DALIT

Lifting the veil on the Indian Caste System

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Total: 11 results found.

... a stinking, smoking room in which large metal cauldrons spat and sizzled atop wood-fuelled fires, Dr Nandini Bhojraj pointed with pride to four plastic buckets placed on the floor. One, she declared, contained ...
Wednesday, 21 July 2010
2. India Tops in Poverty
(The News/Newsflash)
... Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal) than in the 26 poorest African countries combined (410 million). The new poverty measure that gives a multidimensional ...
Monday, 12 July 2010
3. Ramayana of Valmiki
(Micropedia Dalitica/Micropedia Dalitica from L to R)
... established, notwithstanding the fact that Guru Ravidas can certainly be linked to the Buddhists via the Natha Sidha tradition. From the late Lekh Raj Manjdadria’s précis about Yoga ...
Monday, 31 May 2010
4. The Satnami Chamars
(Micropedia Dalitica/Micropedia Dalitica from S to Z)
... the Pothi (book). This pothi, equivalent in stature to the Guru Granth Sahib of the Sikhs is written in the ordinry Brajbhasa language in Devanagari script and contained hymns of many saints who opposed ...
Saturday, 20 March 2010
5. O - is for our history - Part 1
(Dalits in Diaspora/A to Z for Diaspora Dalits)
... survive in the holy book of both the Satnamis and those of the Sikhs as well as in the Rajasthani scripture known as Panchvani. Ravidas and not Sir Thoms More in England was the founder of the concept ...
Sunday, 14 June 2009
6. Dalits and the Emanicipatory Sikh religion
(Micropedia Dalitica/Micropedia Dalitica from S to Z)
  Presented at UPenn Dec 3-5, 2008 Conference Dalit Challenges to Academic Knowledge: The Great Paradoxes   Dalits and the Emancipatory Sikh Religion by Raj ...
Sunday, 14 June 2009
... the marchers chanted Guru Ravidas maharaj ki jai and bole so nirbhaya, Guru Ravidas maharaj ki jai.. Some were chanting the verses of Ravidasji while other demanded instance justice and banning of arms ...
Sunday, 14 June 2009
8. A Critique of the Hindu Council Report 'Caste in India' by Gail Omvedt
(Dalits in Diaspora/Replies to the The Hindu Council/Forum UK)
... productive agrarian society.  In contrast, Vedic society was a semi-nomadic one, based on lineage and relatively loose strata (known as the brahmans or priests, the rajanya or nobles, and the vis ...
Wednesday, 07 January 2009
9. Indeginous Indian Tribal Society
(Micropedia Dalitica/Micropedia Dalitica from S to Z)
  Indian Tribal Society - the building blocks of Indian society Indigenous Indian or adivasi tribal clans were the original building blocks of the castes or caste-clusters. Every aspect ...
Saturday, 06 December 2008
10. Banda The Brave
(Micropedia Dalitica/Micropedia Dalitica from A to F)
... all eat together; and differences between the menial and the respectable having disappeared, they untied together as one. The lowest sweeper and the raja  of high status sharing water and food, did ...
Saturday, 06 December 2008
11. Ravidas the First Utopian
(Micropedia Dalitica/Micropedia Dalitica from L to R)
... many Rajas and Amirs who were sent to fight them and put up such a fight that the contemporrary chroniclers described their battles as another Mahabharta. In the end they were valliantly defeated and in ...
Saturday, 06 December 2008

Rquotes

Lokayatics (Quotes)

On Holy Writs

What pompous talk they revel in, those foolish ones who take their stand.

On argued 'word' of holy writ, professing there is naught save this!

On Asceticism

If a person gets success by abandoning all the activities except maintenance of body as recluses do, all the aquatic animals would have achieved success.


On Philosophical Inference

We accept the inference which is this wordly. We condemn inference

which is used beyond this world only to prove hereafter etc. That inference is merely baseless and utopian by nature.

On Creator

No one sharpens the thorns, no one variegates the animals and birds.

Likewise nobody does make the sugercanes sweet and the tree of Nimba bitter. All this is but natural.

On Vedantist and Buddhists

If you can call respectfully the Vedanta a Scripture that denies the existence of even

this world which is proved by direct perception, then why do you condemn the Buddhists?

Old Testament of Indian Atheism by Surendra Ajnat, Bheem Patrika Publications, Jullundhar, India,



Newsflash

The Times of India

8 Indian states have more poor than 26 poorest African nations
PTI, Jul 12, 2010, 04.18pm IST

LONDON: Acute poverty prevails in eight Indian states, including Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal, together accounting for more poor people than in the 26 poorest African nations combined, a new 'multidimensional' measure of global poverty has said.

The new measure, called the Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI), was developed and applied by the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative with UNDP support.

It will be featured in the forthcoming 20 th anniversary edition of the UNDP Human Development Report.

An analysis by MPI creators reveals that there are more 'MPI poor' people in eight Indian states (421 million in Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal) than in the 26 poorest African countries combined (410 million).

The new poverty measure that gives a multidimensional picture of people living in poverty, and is expected to help target development resources more effectively, its creators said.

The MPI supplants the Human Poverty Index, which had been included in the annual Human Development Reports since 1997.

The 2010 UNDP Human Development Report will be published in late October, but research findings from the Multidimensional Poverty Index were made available today at a policy forum in London and on line on the websites of OPHI and the UNDP Human Development Report.

The MPI assesses a range of critical factors or 'deprivations' at the household level: from education to
health outcomes to assets and services.

Taken together, these factors provide a fuller portrait of acute poverty than simple income measures, according to OPHI and UNDP.

The measure reveals the nature and extent of poverty at different levels: from household up to regional, national and international level.

This new multidimensional approach to assessing poverty has been adapted for national use in Mexico, and is now being considered by Chile and Colombia.

"The MPI is like a high resolution lens which reveals a vivid spectrum of challenges facing the poorest households," said OPHI Director Dr Sabina Alkire, who created the MPI with Professor James Foster of George Washington University and Maria Emma Santos of OPHI.

The UNDP Human Development Report Office is also joining forces with OPHI to promote international discussions on the practical applicability of this multidimensional approach to measuring poverty.