Wednesday, 8 July 2026

Dr. B. R. Ambedkar's Views on the Bhakti Movement and the Upliftment of Dalits

 

Dr. B. R. Ambedkar's Views on the Bhakti Movement and the Upliftment of Dalits

SR Darapuri I.P.S.(Retd)

KABIR AND RAIDAS for Class 12th - YouTube

Introduction

The Bhakti Movement occupies an important place in the social and religious history of India. Emerging between the seventh and seventeenth centuries in different parts of the country, it emphasized personal devotion (bhakti) to God, rejected excessive ritualism, and sought to establish a direct relationship between the devotee and the divine. Several Bhakti saints, including Kabir, Ravidas, Chokhamela, Namdev, Tukaram and Nandanar, condemned social discrimination and proclaimed the equality of all human beings before God. Because many of these saints came from marginalized communities or openly criticized caste prejudice, the Bhakti Movement is often celebrated as a movement of social equality and Dalit emancipation.

Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, however, offered a far more critical and historically grounded assessment. While acknowledging the moral courage and egalitarian spirit of several Bhakti saints, he argued that the movement failed to dismantle the caste system or bring about the social, economic and political liberation of the Dalits. In his view, the Bhakti Movement represented an ethical protest against caste discrimination but not a programme for structural social transformation. The distinction between spiritual equality and social equality lies at the heart of Ambedkar's critique.

Ambedkar's Appreciation of the Bhakti Saints

Ambedkar did not dismiss the Bhakti tradition in its entirety. He recognized that many saints challenged the religious orthodoxy of their time and gave voice to the aspirations of the oppressed. Saints such as Ravidas and Chokhamela, themselves born into communities regarded as "untouchable," exposed the inhumanity of caste discrimination through their poetry and personal experiences. Kabir boldly attacked Brahminical ritualism as well as Islamic orthodoxy, emphasizing morality, reason and the unity of humanity over religious formalism.

These saints questioned hereditary privilege, criticized priestly domination and insisted that devotion, rather than birth, was the true basis of religious worth. They affirmed the dignity of labour and rejected the idea that spiritual status depended upon caste. Their teachings inspired generations of oppressed people and enriched India's ethical and literary traditions. Ambedkar acknowledged these contributions and regarded them as important voices of dissent within Indian society.

Bhakti as a Spiritual Rather Than Social Revolution

Despite recognizing these achievements, Ambedkar argued that the Bhakti Movement remained essentially a spiritual movement rather than a social revolution. Its central concern was the individual's relationship with God rather than the reconstruction of society. While Bhakti saints preached equality before God, they rarely developed a systematic programme for abolishing caste, redistributing economic power or transforming social institutions.

For Ambedkar, this constituted the fundamental limitation of the movement. A religion that teaches spiritual equality while accepting social inequality cannot produce genuine human emancipation. Equality before God has little practical significance if people continue to suffer discrimination in everyday life. A Dalit who is denied entry into a temple, prevented from drawing water from a public well, excluded from education or deprived of economic opportunities cannot be considered equal merely because religion declares all souls to be equal before God.

Ambedkar therefore insisted that social equality must precede or accompany spiritual equality. Without changes in the structure of society, devotional teachings remain largely symbolic.

Failure to Destroy the Caste System

Ambedkar's most significant criticism was that the Bhakti Movement failed to destroy the caste system. Although many saints condemned untouchability and emphasized human brotherhood, caste hierarchy continued to dominate Hindu society long after the movement had spread across India.

He pointed to a striking contradiction in Hindu society. Upper-caste Hindus often revered saints like Ravidas and Chokhamela as holy men while simultaneously refusing to treat ordinary Dalits as equals. Temples celebrated Dalit saints, but living Dalits remained excluded from temples, schools, public wells and positions of dignity. This paradox demonstrated, according to Ambedkar, that admiration for exceptional individuals did not translate into equality for the oppressed community as a whole.

The Bhakti Movement produced revered saints but failed to eliminate the social practices that degraded millions of ordinary Dalits. Consequently, caste survived largely intact despite centuries of devotional preaching.

