Dalit Literature
Dalit Literature
Dalit Literature
Dalit literature means “writing about Dalits by Dalit writers with a Dalit
designates castes and classes who have been held inferior by Varnashrama Dharma.
Comprising the 18% of Indian population ,Dalits for centuries have been subjected to the
hegemony and illtreatment of the upper castes. The efforts of social activists like Jyotirao
Phule and B.R.Ambedkar stimulated for their self recognition and inspired them to come to
the forefront.This social awakening culminated in the emergence of a literary space to record
their voice which came to be called Dalit Literature. According to Alok Mukherjee, “the
central concern of Dalit literature is how best to represent the authentic experience of Dalits”
(Limbale,10).
Essentially ,this literature constitutes writing from the margins to the centre ,intending
a revolutionary social change. Commenting on the nature of Dalit Literature, Arjun Dangle
movement to bring about change …At the very first glance, it will be strongly evident that
there is no established critical theory or point of view behind them; instead there is a new
The origin of Dalit literary voice can be traced back to the works of Madara Chennaiah
(11th century cobbler saint ),Chokhamela(14th century),Dalit Bakti poets (15-16th centuries)
and Tamil siddhas(6-13th century). But it was with the advent of strong egalitarian thinkers
E.V.Ramaswamy Naikkar and B.R.Ambedkar that modern Dalit literature began to take
shape as a distinguished genre first in Maharashtra and then all over in India in the early
decades of the 20th century. However the label ‘Dalit Literature’ was assigned to it in 1958 as
the first meeting of Maharashtra Dalit Sahitya Sangh. The period between 1960 and 1970 is
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considered as the heyday of Marathi Dalit Literature. Baburao Bagul’s When I Had
Concealed My Caste (1963) is the seminal work of Marathi Dalit literature which is hailed as
the epic of the Dalits. On July 9, 1972 a group of Marathi writers and activists Namdeo
Laxman Dhasal, J.V.Pawar,Raja Dhale and Arun Kamble founded the Dalit Panthers ,
gaining inspiration from the amalgamation of Phule’s ideology,Ambedkarite wisdom and the
Black Panthers Movement of the U.S. It expanded the term Dalit to include other oppressed
people such as Neo-Buddhists ,landless , poor peasants and exploited women. It also
invigourated the wriers to protest against the mainstream Marathi literature by depicting the
oppression of Dalits and their revolutionary struggle for change. The Dalit poetry and short
stories were published in Dhasal’s magazine ‘Vidroh’ ,which literally means ‘revolt’. Two
books appeared in 1992, An Anthology of Dalit Literature edited by M.R.Anand and Eleanor
Zelliot and Poisoned Bread : Translations from Modern Marathi Literature,edited by Arjun
Similarly in other corners of the country ,writer activists like Bama were constituting
for a wave of change. In Uttar Pradesh ,writers like Omprakash Valmiki were catalysing for a
whirlwind to come. The first Ambedkari Sahithya Sammelan was organised in Maharashtra
in 1993 with the objective of promoting Dalit writers coming from various parts of the
country. Gradually ,Dalit literature and Dalit activism have taken roots strongly in modern
India . A galaxy of writers like Daya Pawar , Narayan Surve, Keshav Meshram ,Arjun
Dangle, Datta Bhagat ,Sarankumar Limbale , Santabai Kamble , Kamud Pawade and Urmila
Pawar contributed to the growth of Dalit writing. Dalit activists and intellectuals introduced a
case for recognition of caste based stratification in India akin to the racial discrimination in
the West, in the World Conference against Racism held in 2001 in Durban, South Africa. The
debates on caste and Dalit rights at the international level gave a new dimension to Dalit
protests and their literature. Now Dalit literature is seen as analogous to AFRICAN American
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literature reflecting the lives decoloured by torture,poverty,hunger and the resultant agony.
