Cultivator's Whipcord
Thank you to everyone who took time to read my previous blog "Why Caste-based Reservation Refuses to Die?"
Even after decades of
independence, caste based reservation continues in India because social and
economic inequality has not disappeared. One key reason is the failure of land
reforms to break caste control over land and resources. Although laws changed,
power largely remained with upper castes, leaving Dalits and Adivasis landless.
This unfinished reform helps explain why reservation is still necessary today.
Land Reforms after Independence
After India got independence in
1947, one of the biggest problems the country faced was unequal land ownership.
Most land was controlled by a small group of landlords, while farmers were
tenants or landless labourers. This situation was created during British rule
through systems like Zamindari, which focused on collecting revenue rather than
helping farmers.
The then new Indian government
believed that land reforms were necessary for economic development, social
justice, and democracy, with the aim was to remove feudal systems and give land
rights to those who worked on the land.
Zamindari System
The first big step was ending the
Zamindari system. Between 1950 and 1956, many states passed laws to remove
landlords and give land to farmers who worked on it. This helped some tenants
become landowners and ended a very old system.
But the reform was not fully
successful. Zamindars got compensation and used legal tricks to keep land. Many
tenants were also removed before the laws were applied. So, even after the law,
village power mostly stayed with the same rich people.
Land reforms were expected to help
Dalits and Adivasis, who had been historically denied land ownership.
Most Dalits remained landless.
Even when land was allotted, it was often infertile or under dispute. Land
reforms failed to break caste-based control over land, which remains a major
issue in rural India.
Pre Land reforms 19th Century
In his book Shetkaryacha Asud, July 1881, Mahatma Jyotiba Phule exposes how the revenue system under both
Brahmin bureaucrats and British authorities entrapped farmers. He strongly
criticised the caste based control of land in Indian society. He argued that
land was historically taken away from Shudras and Ati-Shudras through religious
authority, social customs, and violence.
According to Phule, Brahmins and
upper castes used religion and tradition to justify land ownership while
forcing lower castes to work as farmers and labourers without rights. He
believed that the main problem of Indian agriculture was not lack of effort by
farmers, but systematic exploitation by landlords, moneylenders, and priests.
Phule supported the idea, that
those working on the land should own it. He opposed the zamindari system and
criticised the British for protecting landlords instead of farmers.
Long before independence, His
critique shows that land reform is not only an economic issue but also a social
and caste issue. Without breaking caste dominance over land, Phule believed
that true equality and justice were impossible.
Jyotirao Phule (19th
Century) pioneered cooperative establishing mutual
aid for farmers and workers (like his Shetkari Sahakari Mandali in 1883) to
counter exploitation, laying foundational principles of collective strength and
social justice that influenced the later movement. Even before India's
cooperative credit system started formally with the Cooperative Credit
Societies Act, 1904.
Contemporary India
The land reforms after
independence failed to bring complete social change. Land redistribution was
limited, tenancy continued in hidden forms, and caste based inequality
remained.
Land reform in India also shows
that laws alone cannot create equality. Without strong political will and
social reform, especially against caste hierarchy, land reforms remain
incomplete. Even today, farmer distress and rural inequality prove that this
issue is still unresolved.
A 2006 survey by the National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) showed that OBCs made up about 40.94% of India’s population, SCs 19.59%, and STs 8.63%. Together, this comes to around 69.16% of the total population.
This means nearly 70% of people fall under reservation categories. At the same time, around 800 million people depend on government support for basic food grains, receiving 5 kg per person. This clearly shows that a large section of the population especially economically weaker and backward groups is still struggling to meet basic needs like food, education, and livelihood.
All this happeing in a counrty where 54.6% of the population engaged in agriculture and allied activities.
Ending this blog with a quote:
विद्या
विना मती गेली,
मती विना नीती गेली,
नीती विना गती गेली,
गती विना वित्त गेले,
वित्त विना शूद्र खचले,
इतके अनर्थ एक अविद्येने केले.
-
महात्मा
ज्योतिबा फुले
Without education, wisdom is lost.
Without wisdom, morality is lost.
Without morality, progress is lost.
Without progress, wealth is lost.
Without wealth, Shudras are crushed.
So many injustices are caused by lack of education alone.
-
Mahatma Jyotiba Phule

Your writing is so engaging; I couldn't stop reading 🙏🙏
ReplyDeleteThank you Jasbir Sir
DeleteWell articulated
ReplyDeleteThank you Sheju
DeleteContinuation of caste based reservation is a subject that I am entirely unqualified to comment on. Continuation, perhaps, is linked to the fact that castes continue to exist, along with (actual as well as perceived) hurt. I have heard upper castes claiming how they have been hurt, I have heard similar complaints from the lower castes too .
ReplyDeleteThank you for taking the time to read and for being open about how complex this issue is. I understand and acknowledge that many people from upper castes also face real challenges and difficulties today.
DeleteTo be clear about my stand, after more than 70 years of independence, this situation should not have continued in this form. Ideally, we should not still be debating reservation at this level.
The purpose of this blog is not to defend or oppose any one group, but to honestly write down the reasons why caste-based reservation still exists, despite all these years. It is an attempt to explain the reality.
Great read
ReplyDeleteThank you Srushti
Delete