Individual Salvation Versus Collective Liberation

Ambedkar also criticized the movement for emphasizing individual salvation instead of collective social struggle. Bhakti encouraged devotees to seek liberation through prayer, surrender and devotion to God. While such devotion might provide spiritual consolation, it did not equip oppressed communities with the political organization or social consciousness necessary to challenge systems of exploitation.

Ambedkar believed that no oppressed community could secure justice merely through moral persuasion or religious devotion. Real emancipation required education, political representation, legal rights, economic resources and organized social movements. His famous call to "Educate, Agitate and Organize" reflected this conviction. Liberation could only be achieved through collective action and democratic struggle, not through individual acts of devotion.

Bhakti and the Absence of Social Democracy

For Ambedkar, democracy was not simply a political system but a way of life founded upon liberty, equality and fraternity. Although Bhakti occasionally promoted the ideal of fraternity, it failed to establish liberty and equality within the social order. Hereditary occupations remained unchanged, caste endogamy continued, Brahminical authority survived, and untouchability persisted.

As a result, the movement did not create the social conditions necessary for democracy. Ambedkar argued that political democracy cannot endure where society itself remains deeply unequal. Social democracy requires equal opportunities, equal dignity and equal citizenship—objectives that devotional reform alone could not achieve.

Critique of Saint Worship

Ambedkar was also skeptical of the tendency to rely upon saints as agents of social transformation. He argued that history is changed not by isolated holy individuals but by organized and conscious masses. Saints may awaken moral awareness, but lasting social change depends upon institutions, laws, political movements and collective action.

He believed that excessive reverence for saints often encouraged passive acceptance of injustice rather than active resistance against it. The oppressed, he argued, must become the makers of their own history instead of waiting for moral reform from privileged sections of society.

Ambedkar's Alternative Vision

Unlike the Bhakti saints, Ambedkar proposed a comprehensive programme for the emancipation of Dalits. This programme included the annihilation of caste, universal education, economic justice, constitutional safeguards, political representation, land reforms, labour rights and democratic participation. He insisted that the struggle against caste required institutional transformation rather than merely spiritual reform.

This conviction ultimately led him to embrace Buddhism in 1956. Through the establishment of Navayana Buddhism, Ambedkar sought to create a religion based upon liberty, equality, fraternity, rationality and compassion. Unlike the caste-based social order that had developed within Hinduism, he believed Buddhism offered an ethical foundation for a genuinely democratic society.

Conclusion

Dr. B. R. Ambedkar's evaluation of the Bhakti Movement is both balanced and profound. He appreciated the courage of saints such as Kabir, Ravidas and Chokhamela for challenging ritualism, priestly authority and social discrimination. Their teachings affirmed the dignity of marginalized people and represented an important moral protest against caste prejudice.

However, Ambedkar concluded that the Bhakti Movement did not fundamentally transform Indian society. It emphasized spiritual equality but failed to establish social, economic and political equality. It produced revered saints but did not abolish untouchability, dismantle caste hierarchy or empower Dalits through education, political representation and economic justice. For Ambedkar, the movement remained ethically significant but socially inadequate.

His own vision of Dalit emancipation therefore rested not on devotional reform but on constitutional democracy, organized social struggle, education, political power and the creation of a society based upon liberty, equality and fraternity. In this sense, Ambedkar transformed the discourse on social justice by shifting the focus from individual salvation to collective human liberation. His critique of the Bhakti Movement continues to provide a powerful framework for understanding both the achievements and the limitations of religious reform movements in the struggle against caste oppression.

Sunday, 5 July 2026

India's Position in the Global Torture Index: An Assessment of Custodial Torture, Legal Framework, and Human Rights Challenges

 

India's Position in the Global Torture Index: An Assessment of Custodial Torture, Legal Framework, and Human Rights Challenges

SR Darapuri I.P.S.(Retd)

        Tibetan Uprising Day

Introduction

Torture is universally recognized as one of the gravest violations of human rights. It strikes at the core of human dignity, undermines the rule of law, and weakens public confidence in institutions entrusted with protecting citizens. Following the horrors of the Second World War, the international community developed a robust legal framework prohibiting torture under all circumstances. Instruments such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948), the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1966), and the United Nations Convention Against Torture (UNCAT) establish the absolute prohibition of torture and cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment.

