Wednesday, 15 July 2026

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar's Conception of Struggle and the Emancipation of Dalits

 

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar's Conception of Struggle and the Emancipation of Dalits

SR Darapuri I.P.S.(Retd)

Introduction

Dr. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar (1891–1956) occupies a unique place in the history of modern India as the foremost philosopher, jurist, economist, constitutionalist, and social revolutionary who devoted his entire public life to the emancipation of the Scheduled Castes, whom he called the "Depressed Classes" and who are now commonly referred to as Dalits. Unlike many social reformers who regarded caste discrimination as a moral aberration that could be corrected through appeals to conscience, Ambedkar understood caste as a deeply entrenched system of social, economic, political, and religious domination. Consequently, he argued that the liberation of Dalits could never be achieved through charity, paternalism, or the goodwill of the privileged classes. It required sustained struggle, conscious organization, democratic mobilization, constitutional action, and intellectual transformation.

For Ambedkar, struggle was not merely an instrument for obtaining immediate concessions. It was a process through which an oppressed people recovered their dignity, acquired political consciousness, and transformed themselves into equal citizens. His famous slogan—"Educate, Agitate, Organize"—summarizes this comprehensive philosophy of emancipation. Education was to awaken critical consciousness, agitation was to challenge injustice through democratic means, and organization was to convert scattered individuals into a powerful social movement capable of altering existing structures of power.

Ambedkar's conception of struggle remains one of the most influential contributions to modern democratic thought. It continues to inspire movements against caste oppression, social exclusion, and discrimination, not only in India but also in broader discussions on human rights and social justice across the world.

Understanding the Nature of Caste Oppression

Ambedkar's understanding of struggle emerged from his analysis of the caste system itself. He rejected the belief that untouchability was merely a social evil that could be removed while preserving the caste order. In his seminal work Annihilation of Caste, he argued that untouchability was only the most extreme manifestation of a much larger system of graded inequality.

According to Ambedkar, caste is fundamentally different from other forms of social hierarchy because it divides society into numerous hereditary groups arranged in a fixed hierarchy. Every caste enjoys superiority over those below it while remaining subordinate to those above it. This system prevents solidarity among the oppressed and enables the continued domination of privileged groups.

Since caste is maintained through religion, social customs, economic dependency, and political exclusion, Ambedkar concluded that its destruction requires struggle on every one of these fronts simultaneously. Social reform without political power would remain ineffective, while political democracy without social equality would remain unstable and incomplete.

Rights Are Won Through Struggle

A central theme running throughout Ambedkar's writings is that rights are never voluntarily granted by dominant groups. History demonstrates that every oppressed community has had to fight for justice through organized collective action.

Ambedkar repeatedly warned Dalits against depending upon the generosity or sympathy of upper-caste reformers. He believed that charity humiliates whereas rights confer dignity. Justice cannot rest upon compassion but must be secured through equality before the law and equal participation in political power.

For this reason, Ambedkar emphasized self-reliance. He encouraged Dalits to become active participants in shaping their own destiny rather than passive recipients of reforms initiated by others. Freedom achieved through struggle possesses moral and political value because it transforms the oppressed into conscious citizens rather than beneficiaries of benevolence.

Dr. Ambedkar had said, “lost rights are never regained by appeals to the conscience of the usurpers but by relentless struggle.”

Educate: The Foundation of Liberation

Ambedkar regarded education as the first condition of emancipation. Having personally experienced the humiliations imposed by caste discrimination despite his extraordinary academic achievements, he understood both the transformative potential of education and the barriers preventing Dalits from acquiring it.

Education, in Ambedkar's view, was not simply a means of obtaining employment. It cultivated rationality, scientific thinking, self-respect, and political awareness. An educated community could challenge religious superstition, question oppressive customs, understand constitutional rights, and participate effectively in democratic institutions.

He repeatedly appealed to Dalit parents to educate their children even under conditions of extreme poverty. The struggle for schools, scholarships, hostels, higher education, and professional opportunities formed an essential component of his broader programme for social emancipation.

Today, Ambedkar's insistence on education remains highly relevant in addressing educational inequality, digital exclusion, and unequal access to quality institutions.

Agitate: Democratic Resistance to Injustice

The second element of Ambedkar's programme was agitation. This term has often been misunderstood. Ambedkar did not advocate violence or lawlessness. Instead, he believed that injustice must be confronted through peaceful yet determined democratic action.

Agitation included public meetings, processions, satyagrahas, petitions, legal challenges, newspaper campaigns, legislative advocacy, and political mobilization. Silence in the face of injustice, according to Ambedkar, only strengthened oppressive institutions.

