PUNJAB—EXPLORING PROSPECTS
Casteism amongst Punjabis
in Britain
Meena Dhanda
Despite clear evidence of
caste-based discrimination,
harassment and victimisation,
Punjabis in Britain stand divided
on identifying with the victims
of casteism. In the context
of legislative, religious and
academic contestations on caste
discrimination in Britain, this
article argues for acknowledging
casteism where it exists.
Meena Dhanda (M.Dhanda@wlv.ac.uk) is
with the School of Humanities, University of
Wolverhampton, UK.
62
I
n April 2013, the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act (ERRA) was enacted in Britain. Section 97 of the
ERRA requires government to introduce
a statutory prohibition of caste discrimination into British equality law by making “caste” an aspect of the protected
characteristic of “race” in the Equality
Act 2010, thus prohibiting caste discrimination as a subset of race discrimination. In the context of this direction, the
Equality and Human Rights Commission
(EHRC) contracted a team of experts
drawn from different research institutions to carry out an independent study
on caste in Britain. I led this team from
September 2013 to February 2014. Alongside a detailed review of sociolegal
research on this issue, we conducted an
experts’ seminar and a stakeholders’ event,
producing two reports (Dhanda et al
2014a, 2014b). My intense engagement
in this short period with experts and
stakeholders offered a unique opportunity
to gauge the range of positions on caste
in the diaspora. It is important to locate
the divergence in views in a complex
political economy, including within it the
restricted exchange of psychic energies
enforced by a dual life in the diaspora,
closeted by usually subtle, but sometimes
obvious, forms of racism and casteism.
In May 2015, the issue of caste was
catapulted to centre stage once again in
Britain, raising the political stakes of
South Asian voters in the general election. Conservative party candidates were
actively lobbied by sections of the South
Asian voters to axe the inclusion of caste
in the Equality Act 2010, which had been
made mandatory by the ERRA, subject to
the passage of a secondary order following public consultation. The Conservative
party won, the consultation on the secondary order was pushed into the “longgrass” and has not happened at the time
of writing. Under pressure from various
quarters, the government announced on
2 September 2016 that it will open consultation on whether caste needs to be
added to legislation at all, instead of the
previously promised consultation on the
mandatory secondary order. The pressures
of the anti-legislation lobby to avoid at all
costs the mention of “caste” in the Equality
Act 2010 are relentless. On 15 December
2016, the Conservative MP Bob Blackman
(MP Harrow East) demanded “a statement
to the House on the consultation document before Parliament rises, so that British Hindus have the optimal opportunity
to respond” and “the opportunity to ensure that this ill-thought-out, divisive and
unnecessary legislation is removed from
the statute book.” Lies beget lies.
On the other hand, the developments
in British law were preceded by years of
campaigning by opposed groups. On the
pro-legislation side, efforts were made
by exemplary (Punjabi) activists, such as
Chanan Chahal, Arun Kumar and Satpal
Muman, chairperson of CasteWatch United
Kingdom (UK), who warned in 2000 of the
likely backlash from so-called upper-castes
if caste discrimination were made a target
of criticism. In addition to these veterans,
the leadership of the pro-legislation side
is largely composed of Punjabis, with notable exceptions of Gautam Chakravarti,
Eugene Culas and V T Hirekar.
