of
    Untouchables in India is approximately 60
    million, or 13.7 percent of Indias population.

5
What makes an Untouchable
  • Occupation
  • Manual scavenger
  • Remover of human waste, dead animals,
  • Leather workers
  • Street sweepers, and cobblers

6
What Happens
  • Deprived of many rights and activities
  • Forbidden to enter temples, most schools, and
    were not even allowed to draw water from the same
    well where higher caste drew water
  • Untouchable were subservient, almost always
    illiterate, and usually poverty stricken

7
High CastesHigher castes had more social power,
and were usually richer than lower caste
  • High Caste would become polluted if
  • Untouchable touched them
  • Entered their house
  • Sat at a close distance from them
  • In stricter parts of India, the site of an
    Untouchable, or even the contact with ones
    shadow could be considered polluting

8
Continued
  • If polluted
  • Must become purified
  • Most of the times they rinse or wash in water.
    However, for stricter people, some must pass
    through religious ceremonies. If the untouchable
    entered the high caste member must wash the place
    where the Untouchable touched or stepped.

9
Untouchability Act
  • 1955
  • Banned Untouchability
  • Provides penalties for preventing anyone from
    enjoying a wide variety of religious,
    occupational, and social rights.
  • It also provides specific educational and
    vocational right to untouchables.

10
  • Despite the fact that untouchability was
    abolished under Indias consitituion the practice
    of untouchability the imposition of social
    disabilities on persons by reason of their birth
    in certain castes remain very much part of rural
    India.

11
Untouchable Children
  • Untouchable children are frequently made to sit
    in the back of the classroom
  • Communities as a whole are made to perform
    degrading rituals in the name of caste.

12
Untouchable Women
  • Untouchable women face the triple burden of
    caste, class, and gender.
  • Untouchable girls have been forced to become
    prostitutes for the upper-caste patrons and
    village priest.
  • Sexual abuse and other forms of violence against
    women are used by landlords and the police to
    inflict political lessons and crush dissent
    within the community.

13
WAGES
  • Untouchable men, women and children numbering in
    the ten of millions work as agricultural
    laborers for a few kilograms of rice or
  • Rs.15 to Rs 35 us 0.38 to 0.88
  • Their upper caste employers frequently use caste
    as a cover for exploitative economic
    arrangements social sanction of their status as
    lesser beings allow their impoverishments to
    continue.

14
Untouchables who want to change the system What
Happens
  • Untouchable who are to challenge the social order
    have been subject to abuse by their higher-caste
    neighbors
  • Villages are collectively penalized for
    individual transgressions through social
    boycott including loss of employment, access to
    water, grazing land, and ration shops

15
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com