His own political career illustrates this philosophy. The Mahad Satyagraha of 1927 asserted the right of untouchables to draw water from a public tank. Although seemingly a struggle over access to water, it was in reality a struggle for equal citizenship and human dignity. Likewise, the Kalaram Temple Entry Movement challenged the religious exclusion imposed upon Dalits, exposing the contradiction between the proclaimed universality of Hindu religion and the actual practice of caste discrimination.

These struggles demonstrated Ambedkar's belief that symbolic acts of resistance could awaken political consciousness among the oppressed while exposing the moral bankruptcy of discriminatory institutions.

Organize: Collective Strength as Political Power

Ambedkar recognized that education and agitation would remain ineffective without organization. Individual achievement could not dismantle a system sustained by collective privilege.

Consequently, he established organizations such as the Bahishkrit Hitakarini Sabha, the Independent Labour Party, the Scheduled Castes Federation, and numerous journals that provided intellectual leadership to marginalized communities.

Organization enabled Dalits to articulate common demands, negotiate with governments, contest elections, influence legislation, and resist social discrimination. It transformed scattered victims of oppression into an organized political community capable of defending its interests.

Ambedkar repeatedly emphasized that disunity among oppressed groups benefited only those who wished to preserve existing hierarchies. Organization, therefore, became the indispensable instrument of democratic struggle.

Political Power and Social Transformation

One of Ambedkar's most significant contributions was his insistence that social equality required political power. Unlike reformers who concentrated solely on changing social attitudes, Ambedkar understood that laws, institutions, and representation profoundly influence social relations.

His demand for separate electorates, later modified into reserved legislative seats through the Poona Pact, reflected this understanding. Political representation ensured that Dalits would possess an independent voice in legislative bodies rather than relying upon upper-caste representatives to defend their interests.

Ambedkar famously observed that political power is the key to all social progress. Representation in legislatures, government services, educational institutions, and public administration would gradually alter the balance of power within Indian society.

His role as Chairman of the Drafting Committee of the Indian Constitution enabled him to institutionalize many safeguards for equality, fundamental rights, affirmative action, and constitutional remedies. Yet he never regarded constitutional guarantees as sufficient by themselves.

Constitutional Methods and Continuous Vigilance

After independence, Ambedkar consistently argued that constitutional democracy requires continuous struggle. While he rejected violent revolution and unconstitutional methods where democratic remedies were available, he equally rejected complacency.

In his final address to the Constituent Assembly, he warned that constitutional morality cannot survive unless citizens remain vigilant in defending liberty, equality, and fraternity. Democratic institutions function effectively only when people actively participate in public life and resist attempts to undermine constitutional values.

Thus, Ambedkar's philosophy of struggle after independence emphasized elections, public debate, peaceful protest, judicial remedies, legislative action, and civil society mobilization. Constitutional methods became instruments of organized democratic struggle rather than substitutes for social movements.

The Religious Dimension of Struggle

Ambedkar ultimately concluded that caste was inseparable from the religious doctrines that sanctioned it. He therefore argued that social equality could not be fully realized within a religious framework that treated hierarchy as sacred.

His conversion to Buddhism in October 1956 represented the culmination of decades of intellectual and political struggle. It was not merely a change of faith but a declaration of human dignity and equality. Through Navayana Buddhism, Ambedkar offered Dalits a moral philosophy founded upon liberty, equality, fraternity, rationality, and compassion.

The mass conversion movement demonstrated that struggle also involves creating alternative ethical and cultural foundations for society.

Economic Justice as an Essential Component of Liberation

Ambedkar consistently argued that caste oppression cannot be separated from economic exploitation. Landlessness, indebtedness, unemployment, exclusion from skilled occupations, and unequal access to resources reinforced social discrimination.

He therefore advocated labour rights, state intervention in key industries, social insurance, living wages, land reforms, and public welfare measures. Economic independence would enable Dalits to resist caste domination more effectively.

His economic thought anticipated many contemporary discussions concerning inclusive development, social security, and distributive justice.

Women and the Dalit Movement

Ambedkar regarded women's emancipation as inseparable from the emancipation of Dalits. He encouraged women to participate actively in political movements and public life. He campaigned for women's education, equal property rights, maternity benefits, and legal reforms through the Hindu Code Bill.

He understood that caste reproduces itself through patriarchal control over marriage and family. Consequently, the struggle against caste necessarily required the struggle against gender inequality.