India, as the world's largest democracy and a constitutional republic committed to protecting fundamental rights, has consistently affirmed its commitment to human rights. Nevertheless, allegations of custodial torture, police brutality, deaths in custody, and impunity continue to attract national and international concern. These concerns are reflected in the Global Torture Index (GTI), launched in 2025 by the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), which classifies India as a High Risk country for torture and ill-treatment.

The Global Torture Index does not merely count incidents of torture; rather, it evaluates the structural conditions that enable or prevent torture. India's classification highlights significant deficiencies in legal safeguards, institutional accountability, and implementation of constitutional protections.

The Global Torture Index

The Global Torture Index is an international assessment tool designed to measure the risk of torture across countries. Developed by the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT), it evaluates legal frameworks, institutional safeguards, accountability mechanisms, victims' rights, prison conditions, police practices, and government commitment to preventing torture.

Unlike rankings based solely on reported incidents, the GTI examines whether a country's legal and institutional architecture effectively prevents torture and provides remedies when violations occur.

The Index assesses countries under seven major pillars: Political commitment to eradicate torture; Prevention of police brutality; Protection of persons deprived of liberty; Rights of torture victims; Accountability and ending impunity; Safeguards against torture; Transparency and public oversight.

Based on these indicators, India is assessed as presenting a High Risk of torture and ill-treatment.

Constitutional Protection Against Torture

The Constitution of India contains several provisions that implicitly prohibit torture.

Article 21 guarantees that no person shall be deprived of life or personal liberty except according to procedure established by law. Judicial interpretation has expanded Article 21 to include protection against torture and custodial violence.

Article 20(3) protects individuals against self-incrimination.

Article 22 provides safeguards against arbitrary arrest and detention, including the right to legal representation and production before a magistrate within twenty-four hours.

The Supreme Court has strengthened these protections through landmark judgments such as D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal (1997), which laid down detailed guidelines governing arrest and detention, including mandatory arrest memos, medical examinations, and notification of relatives.

Despite these constitutional safeguards, implementation remains inconsistent.

Why India Is Classified as "High Risk"

1. Absence of a Specific Anti-Torture Law

One of the principal reasons for India's classification is the absence of legislation specifically criminalizing torture.

Although acts of assault and grievous hurt are punishable under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (formerly the Indian Penal Code), there is no offence of torture corresponding to international standards under the United Nations Convention Against Torture.

Consequently: torture is often prosecuted under ordinary criminal provisions; command responsibility is inadequately addressed; penalties may not reflect the gravity of torture and prosecution of public officials remains difficult.

This legislative gap has been repeatedly highlighted by international human rights bodies.

2. Non-Ratification of the UN Convention Against Torture

India signed the United Nations Convention Against Torture in 1997 but has not ratified it.

Ratification would require India to: criminalize torture; establish independent investigative mechanisms; ensure compensation and rehabilitation for victims; strengthen safeguards against arbitrary detention and cooperate with international monitoring mechanisms.

Similarly, India has not ratified the Optional Protocol to the Convention Against Torture (OPCAT), which establishes independent preventive inspection of detention facilities.

3. Custodial Violence

One of the most persistent concerns is custodial violence.

Reports from courts, human rights organizations, and statutory bodies have documented allegations involving: physical assault during interrogation; torture to extract confessions; sexual violence; psychological abuse; deaths in police custody and violence in judicial custody.

Victims frequently belong to marginalized groups, including Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, religious minorities, migrant workers, and economically disadvantaged communities.

4. Prison Conditions

India's prisons face chronic structural problems.

These include: overcrowding; shortage of prison staff; inadequate medical facilities; poor sanitation; prolonged undertrial detention and limited access to legal aid.