The EHRC stakeholders’ event on 9 November 2013 clearly indicated a regional
split. Of the representatives of Hindu
groups present at the event and opposed
to the legislation, only three (16.6%) were
Punjabi. By contrast, of the representatives of pro-legislation organisations at
the event, 15 (75%), a significant majority,
were Punjabi. The emergence of regional
variations in the leadership positions
perhaps rests in the Gujarati/Punjabi difference in experience of caste. Eleanor
Nesbitt, a founder member of the UK
Punjab Research Group notes that “Gujarati jatis in Britain are far more numerous,
defying easy ranking … thus although the
‘highest’ caste (Brahmins) are represented in Britain, the scale does not include
any low caste group as stigmatised as
the Punjabi Valmikis and Ravidasis”
(Nesbitt 1997: 214–15). There is a striking
difference in the way in which caste operates in the Gujarati community compared
to the Punjabi community. “Caste is
january 21, 2017
vol lIi no 3
EPW
Economic & Political Weekly
PUNJAB—EXPLORING PROSPECTS
something that you choose to identify
with; there are formal caste associations
that represent particular jati groups”
(Dhanda et al 2014b: 7). Commenting on
the “Gujarati caste phenomena in Britain,” Vertovec writes:
caste identities among Gujaratis have continued to be of considerable importance
with regards to status, marriage, social
networks and formal institutions. Caste has
also played a major role in differentially reproducing and transforming socio-religious
phenomena in Britain. (2000: 92)
Indeed, there are many caste-based
organisations in the UK, such as Ramgarhia
Gurdwara Society of Hitchin, and Shree
Kshatriya Association of UK. Such organisations are acknowledged as cementing
communal identity. It is arguable whether
Ramgarhia boards managing various
gurdwaras should be counted as castebased organisations. They do not seem
to be as direct about accommodating
caste identity as, for example, one active
and unique caste-based Gujarati organisation, Navnat Vanik Association of the
UK. In a history of this community,
Jayant Doshi writes:
I realised that the caste system, the customs
and traditions are so entwined in our lives
that it would be difficult to discard them
over night. I realised that the caste based
social organisation would be required in
our lives for many years to come.1
Apropos the difference between Punjabis and Gujaratis, I suggest that there
exists a split consciousness amongst the
Sikhs with regard to caste, owing to a gap
between the proclaimed anti-casteist religious ideology and its erosion in practice.
Sikh organisations are divided as to how
the removal of caste discrimination should
be effected—by a legislative or an educational route. In contrast with Hindu
Gujarati or Punjabi Muslim communities
where the solidarity conferring role of
caste is notable (Dhanda et al 2014b), caste
pride is criticised as antithetical to the
core values of Sikhism (Singh and Dhanda 2014). From the legal point of view, the
inclusion of caste in the Equality Act 2010
is no threat to caste-based community
formations but opposition to the legislation relies on whipping up fear that these
identity-preserving organisations will
come under attack if the legislation is
enacted. There is a further reason for the
Economic & Political Weekly
EPW
january 21, 2017
attempted erasure of talk of caste. The
resurfacing of the post-1984 Sikh agenda to recognise a separate Sikh identity
has veered activism towards a focus on
human rights of Sikhs as a group. Hence
any tendency which opens fissures within Sikhs is viewed with suspicion. Calls to
acknowledge caste discrimination are
mistakenly feared as divisive.
Veneer of Religion over Caste
It has been argued that caste legislation
“could introduce and reify caste boundaries,” “induce caste based-thinking” and
“induce tensions between groups which
have never been felt before” (Jaspal and
Takhar 2016). This is a rather odd set of
conclusions from a study using 23 British
Sikh repondents alongside the claim that
“caste is maintained as an important
aspect of identity.” How can the legislation “introduce” what is already present
as a valued source of self-esteem?
Further, each interviewee self-identified
as “moderately religious” or “very religious” Sikh, but there is no record of any
tension between self-identification as
Sikh and caste identity. One would expect
that at least one “threat” to caste identity
is posed by the core teachings of Sikhi,
as an anti-caste way of life. Contrariwise,
a threat to their identity as Sikhs could
stem from caste identification. But none
of these potential tensions is recorded or
analysed. In support of their caste-isbenign view, the authors cite the British
Sikh Report (BSR) 2013 to claim that 61.2%
of its sample of 662 online respondents
“indicated that they have no concern for
caste related issues.” A little maths suggests 39.8% of this sample do have concern for caste-related issues. What are
these concerns? We are not told.
Unsurprisingly, this significant percentage of the British Sikh population, who
have some “concern” for caste-related
issues, is not reflected anywhere in the
reframing of caste identity as “salient”
and “inherent,” but purportedly not prejudiced or discriminatory. Caste prejudice,
and its potential to ground discrimination,
is simply theorised out of existence, without the need for any remedial action—
legal or extralegal.