Narrating the homogeneity of these literatures, Limbale claims : “ These literatures have been
created through the chemistry of life and experience , society and problems , pain and
rebellion . There are numerous expressions of red –hot experience and fighting instincts in all
these literatures .”(Limbale,97). However Ambedkar discards the possibility of any other
system crueller than casteism. He says : “ There cannot be a more degrading system of social
organisation than the caste system. It is the system which deadens,paralyses and cripples the
people.’’(Ambedkar,39)
Being the writings of survival , Dalit literature glorifies existence over ideals and it
dethrones the tradional myths and customs in which Hinduism is built upon. Dalit writers
question the sanctity of Veda tradition and Hindu scriptures and condemn Manusmrithi as
they strengthen the varna system and thereby the practice of casteism. Dalit writers discard
the established tradition . this does not mean that they are devoid of any tradition of their own
. They claim the tradition of Buddha, Kabir, Phule, and Ambedkar. Dalit writing relies on
values and ideals of Humanism which has been derived from Ambedkarism. Limbale claims
Dalit literature can be termed as the literature of protest. Its purpose is ‘’to inform Dalit
society of its slavery, and narrate its pain and suffering to upper caste Hindus(Limbale,49).”
So that it would be inadequate to expect the traditional aesthetic values in this literature.
Limbale in his Towards an Aesthetic of Dalit Literature ,rejects the aesthetic concepts of
Sathyam , Sivam , Sundaram as this aesthetic system is the selfish mechanism of upper caste
Hindu society. He declares :“ Human beings are first and foremost human-this is Sathyam.
The liberation of human beings is Shivam. The humanity of the human beings is sundaram.
without fully comprehending the factors such as the nature, intensity, language, context and
DATTA BHAGAT
Datta Bhagat is a Marathi playwright and literary critic noted for his contributions to
0ne of the leading figures of Dalit Theatre Movement in Marathi. He serves as professor of
was critically acclaimed for the brilliant incorporation of traditional dindi procession and
elements of the folk art tamasha to spin a tale of dalit oppression against the backdrop of a
pilgrimage to Vithoba temple situated at Pandharpur. His another play Wata Palwata (1987)
is hailed as a milestone in Marathi theatre for its attempt to interwine social, economical,and
political aspects of casteism. His other plays include Jahaj Phutle Aahe (1982), Ekti (1982)
and Paranhute . Datta Bhagat’s fame as a literary critic rests mainly with his essay Dalit
Chetna aur Marathi Dalit Rangmanch, translated as Dalit Consciousness and Marathi Dalit
Theatre. Datta Bhagat is a prominent figure in Dalit thatre which is established by gaining
constraints of nation, this movement shares the common ground with the Black theatre of the
African Americans. Discarding the classical Sanskrit style, this theatre adopted the Indian
folk style. Ideals are being re-established and old myths are being revisited to explore new
AVART
The play Avart translated as Whirlpool seeks public attention on the public attention on
the issue of casteism and poses some serious questions regarding it in an unprecedented
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stratification persists with changes in its outward forms of manifestation. The title of the play
Avart suggests the endless chain of physical,emotional and psychological brutality that has
been sanctioned and legalised by the scriptures, vedas and Manusmrithi. Whirlpool ,the
English title presents the idea in a symbolic manner implying the depth of casteism and
As typical to the custom of Marathi Dalit theatre, the play abandons the traditions of
classical Sankrit drama and relies on the conventions of folk theatre , which is considered as
the ‘lok natya’ – people’s theatre. Avart begins with the sutradhar and vidhushak on stage
introducing the practice of sati. This introduction along with the resounding of dholak and
tuntuni invoke the folk art form tamasha in which Mahars predominate. The democratic
cultured form tamasha is popularised by Anna Bhau Sathe who named it loknatya, reforming
it to suit the audience, times, and context. Tamasha offers a platform for the dalits to raise
their voice fearlessly and publicly. Usually tamasha teases Hindu divinities like Rama and
Krishna . But Bal Thackeray, the founder and leader of Shiv Sena has forbidden such attacks
publication of Dr. Ambedkar’s Riddles of Hinduism in 1987 was the context of the
production of Avart. Despite the objections raised, Datta Bhagat pokes fun at Krishna
paralleling Ambedkar’s critique of the godliness of Krishna in Riddles if Hinduism : ‘’In the
hands of Vyas , Krishna is god among men . that’s why he is made the hero of the
Mahabharata. Does Krishna really deserve to be called god among men ? ‘’(Ambedkar,435).
Avart presents a serious debate by vidhushak and sutradhar on the nature of dalit
literature:
“Jester : Why are you harping on that same old theme again?
