Dalit : the black untouchables of India / V.T. Rajshekar.
Material type: TextPublication details: Atlanta, GA : Clarity Press, c1987.Edition: Second editionDescription: 89 pages ; 22 cmISBN:- 0932863051
- 9780932863058
- Dalit : the black untouchables of India / V.T. Rajshekar, foreword by Y.N. Kly [Cover title]
- 305.5/68 20
- DS 422 .C3 R35 1987
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOKS | Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library General Stacks | DS 422 .C3 R35 1987 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | NPML21120009 |
Originally published under title 'Apartheid in India. Bangalore: Dalit Action Committee, 1979.'
This resource includes an index.
To the author -- To the North American reader -- The Dalit and the African-American -- Quotas and assimilation -- Publisher's note
Integration or intergradation -- The direction of the present African-American leadership -- U.S. "integration", just a strategy? -- From nation to underclass, the final defeat -- Culture and oppression -- The "breaking-in" process continues -- Foreword by Y.N. Kly
Preface to second edition -- Preface to first edition --
1. Who are the black untouchables? -- 2. Population -- 3. Non-violence in practice -- 4. Role of the press -- 5. The Hindu caste system -- 6. The ruling class controls government -- 7. The wonder of the Hindu religion -- 8. A probable solution -- 9. The Indian Marxists -- 10. Let down by everybody -- 11. Appeal to the United Nations Organization.
"After Centuries of slavery, apartheid and ethnocide, the silence is broken. One hundred million Dalits in India, the twentieth century's largest, most repressed minority, cry out for the ear of the world. Who are the Dalit? What does it mean to be treated as an 'untouchable'? Who were their fair-skinned Aryan conquerors, the creators of the caste system still in operation in India today? What is the relation between Hindu Brahminism, the modern Nazi doctrine of Aryan supremacy, and the colonial U.S. and South African doctrine of 'white nationalism' and white superiority? Why do many consider Mahatma Gandhi, who labelled them 'the harjan' (the children of God), their enemy?" - From the back cover of the third edition.
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