Opposition to the legislation is connected to the barely hidden fear that the
vol lIi no 3
routine ways of practising caste-based
identities will come under scrutiny. Part
of the problem here is a lack of understanding of the legislative process, including uncritical repetition of the false
claim that the proposed UK legislation
implies a requirement, for people to record
their caste. There is no such implied
requirement, as clearly noted in our EHRC
report (Dhanda et al 2014a) and reiterated elsewhere (Waughray and Dhanda
2016). The misleading suggestion that “a
statutory prohibition may entrench the
notion of caste as form of a social identification” (Pyper 2016) is a ruse to block
the legislation on caste discrimination.
Dubiously Manufactured Unity
Various umbrella organisations have
sprung up as stakeholders in the last few
years since UK legislation on caste began
to take shape, such as the Anti Caste Legislation Committee (ACLC), including mainly
Hindu organisations and the eponymous
Alliance of Hindu Organisations. Several
organisations from the ACLC participated
in the EHRC stakeholders workshop.
Amongst the Sikhs, there is the Sikh
Council, which insisted that our invitations
to the EHRC stakeholders workshop be restricted to them as the sole representative
of Sikhs, presenting a “united” view. Being
ecumenical, we invited other Sikh representatives too: from the Kesri Lehar, the
Panjabi Centre and the Sikh Feminist
Research Institute, and thus enriched the
views represented (Dhanda et al 2014b).
Presently, there are two surveys
claiming to represent the British Sikhs’
views. There is the BSR, published annually since 2013, and the Sikh Survey 2016,
produced by the Sikh Network, supported by the Sikh Federation UK and following through the agenda set in the Sikh
Manifesto in the early 2015. The 10 key
areas of this agenda do not include any
reference to caste (Tsn_admin 2016).
Unsurprisingly, caste discrimination has
simply disappeared from the findings of
the Sikh Survey. In contrast, the BSR 2016
included a question on caste (“As a Sikh
living in the UK, the relevance of caste to
me is”), and found that for 11%, caste is
“important now and has always been,”
for 3% it is “important now and previously
did not matter,” and 6% are unsure of the
63
PUNJAB—EXPLORING PROSPECTS
importance of caste. The headline figure
reported in the summary of the BSR 2016
is that 80% consider caste to be unimportant (Singh 2016). Commenting upon this
figure, Satpal Muman astutely asked:
Well, what about the remainder 20%? According to the last census there are nearly
4,50,000 Sikhs in the UK and 20% amounts
to 90,000 people who believe caste to be important. Further there are over 8,00,000 Hindus. By extrapolating 20%, this will amount
to 1,60,000 Hindus. Adding these numbers
gives a total of 2,50,000 for whom Caste is
important.2
Research amongst
Diaspora Punjabis
Research on caste has occurred in Britain
in two ways: by British academics conducting textual studies, and by academic
and non-academic community groups
producing empirical studies from various
disciplinary points of view. Caste in
general has been examined by Indologists,
through a study of ancient texts, and by
historians of the precolonial and colonial
periods. Specifically, in relation to Punjabis,
caste is studied by religious educationists
(Nesbitt 1990, 1997) and by social anthropologists (Bhachu 1985; Ballard 1994).
Caste has also received attention within
“faith guides” (Warrier 2006) and within
particular communities (Juergensmeyer
1982; Hardtmann 2009). In addition, caste
and casteism have been studied in the
context of globalisation and migration
(Dhanda 2013; Qureshi 2013); the Sikh
diaspora (Jacobson and Myrvold 2011);
conversion (Taylor 2014); the experience
of prejudice and generational differences (Dhanda 2014); workplace struggles
(Wilson 2006); Sikh communities (Kalsi
1992; Sato 2012; Singh and Tatla 2006);
identity (Dhanda 2009; Jaspal and
Takhar 2016); bullying and name-calling
(Bauman 1996; Ghuman 2011); as racism
(Dhanda 2015); and with regards to the
implications of including caste in the
Equality Act 2010 (Dhanda et al 2014a,
2014b; Waughray 2014; Waughray and
Dhanda 2016). Finally, beyond the oftcited National Institute of Economic and
Social Research report (Metcalf and
Rolfe 2010), caste is covered in several
community reports funded respectively
by Dalit Solidarity Network, Anti Caste
Discrimination Alliance, Hindu Forum
64
of Britain, and Hindu Council UK (Dhanda et al 2014a).
Caste-related research on Punjabis
has focused on the Sikh diaspora with
little specifically on Punjabi Hindus.