Contemporary Relevance

More than seven decades after Ambedkar's death, caste discrimination continues to exist despite constitutional guarantees. Atrocities against Scheduled Castes, discrimination in educational institutions, unequal access to land and employment, manual scavenging, residential segregation, and social exclusion demonstrate that legal equality alone has not eliminated structural inequality.

Ambedkar's philosophy therefore remains profoundly relevant. His emphasis on education is reflected in continuing struggles for equal access to quality schools and universities. His insistence upon organization inspires Dalit movements, student organizations, labour unions, women's groups, and civil society initiatives. His advocacy of constitutional methods provides guidance for defending democratic institutions and fundamental rights.

Equally significant is his insistence upon fraternity. Ambedkar understood that liberty and equality cannot flourish in a society lacking mutual respect and shared citizenship. The struggle for Dalit emancipation is therefore not merely a struggle for one community but for the democratization of Indian society itself.

Conclusion

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar conceived struggle as the indispensable path to the emancipation of Dalits. Rejecting charity, paternalism, and passive reform, he argued that liberation requires education, democratic agitation, collective organization, political representation, constitutional action, economic justice, and moral transformation. His struggles at Mahad, Nashik, the Round Table Conferences, the Constituent Assembly, and finally through conversion to Buddhism illustrate a coherent philosophy aimed at dismantling every institutional basis of caste oppression.

Ambedkar's enduring message is that oppressed communities become free not when others choose to liberate them but when they themselves become conscious, organized, and determined to claim their rights. His call to "Educate, Agitate, Organize" continues to serve as a timeless programme for achieving liberty, equality, fraternity, and human dignity. In contemporary India, where caste-based inequalities persist despite constitutional guarantees, Ambedkar's conception of struggle remains both an ethical imperative and a practical guide for building a truly democratic and socially just society.

Sunday, 12 July 2026

An Ambedkarite Critique of Dera Culture in Punjab and Its Role in the Emancipation of Dalits

 

An Ambedkarite Critique of Dera Culture in Punjab and Its Role in the Emancipation of Dalits

SR Darapuri I.P.S.(Retd)

                

Introduction

The phenomenon of Dera culture occupies a distinctive place in the socio-religious and political landscape of Punjab. Deras—religious sects or institutions led by charismatic spiritual leaders—have attracted millions of followers across caste, class, and religious boundaries. However, their most significant social base has been among Dalits, who constitute approximately one-third of Punjab's population, the highest proportion among all Indian states. The widespread support enjoyed by Deras among Dalit communities raises an important question: have these institutions contributed to the emancipation of Dalits, or have they merely provided spiritual consolation while leaving the structures of caste oppression intact?

An Ambedkarite analysis offers a rigorous framework for answering this question. Dr. B. R. Ambedkar regarded religion as a means for establishing liberty, equality, fraternity, and social justice. He rejected any religious system that perpetuated inequality and argued that genuine emancipation could only be achieved through education, political organization, economic democracy, constitutional rights, and the annihilation of caste. Evaluated against these principles, Dera culture presents a complex picture. While many Deras have offered dignity, identity, and community to marginalized Dalits, they have generally failed to challenge the structural foundations of caste hierarchy. Consequently, from an Ambedkarite standpoint, Dera culture represents a limited and often contradictory response to caste oppression.

Historical Background of Dera Culture in Punjab

Punjab has long been associated with the egalitarian teachings of Guru Nanak, who rejected caste distinctions and emphasized the equality of all human beings before God. Institutions such as the langar were intended to symbolize social equality by encouraging people from all backgrounds to dine together. Nevertheless, the persistence of caste divisions within Punjabi society demonstrates the limits of religious ideals when confronted with entrenched social and economic structures.

Despite the egalitarian principles of Sikhism, Dalits—including Mazhabi Sikhs, Ramdasias, Ravidasias, Valmikis, and other Scheduled Castes—have often experienced discrimination in village life. Numerous studies have documented the existence of separate Dalit gurdwaras, separate cremation grounds, unequal participation in religious institutions, and exclusion from positions of authority within mainstream Sikh organizations. The overwhelming majority of agricultural land in Punjab continues to remain in the hands of dominant caste landowners, leaving many Dalits economically dependent as agricultural labourers.

It was within this social context that numerous Deras gained prominence. Among the most influential are Dera Sacha Sauda, Dera Sachkhand Ballan, Radha Soami Satsang Beas, and the Nirankari Mission. These institutions attracted Dalits by offering recognition, participation, and spiritual equality that were frequently denied within dominant caste-controlled religious institutions.

Why Did Dalits Turn Towards Deras?

An Ambedkarite analysis begins by recognizing that the growth of Deras cannot be understood merely as a matter of religious preference. Rather, it reflects the lived experience of caste discrimination and social exclusion.

