Saharanpur protests herald a new phase in Uttar Pradesh's dalit politics

BJP is making inroads
among Dalits but at the same time, Dalits come together when they are attacked
Saharanpur, a district known for
its woodcraft products in western UP, is in the news for two caste and communal
incidents, involving clashes with Dalits.
The ongoing Dalit protest in the district, which has now reached the capital
New Delhi, suggests a new phase in Dalit politics in UP, closely related to the
declining fortunes of the BSP, and efforts by the BJP to bring the Dalits into
the ambit of its more socially inclusive Hindutva strategy.
Dalit politics has been through a
number of phases in UP related to the strategies pursued by the BSP and rapid
social change in the state in recent decades. In the 1990s the construction of
Dalit identity by BSP leaders Kanshiram and Mayawati, promoted a radical,
anti-upper caste politics, demanding self-respect and dignity.
The BSP was still a movement-party, a
democratizing force moving downwards to mobilize the smaller and marginal Dalit
sub-castes in the poorer regions of UP. By the end of the decade two
developments introduced significant change: class divisions within the
community with rise in literacy and attainment of non-agricultural employment
among a small better off section of the Dalits, which coincided with the
weakening of identity politics and the return of a desire for development in
the state.
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For the better-off, upwardly
mobile, section of Dalits, the improvement of economic status became as
important as identity and self-respect and they tended to move away from the
BSP, becoming more open to parties that promised economic betterment. This
shift has been more marked among the non-Jatav Dalits rather than the Jatavs
who form the core constituency of the party.(read
more)
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