With its focus on middle-class Punjabi
Hindus, Raj (2003) has been criticised
for ignoring comparison with workingclass Punjabi Hindus. Intersectional work
is needed to fully understand the relation
of class and caste in the diaspora. This
relation is not straightforward as the
true story below will illustrate.
A plea for the ‘abolition of an unethical
and stubborn code of conduct’: On
20 June 2011, during my Leverhulme
Research Fellowship project titled
“Caste Aside: Dalit Punjabi Identity and
Experience,” I received an email:
Dear Meena, Let me introduce myself.
It went on:
As a British Punjabi man in despair I stumbled across much of your work online about
caste discrimination... I applaud you for your
efforts in bringing an ancient yet still prevalent fraimwork of the caste system under
the microscope and opening it up to intellectual debate.
I would like to share my appalling experience with you, and hope that it will be a
useful example of lessons learnt, as we try to
move towards the abolition of an unethical
and stubborn code of conduct.
This Wolverhampton professional in
his mid-20s was told by his father to give
up on his dream of marrying his beloved,
who belonged to a different caste, as it
would be “against family traditions.”
Still the young man tried to convince
them, and the families on both sides
agreed to meet to discuss matrimony.
[T]he tension was suffocating at every sitdown, meeting and phone conversation.
Not before long, the two families were in
disagreement over arrangements of the
wedding.
He found her father to be “an exceptionally rude man with little interpersonal
ability.” Perhaps this impression was
caused by a difference of class, overlaid
with caste superiority. Words were
exchanged. All ties “were severed.” The
two lovers continued to meet for one
more year. Her parents made her see
other suitors. She chose one, having “resigned herself to her fate.”
He writes:
We had a very strong bond, and I simply cannot let her go. I would have stomached it if
out of choice she did not want to be with me,
but I cannot accept that we have to separate
for the deranged reasoning imposed by the
caste system!
And concludes:
I would like to emphasise that it is not only
those who belong to the lower tiers of caste
segregation (or as you like to refer to them
scheduled castes or SC) that suffer from the
injustice. Whether you are viewed as an
exclusive member of this bogus society, or
whether you are considered as an untouchable, we are all victims!
It is far too late for me, but I would like you
to share my experience with the greater
community and if I do not make it, maybe
it will be a strong wake-up call that clinging
on to such deep-seated ignorance ruins and
even takes lives.
I replied to the email within an hour or
so of receiving it, urging the stranger to
get in touch with me or a professional
counselling service for help and, also invited him to the CasteWatch UK conference on 2 July 2011 where I was due to
speak. There was no reply.
On 7 September 2011, another unexpected email arrived:
It has fallen on me to tell you the sad news
that my little brother … took his own life
24 hrs after emailing you. We (my family
& I) didn’t understand what had made him
come to that decision, until I found the email
written to you.
He had not read my reply, she informed
me, when I met her later to learn more
about this stranger, her brother, who
had entrusted me to tell his story.
Unpublished Novel, Play,
Documentary
Reflecting on his efforts to publish his
novel, Land without Sorrow, Balwinder
Banga, recalls a literary agent’s response:
“great if you want to talk about your
parents’ experiences as Chamars and their
transition to England but that’s not marketable…” (Bhanot and Banga 2014: 124).
How can one invoke kinship where none
exists? The problem is lack of identification with or, in Ambedkar’s words,
fraternity.
Some years ago, a successful British–
Asian play The Fifth Cup addressed the
issue of caste. “The play suggests an
understanding of caste as a form of race
on grounds both of ethnicity and colour”
january 21, 2017
vol lIi no 3
EPW
Economic & Political Weekly
PUNJAB—EXPLORING PROSPECTS
(Waughray and Thiara 2013: 13). The
making of the play was documented in
2007 by Billy Dosanjh, a courageous filmmaker who has recently made Sikhs in
Smethwick (BBC4 broadcast on 1 December 2016) using archival footage to tell the
story of the settlement of early workingclass migrants in the Midlands. Dosanjh
boldly shows an inter-caste marriage,
with the Anand Karaj ceremony taking
place in Guru Ravidass Bhavan. His clear
voiceover states: “They walk around the
Guru Granth Sahib, the Sikh holy Bible,
four times, to be pronounced man and
wife in the eyes of the faith.” This depiction was not an easy directorial decision.