For generations, Dalits encountered humiliation in everyday life despite constitutional guarantees of equality. Economic dependence, landlessness, social segregation, and exclusion from religious leadership reinforced feelings of marginalization. Many villages witnessed the establishment of separate Dalit religious institutions because integration within mainstream institutions remained incomplete.

Deras provided an alternative social space where Dalits could participate with dignity. Followers could become preachers, organizers, musicians, volunteers, and administrators. Many Deras emphasized the spiritual equality of all human beings and rejected overt caste discrimination within their congregations. In this sense, Deras represented an important protest against caste-based exclusion and fulfilled psychological and emotional needs neglected by mainstream religious institutions.

From an Ambedkarite perspective, however, understanding why Dalits sought refuge in Deras does not automatically establish that Deras became instruments of social emancipation. The critical question concerns whether they transformed the structures responsible for oppression.

Ambedkar's Philosophy of Religion

Dr. Ambedkar's understanding of religion differed fundamentally from conventional spiritual traditions. He argued that religion must serve society by promoting justice rather than preserving hierarchy. According to him, an ethical religion should foster liberty, equality, fraternity, rationality, and human dignity.

Ambedkar sharply criticized religious traditions that sanctified caste or encouraged passive acceptance of injustice. His eventual adoption of Buddhism reflected his belief that religion should become a force for social reconstruction rather than spiritual escapism. For him, the purpose of religion was not simply individual salvation but collective emancipation.

This philosophical framework provides the criteria for evaluating Dera culture.

Positive Contributions of Dera Culture

An objective Ambedkarite analysis must acknowledge the positive contributions made by many Deras before examining their limitations.

Alternative Spaces of Human Dignity

Perhaps the most significant contribution of Deras has been the creation of alternative spaces where Dalits could experience respect and recognition. Unlike many traditional religious institutions dominated by upper castes or dominant castes, Deras often welcomed marginalized communities without overt discrimination. The opportunity to participate in leadership roles enhanced followers' sense of self-worth.

Community Formation and Social Solidarity

Deras have also functioned as centres of community organization. They organize religious gatherings, social service activities, educational programmes, marriages, disaster relief, and charitable initiatives. These activities have strengthened collective identity among marginalized communities and reduced social isolation.

Assertion of Cultural Identity

Institutions such as Dera Sachkhand Ballan have contributed significantly to strengthening the identity of followers of Guru Ravidas. The assertion of Ravidassia identity has enabled many Dalits to challenge the stigma historically attached to their caste status and cultivate pride in their cultural heritage.

Educational and Welfare Activities

Several Deras operate schools, hospitals, vocational training centres, and charitable institutions. These initiatives have improved access to education and healthcare, particularly among economically weaker sections. Such contributions have undoubtedly enhanced the quality of life for many followers.

The Ambedkarite Critique of Dera Culture

Despite these achievements, an Ambedkarite critique identifies several fundamental limitations that prevent Deras from becoming genuine instruments of Dalit liberation.

Spiritual Consolation Instead of Structural Transformation

The foremost criticism is that Deras primarily offer spiritual comfort rather than social revolution. Ambedkar consistently argued that caste cannot be eliminated through devotional practices or moral preaching alone. Most Deras emphasize meditation, personal morality, devotion, and charitable service while avoiding organized struggles against land inequality, caste discrimination, labour exploitation, and political exclusion.

Consequently, they often alleviate the psychological consequences of oppression without addressing its structural causes.

Failure to Challenge the Caste System

Ambedkar regarded caste as a system of graded inequality embedded in social, economic, and political institutions. Genuine emancipation required dismantling these institutions rather than merely promoting interpersonal harmony.

Most Deras seldom challenge dominant caste ownership of land, unequal access to economic resources, caste-based political domination, or discriminatory social practices. Their emphasis on peaceful coexistence frequently substitutes reconciliation for justice. From an Ambedkarite standpoint, harmony without equality simply perpetuates existing hierarchies.

Personality Cults and Charismatic Leadership

Another significant criticism concerns the centrality of charismatic gurus. Many Deras revolve around unquestioned obedience to spiritual leaders whose authority extends over religious, organizational, and even political matters.

Ambedkar repeatedly warned against hero worship, arguing in Annihilation of Caste and elsewhere that democracy requires rational criticism rather than blind devotion. Personality cults discourage independent thinking and undermine democratic participation within oppressed communities.