Stage Manager : It is not like that at all. Johar is ancient, but its
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meaning is modern.
literature.”(Bhadat,1)
The instance of Johar is explored to describe the nature of casteism which persists like the
old wineserved in new pots. Dalit literature is equated with belching,thereby indicating its
purpose to create shock and disturbance in the minds of the high priests of literature as
Limbale calls them. The play chronicles the story of three generations of an untouchable
family- Tukaram, his father, and his son Manohar. It is through them the playwright exposes
the ordeals the untouchables had to undergo through. Thukaram’s father , a yesker by caste
was murdered for touching an uppercaste Cintaman Maharaj during the dindi procession
which boasts equality of various castes. His act was an impulse out of reverence than that of
defiance. However, his sin for polluting the uppercaste was believed as the cause of the
outbreak of cholera in the village, exposing the Hindu high caste mentality of seeing the
practise of untouchability as normal and judicial: “The old orthodox Hindu does not think
that there is anything wrong in the observance of untouchability. To him it is normal and
Eventually, Tukaram’s father had to sacrifice his life as an act of redemption through
the ritualistic killing called ‘jalasamadhi’. Tukaram’s father is presented as a silent victim
whose name is not mentioned implying his inability to protest. The playwright criticises the
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public mentality and resounds the rebellious fervour of Ambedkar which invoked the
Jakhu: He did , didn’t he ? He got beaten up,but why? Because he abandoned the
Customs of his caste. Hey, Tuka says, when you are a low caste , you have go to eat
dirt.
Jester : But why did he lower his head to the feet of the maharaha ?”(Bhagat,6)
The playwright , through the words of the jester advocates dalit rebellion by ceasing to
Manohar’s father’s name Tukaram is suggestive to the 17th century saint poet Tukaram
who criticized excessive adherence to the Brahmanical texts which sanctioned caste based
stratification by standing for the rights of low castes. Consequently he was tortured and was
charged with blasphemy. His house and property were confiscated and he was forced to
drown the texts of his Abhangas. Later, he was found missing and his corpse was never found
leaving scope for suspicion. The Brahmins claimed that he was relocated to heaven without
Meanwhile the playwright introduces the myth of Sambuka from the Ramayana
showcasing how the so called great culture of Indian epics denied the rigths of individuals on
the grounds of casteism and even glorified the the same. Ramarajya was built on the
foundations of Manusmrithi and Chaturvarnya where the shudras were prohibited from
performing ascetic practices for the spiritual enlightenment. Sambuka , a low caste
transgressed the boundary of this established order by performing tapasya. His act resulted in
the death of a Brahmin boy . Later Sambuka was killed by the ideal king lord Rama as the
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true protector of Brahmanic tradition. The epic glorifies this act by saying that it was for
Sambuka s salvation. Thus the myth prompts the high caste Hindus to continue the same act
throughout generations. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar does not find anything wrong in Rama for this
action , but condemns the practice : “Ram Raj was a Raj based on Chaturvarnya. As a king,
Rama was bound to maintain Chaturvarnya. It was his duty . Therefore to kill Sambuka , the
Myths are often used as ideological discourses to propagate the ideas of those who are
in power. Hinduism used myths as a means of its sustenance. Datta Bhagat , through the myth
of Sambuka reiterates the cruelty of casteism rooted in the ancient Chaturvarnya concept,
which uprooted the rebellious souls like Charvaka, Dr.Narendra Dabhalkar , Comrad Govind
Tukaram was dragged into a conflict between Baji , the goldsmith and Candar Patel, the
landlord. Patel intimidates Tukaram as a way to influence him: “Speak in my favour” the
Patel said to him, with threats. Bear in mind that we have the accounts of your debts of many
generations” (Bhagat,9).Patel s threatening voice exemplifies the extent to which the ignorant
untouchables are tortured. Far from this , Tukaram ‘s son young Manohar is depicted as a
person with sound sensibility representing a new generation of dalits inspired by the