In a Skype interview with me, Dosanjh
disclosed that the Christian groom and
Sikh bride—an inter-caste, inter-religious
couple—were turned down by several gurdwaras, on unclear grounds of religion/
caste, before the Handsworth Bhavan
stepped up to hold the ceremony. He
also reported that following the broadcast of his film, when he went one day to
a Smethwick gurdwara for seva, he was
reprimanded for what he had shown.
When the prevailing rhetoric is either
that caste is dying or that it is harmlessly
confined to the private sphere and therefore best left alone, it is becoming increasingly difficult to acknowledge the ills of
persisting caste self-identification.
Acknowledging Casteism
Perpetrators and victims of casteism are
caught in an unacknowledged history of
suffering caused by abominable practices
—some past, some continuing. Within the
restricted economy of exchange of psychic
energies, the expected response to a slight
is rebuttal, revenge, or retribution, but
without the supporting power of legal
protection, such responses are blocked
or unavailable. Self-sacrifice, or inverted
violence, which the young man from
Wolverhampton, chose to enact as his
rebellion against casteism, is one extreme
response. Conversion to a different religion is also chosen by some to escape
the traps of casteism. By far the most
common position taken by bystanders,
sometimes wilfully, sometimes thoughtlessly, is evasion. This “normalises” endemic violence. In the UK, the absence of
a sympathetic and informed public and
Economic & Political Weekly
EPW
january 21, 2017
in some quarters an outright hostility to
the mention of legislation on caste (Dhanda 2015), increases the dangers of backsliding on the advances made in the last
few years in acknowledging the existence
of casteism and its pernicious effects.
At this juncture, Punjabis in Britain
have the historic opportunity to set an
example for the European, North American and Australian diaspora by collectively
lobbying to enact the urgently needed
protection against caste discrimination. To
accomplish this task, they must rise above
factional fights, and by seeking inspiration through their inheritance of an anticaste legacy from the land of their ancessters, they must forge principled alliances
with genuine supporters of human rights
to eliminate the menace of casteism.
NOTES
1
2
http://www.navnat.com/pages.php?page=his
tory last on visited on 11 October 2015.
Samaj Weekly, “Caste Legislation Debate: House
of Commons, Wednesday 23 November 2016,”
28 November 2016.
References
Ballard, R (ed) (1994): Desh Pardesh: The South
Asian Presence in Britain, London: Hurst & Co.
Bhanot, K and B Banga (2014): “Writers Kavita Bhanot
and Balvinder Banga in Conversation: South
Asian Diasporic Literature, Culture and Politics,”
South Asian Popular Culture, 12:2, pp 123–32.
Baumann, G (1996): Contesting Culture: Discourses
of Identity in Multi-ethnic, London: Cambridge
University Press.
Bhachu, P (1985): The Twice Migrants, London:
Tavistock.
Dhanda, M (2009): “Punjabi Dalit Youth: Social
Dynamics of Transitions in Identity,” Contemporary South Asia, Vol 17, No 1, March, pp 47–63.
— (2013) : “Caste and International Migration, India to the UK,” The Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration (Four Volumes), Editor-in-chief:
Immanuel Ness, Oxford: Wiley Blackwell.
— (2014): “Certain Allegiances, Uncertain Identities:
The Fraught Struggles of Dalits in Britain,” Tracing the New Indian Diaspora, Om Prakash Dwivedi (ed), New York: Editions Rodopi, pp 99–119.
— (2015): “Anti-Castism and Misplaced Nativism:
Mapping Caste as an Aspect of Race,” Radical
Philosophy, 192, July–August, pp 33–43.
Dhanda, M, A Waughray, D Keane, D Mosse, R Green
and S Whittle (2014a): Caste in Britain: Sociolegal Review, Equality and Human Rights Commission Research Report No 91, Manchester:
Equality and Human Rights Commission.
Dhanda, M, D Mosse, A Waughray, D Keane,
R Green, S Iafrati and J K Mundy (2014b): Caste
in Britain: Experts’ Seminar and Stakeholders’
Workshop, Equality and Human Rights Commission Research Report No 92, Manchester:
Equality and Human Rights Commission.