Limited Commitment to Rationalism

Ambedkar regarded rational inquiry and scientific temper as indispensable components of social progress. In contrast, many Deras continue to encourage belief in miracles, supernatural powers, divine intervention, and mystical healing. Such beliefs may provide emotional comfort but do not cultivate the critical consciousness necessary for social transformation.

Diversion of Economic Resources

Many followers contribute substantial donations to Dera institutions. From an Ambedkarite perspective, oppressed communities should prioritize investment in education, political organization, legal struggles, and economic development. While charitable activities have their value, excessive concentration of resources within religious institutions may reduce investments in long-term empowerment.

Depoliticization of Dalit Society

Perhaps the most serious Ambedkarite criticism concerns the depoliticization of followers. Ambedkar's famous call to "Educate, Agitate, Organize" emphasized collective political action as the path to liberation.

Most Deras encourage discipline, service, morality, and spiritual development but rarely mobilize followers for struggles concerning land reforms, labour rights, implementation of constitutional safeguards, or protection against caste violence. As a result, followers often become passive recipients of spiritual guidance rather than active agents of democratic transformation.

Electoral Influence and Political Accommodation

Many Deras have acquired considerable political influence because of their large follower base. Political parties across ideological lines have frequently sought their support during elections. Although such engagement may increase the bargaining power of Dera leadership, it often converts religious institutions into intermediaries between political elites and marginalized communities.

An Ambedkarite perspective argues that Dalits should develop independent political consciousness rooted in constitutional values rather than relying upon religious authorities to determine political choices.

Limited Economic Transformation

Ambedkar consistently maintained that political democracy cannot survive without economic democracy. Despite decades of influence, most Deras have not significantly altered the unequal distribution of land, productive resources, or employment opportunities that underpin caste hierarchy in rural Punjab.

Consequently, the material conditions that sustain caste oppression remain largely unchanged.

The Ravidassia Movement: A Qualified Exception

The evolution of the Ravidassia movement illustrates both the possibilities and limitations of Dera culture. Following the 2009 attack on leaders of Dera Sachkhand Ballan in Vienna, many followers asserted a distinct Ravidassia religious identity. This development represented a powerful symbolic rejection of caste discrimination and affirmed the dignity of Dalit communities.

Nevertheless, from an Ambedkarite standpoint, symbolic assertion alone cannot substitute for structural transformation. Religious identity must be accompanied by struggles for land redistribution, educational advancement, political representation, labour rights, gender justice, and constitutional equality if genuine emancipation is to be achieved.

Dera Culture and the Ambedkarite Vision of Liberation

The contrast between Ambedkar's philosophy and Dera culture is profound.

Ambedkar emphasized rationality over unquestioning faith, democratic organization over charismatic authority, constitutional rights over spiritual dependence, and structural transformation over symbolic consolation. His project aimed at annihilating caste itself rather than merely creating alternative religious spaces within a caste-ridden society.

Deras have undoubtedly offered dignity where humiliation prevailed, community where isolation existed, and hope where despair was widespread. However, their contribution has largely remained confined to the sphere of psychological, cultural, and spiritual empowerment. They have generally not initiated movements capable of transforming the economic and political foundations of caste oppression.

Conclusion

An Ambedkarite evaluation of Dera culture in Punjab must therefore be both balanced and critical. It would be inaccurate to dismiss Deras as entirely reactionary, for they have provided important spaces of dignity, cultural assertion, welfare, and social solidarity to marginalized Dalit communities. They emerged because mainstream religious institutions often failed to embody their own egalitarian ideals.

At the same time, it would be equally misleading to regard Deras as vehicles of comprehensive Dalit emancipation. Their emphasis on spiritual uplift, moral reform, and charismatic leadership has generally not been accompanied by sustained struggles against caste hierarchy, land inequality, political exclusion, or economic exploitation. Consequently, they have often mitigated the suffering caused by caste without dismantling the structures that produce it.

For Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, genuine emancipation required not merely recognition but transformation. It demanded the destruction of caste through education, rational inquiry, democratic organization, constitutional morality, political mobilization, and economic justice. Judged by these standards, Dera culture has served as a partial refuge from oppression rather than as an instrument for its complete abolition.

The future of Dalit liberation in Punjab, therefore, lies not in replacing one form of religious dependence with another but in combining the quest for dignity with the Ambedkarite programme of social democracy, constitutional rights, economic equality, and the annihilation of caste. Only such a synthesis can fulfil the promise of genuine human emancipation.

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar's Conception of Struggle and the Emancipation of Dalits

  Dr. B.R. Ambedkar's Conception of Struggle and the Emancipation of Dalits SR Darapuri I.P.S.(Retd) Introduction Dr. Bhimrao ...