into the Hanuman temple . Though the whole village conspired to prevent him from this ,
Manohar sternly asks : “Your deity is that impotent ? It will be polluted?”(Bagat,12) . This
question pierces the heart of Hinduism . Also the faith in a democratic government to
champion the cause of the downtrodden proves to be void. “ Jester: ….He thinks the
government is his. Hey, but what is his ? The government is in Delhi and Delhi is very
subaltern has been equated with Sambuka , Karna ,Chokhamela and Ambedkar. “ I am the
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sinner Sambuk who crossed the boundaries of your Aryan religion….Iam the Cokhamela
whose bones buried under the wall of Mangalvedha cried out the name of the Lord. …I am
Though the whirlpool of casteism drowned the generations of dalits mercilessly, the
voice they uttered after a long span of withering injustice, contributes to the emergence of a
SARANKUMAR LIMBALE
Sarankumar Limbale is a Dalit activist ,poet,writer and literary critic who came to the
social sphere in association with the Dalit Panthers Movement. Limbale was born in 1956
June in the Hanoor village of Sholapur district in Maharashtra. Born to a high caste father and
a landless ,poor, untouchable mother Limbale had to live with a tag “outcaste” indicating his
low social status and marginalisation even within the dalit community. Author of 44 books ,
Limbale claims a significant place in Indian dalit writing marked by staunch portrayal of dalit
life and adverse criticism on casteism.He is noted for his works like
OUTCASTE
Life narratives are lively segments of dalit literature in Marathi, exploring the tragic
plight of the untouchables, exposing the follies of caste Hindus,and recording organic protests
which was first appeared in the Mahar dialect in 1984. It portrayed how the pathetic
upbringing and victimization of an untouchable unvoiced subaltern paves way for the
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transformation into a determined, self-asserted and apeaking subaltern. The book was
The title Akkarmashi stands for impure,incomplete and illegitimate child marking the
low social status of Sharan who has born with a burden of inferiority. His mother Masamai is
an untouchable, while his father Hanmantha Limbale is the Patil of Baslegaon. Explaining
calling me akkarmashi”. (Limbale,1) He does not entirely belong to the Mahars like his
mother or to high caste Lingayats, where his father belongs. So he is an outcaste. He says
“My father lives in a mansion, my mother in a hut, and I on the street. Where are my roots
exactly ?”(Limbale,62).
Outcaste depicts the life of Sharan upto the age of twenty five as an outcaste. It is also
the tragic depiction of Mahar life which is stained by untouchability, starvation and humility
in the immediate post independent Indian context. Limbale ‘s book shows that identity as a
social construct which shrinks and widens in accordance with the physical, social, economic
and political conditions concerning the individual. In the Indian context, identity is closely
connected and is constructed in association with caste, religion, race and gender which one
belongs to. However Outcaste is a classic chronicling the conflicts of an individual who has
been denied of such possessions : “My history is my moteher ‘s life, at the most my grand
The surname Limbale tells the tale of the half life the protagonist lives. He does not
entirely belong to the low caste or to the high caste. He feels a sense of absence of
belongingness at the maharwada. “In a sense, I was not a Mahar, because high caste blood
ran in my body. Could I drain this blood out of my body?” (Limbale,82. Despite this, he
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wonders : “Strange that I too could have a father!....I owe my father’s name to Bhosale, the
Dalits are considered the high caste Hindu’s other. But this other is neither have a
distinct racial lineage nor a different geographical origin. They are part of the Hindu society ,
though their sight or touch is considered polluting. “Though branded as untouchables, we too
are human beings. High caste children from the village may visit the temple,yet we are
forbidden. There is a saying ‘children are the flowers of God’s abode; but not us. We are the
garbage the village throws out.”(Limbale,5) They are condemned just like they are not
deserved to be called human beings. “….the other boys throw stones at me and teased me
calling aloud, Mahar.”(Limbale,6). Their settlement are outside the village. Living with his
grandma Santamai and Bapu, the Muslim porter, the bus stand forms his ghetto.