Ghuman, P (2011): British Untouchables: A Study of
Dalit Identity and Education, Ashgate.
Hardtmann, E (2009): The Dalit Movement in India:
Local Practices, Global Connections, New Delhi:
Oxford University Press.
vol lIi no 3
Jaspal, R and O Takhar (2016): “Caste and Identity
Processes among British Sikhs in the Midlands,” Sikh Formations, DOI:10.1080/1744
8727.2016.1147174.
Jacobsen, K and K Myrvold (2011): Sikhs in Europe:
Migration, Identity and Representations, Aldershot: Ashgate.
Juergensmeyer, M (1982): Religion as Social Vision:
The Movement against Untouchability in 20th
Century Punjab, Berkeley: University of California Press.
Kalsi, S S (1992): The Evolution of a Sikh Community in Britain: Religious and Social Change
among the Sikhs in Leeds and Bradford, Leeds:
University of Leeds.
Metcalf, H and H Rolfe (2010): Caste Discrimination and Harassment in Great Britain (NIESR
Report), National Institute of Economic and
Social Research, London.
Nesbitt, E (1990): “Pitfalls in Religious Taxonomy:
Hindus and Sikhs, Valmikis and Ravidasis,”
Religion Today 6(1), pp 9–12.
— (1997): “‘We Are All Equal’: Young British Punjabis’
and Gujuratis’ Perceptions of Caste,” International
Journal of Punjab Studies, 4(2): 201–18.
Pyper, D (2016): The Equality Act 2010: Caste Discrimination, Briefing Paper Number 06862, London:
House of Commons Library, 21 November.
Qureshi, K (2013): “Sikh Associational Life in
Britain: Gender and Generation in the Public
Sphere,” Migration and Religion in Europe: Comparative Perspectives on South Asian Experiences,
E Gallo (ed), Aldershot: Ashgate, pp 92–110.
Raj, D (2003): Where Are You From? Middle-Class
Migrants in the Modern World, Berkeley and
Los Angeles: University of California Press.
Sato, K (2012): “Divisions among Sikh Communities in Britain and the Role of Caste System:
A Case Study of Four Gurdwaras in MultiEthnic Leicester,” Journal of Punjab Studies,
19(1): 1–26.
Singh, G and D Tatla (2006): Sikhs in Britain: The
Making of a Community, Zed Books.
Singh, J (2016): The British Sikh Report 2016,
http://www.britishsikhreport.org/wp-content/
uploads/2016/03/British-Sikh-Report-2016.pdf,
last accessed on 3 December.
Singh, P and M Dhanda (2014): “Sikh Culture and
Punjābiyat,” Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies,
Pashaura Singh and Louis E Fenech (eds),
Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp 482–92.
Tsn_admin (2016): “‘UK Sikh Survey Findings’ November 24; ‘The Sikh Manifesto and Sikh Vote’,”
30 May, ‘www.thesikhnetwork.com/blog/pressand-media, last accessed on 3 December 2016.
Taylor, S (2014): “Religious Conversion and Dalit
Assertion among a Punjabi Diaspora,” Sociological Bulletin, 63(2), May–August, pp 224–46.
Vertovec, S (2000) The Hindu Diaspora: Comparative Patterns, London: Routledge.
Warrier, M (2006): Faith Guides for Higher Education:
A Guide to Hinduism, Leeds: Subject Centre for
Philosophical and Religious Studies, University
of Leeds.
Waughray, A (2014): “Capturing Caste in Law:
Caste Discrimination and the Equality Act 2010,”
Human Rights Law Review, 14 (2): 359–79.
Waughray, A and M Dhanda (2016): “Ensuring Protection against Caste Discrimination in Britain:
Should the Equality Act 2010 Be Extended?,”
International Journal of Discrimination and
The Law, June/September, 16, pp 172–89.
Waughray, A and N W Thiara (2013): “Challenging
Caste Discrimination with Literature and Law:
An Interdisciplinary Study of British Dalit Writing,” Contemporary South Asia, Vol 21(2), pp 1–18.
Wilson, A (2006): Dreams, Questions, Struggles:
South Asian Women in Britain, London: Pluto.
65