According to the Global Torture Index, prison occupancy exceeds capacity, while undertrial prisoners constitute approximately three-fourths of the prison population.

Overcrowded prisons increase the likelihood of violence, abuse, and inhuman treatment.

5. Police Accountability

The Index also points to weaknesses in accountability mechanisms.

Investigations into allegations of custodial torture often face obstacles, including: reluctance to register First Information Reports against police personnel; dependence on police investigations; delays in prosecution; low conviction rates and requirement of prior governmental sanction in certain cases.

These factors contribute to a perception of institutional impunity.

6. Victims' Rights

Victims of torture frequently encounter significant barriers in obtaining justice.

Challenges include: fear of retaliation; lack of witness protection; financial hardship; inadequate legal representation; delayed judicial proceedings and limited rehabilitation services.

Although constitutional courts have awarded compensation in several cases, comprehensive statutory mechanisms for victim rehabilitation remain inadequate.

Judicial Initiatives

The Indian judiciary has played an important role in combating custodial torture.

Important judicial interventions include:

  • D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal (1997) establishing arrest guidelines;
  • Nilabati Behera v. State of Orissa (1993) recognizing compensation for custodial deaths;
  • Joginder Kumar v. State of Uttar Pradesh (1994) limiting arbitrary arrests;
  • repeated directions emphasizing videography of interrogations and installation of CCTV cameras in police stations.

These decisions have strengthened procedural safeguards but cannot substitute for comprehensive legislative reform.

National Human Rights Commission

The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) regularly monitors custodial deaths and issues recommendations concerning: independent investigations; compensation; magisterial inquiries; medical examinations and human rights training for police personnel.

However, many observers note that the Commission's recommendations are advisory rather than binding, limiting their effectiveness.

International Criticism

Various international human rights mechanisms have expressed concern regarding: custodial torture; excessive use of force; arbitrary detention; impunity; preventive detention laws and prison conditions.

Repeated recommendations have urged India to ratify the UN Convention Against Torture and enact comprehensive anti-torture legislation.

Government's Position

The Government of India maintains that: constitutional protections are robust; judicial oversight is strong; existing criminal laws punish custodial abuse and human rights institutions provide adequate safeguards.

The government has also highlighted: police modernization; forensic investigation; CCTV installation in police stations; judicial monitoring; digital record-keeping; human rights training and nevertheless, critics argue that implementation remains uneven across states.

Reform Measures

To reduce the risk of torture, several reforms have been proposed:

Enact comprehensive anti-torture legislation; ratify UNCAT and OPCAT; strengthen independent investigation of custodial complaints; improve police training and interrogation methods; ensure mandatory audio-video recording of interrogations; reduce prison overcrowding; expedite criminal trials; strengthen legal aid; improve witness protection and establish effective victim rehabilitation mechanisms.

Conclusion

India's classification as a High Risk country in the Global Torture Index does not imply that torture is officially sanctioned by the State. Rather, it indicates that significant structural weaknesses continue to create conditions in which torture and ill-treatment may occur and accountability remains insufficient. While the Constitution guarantees the right to life, liberty, and dignity, and the judiciary has developed important safeguards against custodial abuse, the absence of a dedicated anti-torture law, non-ratification of the United Nations Convention Against Torture, persistent allegations of custodial violence, prison overcrowding, and challenges in ensuring accountability continue to raise serious concerns.

Addressing these issues requires a combination of legislative reform, institutional strengthening, police modernization, independent oversight, and effective implementation of constitutional safeguards. A comprehensive approach that protects both public security and individual rights would reinforce the rule of law and strengthen India's commitment to democratic governance and human dignity. Such reforms would also contribute to improving India's standing in international human rights assessments while enhancing public confidence in the criminal justice system.


Dr. B. R. Ambedkar's Views on the Bhakti Movement and the Upliftment of Dalits

  Dr. B. R. Ambedkar's Views on the Bhakti Movement and the Upliftment of Dalits SR Darapuri I.P.S.(Retd) Introduction The Bha...