The life Limbale leads involves a clash between dignity and survival. His existence
itself challenges the notion of morality . He acknowledges, “ My first breath must have
threatenend the morality of the world. With my first cry at birth , milk must have splashed
from the breasts of every Kunti.” Whenever he tried to unearth his roots,his question was
disregarded. “Instead of answering me,my mother clammed up like Kunti. At such moments I
felt a kinship with Karna. I felt we were brothers. Many times I felt I was Karna because ,
like him, I too was drifting with the flow of the river.”(Limbale,60)
The untouchables’ right of inheritance is only the authority over the left over food
which they relish like nector. They are the cleanest as they ensure the purity of the upper
castes by making themselves unclean. However , they are treated without any sense of
humanitarian consideration or value. Ambedkar says : “A Hindu’s public is his caste. His
responsibility is only to his caste. His loyalty is restricted only to his caste.Virtue has become
caste ridden and morality has become caste bound. There is no sympathy for the deserving.
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morality.”(Limbale,23)
For the untouchables, starvation is like their birth right and they sacrifice their sense
of worth for reducing their hunger. The whole life progresses as a conflict over prestige
versus hunger. Limbale claims : “….man has been striving to satisfy his stomach….He
started selling himself for his stomach. A woman becomes a whore and a man a thief. The
stomach makes you clean , shit, it even makes you eat shit.” (Limbale,8). Limbale portrays
his misfortune to witness his sister’s stealing. He is aggressive and disturbed and questions
those who steal to widen their fortune. “We know we should not steal ,but then how could we
feel ourselves? Who steals out of habit? The poor steal for the sake of hunger. If they had
enough to eat would they steal? Black marketers become leaders, where as those who are
driven hunger are considered criminals”(Limbale,21). Dalits strive to eradicate their poverty
by working hard , however the highcastes would not pay for their work and they consider it
only as their duty and service. Besides, the high castes throughout the generations has been
trying to prevent dalits from all sorts of representation to regain their freedom from the high
castes. They ensure support from the institutions of education, religion, and political parties
to instil slavery in the minds of dalits. They have been taught to serve the uppercastes by
However, the caste system has progressed much beyond the restrictions of varna
system as it segregates the subcastes within the castes. Thus the practice of casteism becomes
much more dangerous than the varna system. Ambedkar says the four varnas corresponds to
the mindset of Hindus : “The names Brahmin , Khastriya , Vaishya and Shudra are names
which are associated with definite and fixed notions in the mind of every Hindu
”(Ambedkar,97) and he believes the liberation from from this mindset would enable the
liberation of the low castes. Dalit literature is a collective attempt by the educated dalits to
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uproot the mindset to materialise the liberation envisaged by Jyotiba Phule ,Buddha , Kabir
and Ambedkar.
The spread of education among the dalits helped them to think about a change in the
social system. The activism of Dr.B.R.Ambedkar instigated them to dream a future devoid of
segregation. This activism prompts the protagonist Sharan and his friend Parashya to question
the discrimination in Shivram’s teashop where the tea is served in separate cups for the
Mahars and Mangs. For Sharan this act was also a result of his aversion to eat the dead
animals and the food habits of his community which he feels humiliating. Besides this he
Later, education enables Limbale to celebrates his low caste inferior identity which he
found burden once. He writes : “With our education , there grew in us a sense of pride.
Casteism made us bitter….Those days when we went around the village and walked with
pride , thehigh caste people hated our confidence. They didn’t want us to enjoy any self
esteem.”(Limbale,76). Thus he transforms his low caste self into a weapon of protest.
Numerous attempts have been made to define dalit identity and their consciousness.
The term ‘dalit’ originally decribed the Mahars , an untouchable community in Maharashtra
has been widened later to include all those who are victims and exploited.Apart from the
word dalit , other terms have been suggested by various persons , all fail to embody dalit
consciousness. The term dalit bandhu was coined by Dr. B.R.Ambedkar through his
speeches. He also called them broken men in his book The Untouchable.The British
introduced the term scheduled castes to refer them. Later Mahatma Gandhi called them
Harijans. However, the dalit intellectuals favoured the term dalit as the word described them
as warriors fighting back. “The word dalit did not denote caste; rather , it referred to those
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who were yesterday’s exploited and were now fighting back’(Limbale,42)’. The notion of
identity was alien to the dalit subalterns till the end of the 19th century. As the sense of
identity has not given to the dalits as a birth right , they had to fight to gain it. Attempts have
been made by some individuals but they were silenced. Sambuka was not silent but he was
silenced; so was Ekalavya , Karna and Tukaram . their voices were discarded.
For dalits, the formation of identity was a historical process evolving through different
stages. In the first phase dalits recognised theie essence as different from the high caste
Brahmins. The contribution of Bhakti poets aided them in this process. The emergence of
‘Adi’ movements and their claming for the rights of the original inhabitants constitutes the
secnd phase. Claiming for a distinct dalit identity reached at its peak in the first half of the
20th century influenced by various social reformers and dalit activists. Dr. B.R.Ambedkar
appeared as an iconic figure at this stage. Later, the increase of educated dalit youth along
with the mass movements of Ambedkar secured a state of mind among the dalits to protest ,
raise their voice , demand their rights and eventually celebrate their caste identity.
After the demise of Dr. B.R .Ambedkar, educated dalit youths continued his activism.
Dalit literature is part of the attempt by the dalits to gain their identity. Invertimg the aesthetic
“The three values of life- equality, freedom and solidarity can be regarded as constituting the
essence of beauty in dalit literature. The aesthetic of dalit literature rests on : first, the artist ‘s
social commitment; second , the life- affirming values present in the artistic creation ; and
third, the ability to raise the reader’s consciousness of fundamental values like equality,
Limbale and Datta Bhagat establish the dalit subalternity not in a colonial structure ,
but in the caste oriented socio-cultural structure of Hindu society. Here the rural landscape
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becomes the metropolis , where dalits exist literally on the periphery. They work, eat, and
work without bothering the so called high spiritual values of ‘moksha’ and ‘rebirth’ . Rather
they enable purity of the upper castes and become impure through the process. Dalits are the
upper caste Hindu’s other. But this other is not separate like the member of another ethno-
cultural ,religious or linguistic group. This other is part of Hindu society , and yet apart from
Limbale and Bhagat present dalit identity as dynamic and flexible. It undergoes
significant changes in accordance with space and time. The primordial notion of selfhood as
wounded and fractured transforms into a determined self through the educated youths like
Sharan in Outcaste and Manohar in Avart.Both Sharan and Manohar appear as followers of
Ambedkarite ideology. Their willingness to suffer for a new social change reflects the young
Ambedkar who led a satyagraha in Mahad for the right of lowcastes to draw water from the
main water tank of the town , burning of Manusmrithi in 1927 December 25 , Kalaram
temple movement in 1930 and conversion to Buddhism .Similarly , Tukaram’s father’s wish
to touch warkari’s feet corresponds the thirst of Marathi saint poet Chokhamela’s devotion to
the temple of Pandharpur. It is also believed that Ambedkar’s wife Ramabhai Bhimrao
Ambedkar has died without fulfilling her wish to go to the Vithobha temple.
CONCLUSION
Limbale’s and Datta Bhagat’s characters differ from dalit characters portrayed by non-
dalit writers mainly because of their nature. Unlike the dalit characters of non-dalit writers as
mute, silent, innocent and lifeless here the characters appear as they are: determined, self
conscious and self-inspired; they show humanness. Sharan’s thoughts in Outcaste to hide his
grandma within his shirt disguised and reshaped as an empty plate show how deliberately the
untouchables want to escape from their identities. The most vicious problem of casteism as
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highlighted by Ambedkar is that it never gives a choice to the victim either to opt one’s caste
or change one’s caste as one wishes. Limbale highlights the hollowness and absurdity of the
age old claim that untouchables are segregated only because of their uncleanliness. If it was
so, they must have been accepted once they become clean. By pointing his own experience
,Limbale questions this claim: “I used clean clothes, bathed everyday and washed myself,
clean with soap and brushed my teeth with toothpaste. There was nothing unclean about me.
Then in what sense was I untouchable? A high caste who is dirty was still considered
who had become a Brahmin by attitude, but high caste people didn’t even allow me to stand
at their doorstep.(Limbale,107)”
and shame may be monotonous as the high priests of literature claims; the high castes’
attitude to the lowcastes remains the same as well. It is this attitude which acts as the
progenitor of the lowcastes’ sufferings. So dalit literature stands for the actualisation of two
objectives : to create awareness among the lowcastes about their condition ; and to change the
high castes’ mentality towards the lowcastes by showcasing them the latter’s suferings. From
the progress of this literature , we can hope for sure a better future is about to come negating
all differences .
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