Volume 17 01
Volume 17 01
Volume 17 01
.... I take my vow that I shall lay down may life in defence of our land.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar
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DR BABASAHEB AMBEDKAR
WRITINGS AND SPEECHES
VOL. 17
PART ONE
DR. B. R. AMBEDKAR AND HIS
EGALITARIAN REVOLUTION
PART ONE
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PART ONE
PART ONE
Edited by
Secretary
Education Department
Government of Maharashtra
Publisher:
Dr. Ambedkar Foundation
Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment, Govt. of India
15, Janpath, New Delhi - 110 001
Phone : 011-23357625, 23320571, 23320589
Fax : 011-23320582
Website : www.ambedkarfoundation.nic.in
Printer
M/s. Tan Prints India Pvt. Ltd., N. H. 10, Village-Rohad, Distt. Jhajjar, Haryana
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Kumari Selja
MESSAGE
Babasaheb Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, the Chief Architect of Indian Constitution was
a scholar par excellence, a philosopher, a visionary, an emancipator and a true
nationalist. He led a number of social movements to secure human rights to the
oppressed and depressed sections of the society. He stands as a symbol of struggle
for social justice.
The Government of Maharashtra has done a highly commendable work of
publication of volumes of unpublished works of Dr. Ambedkar, which have brought
out his ideology and philosophy before the Nation and the world.
In pursuance of the recommendations of the Centenary Celebrations Committee
of Dr. Ambedkar, constituted under the chairmanship of the then Prime Minister
of India, the Dr. Ambedkar Foundation (DAF) was set up for implementation of
different schemes, projects and activities for furthering the ideology and message
of Dr. Ambedkar among the masses in India as well as abroad.
The DAF took up the work of translation and publication of the Collected Works
of Babasaheb Dr. B.R. Ambedkar published by the Government of Maharashtra
in English and Marathi into Hindi and other regional languages. I am extremely
thankful to the Government of Maharashtras consent for bringing out the works
of Dr. Ambedkar in English also by the Dr. Ambedkar Foundation.
Dr. Ambedkars writings are as relevant today as were at the time when
these were penned. He firmly believed that our political democracy must stand on
the base of social democracy which means a way of life which recognizes liberty,
equality and fraternity as the principles of life. He emphasized on measuring the
progress of a community by the degree of progress which women have achieved.
According to him if we want to maintain democracy not merely in form, but also
in fact, we must hold fast to constitutional methods of achieving our social and
economic objectives. He advocated that in our political, social and economic life,
we must have the principle of one man, one vote, one value.
There is a great deal that we can learn from Dr. Ambedkars ideology and
philosophy which would be beneficial to our Nation building endeavor. I am glad
that the DAF is taking steps to spread Dr. Ambedkars ideology and philosophy
to an even wider readership.
I would be grateful for any suggestions on publication of works of Babasaheb
Dr. Ambedkar.
(Kumari Selja)
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Kumari Selja
Minister for Social Justice & Empowerment, Govt. of India
and
Chairperson, Dr. Ambedkar Foundation
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MAHARASHTRA
FOREWORD
(Sushilkumar Shinde)
Chief Minister
(XIII)
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PREFACE
(XVI)
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EDITORIAL
(XXIX)
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CONTENTS
Sr. No. Subject Page
FOREWORD (XI)
PREFACE (XV)
EDITORIAL (XVII)
SectionI
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA
SectionII
1. I have no Homeland 51
SectionIII
SectionIV
SectionV
MOVEMENTS
CONTENTSContd.
Sr. No. Subject Page
(1) (2) (3)
20. I shall stand for Principle and will fight alone for
it 284
(XXXII)
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CONTENTSContd.
Sr. No. Subject Page
(1) (2) (3)
23. Dr. Ambedkar challenges Gwyer Award 290
24. I am Anxious more than Mr. Jinnah 300
(XXXIII)
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CONTENTSContd.
(XXXIV)
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CONTENTSContd.
APPENDICES
AppendixI : Brute force will not sustain
Untouchability 453
(XXXV)
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SECTION I
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 3
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 5
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 7
small groups in the city. Some were busy packing and a few
were taking their meals before dispersing for their villages.
The majority of the delegates had by now left the town. The
rowdies pounced upon the delegates in the pandal, knocked
down their food in the dust, pounded the utensils and
belaboured some before they knew what had happened. There
was utter confusion in the pandal. Up-till now the orthodox
had lost their conscience. They now showed signs of losing
their senses !
Untouchable children, women and delegates, who were
strolling in the streets of Mahad, were frightened at the
sudden sweep of this event. Stray individuals amongst them
were beaten. They had to run into Muslim houses for shelter.
The local Mamlatdar and the Police Inspector, who failed to
check the rowdies, saw Dr. Ambedkar in this matter at four
Oclock in the evening at the Travellers Bungalow where
Dr. Ambedkar and his party were staying during the days of
the Conference. You control others, I will control my people,
said Dr. Ambedkar to the officers, and he hurried to the scene
with two or three of his lieutenants. In the street a batch of
rowdies mobbed him, but he calmly tried to soothe them by
telling that there was no desire nor any plan on their part to
enter the temple. He went ahead, saw things for himself and
returned to the Bungalow. Up to this moment about twenty
persons from the Untouchables were seriously wounded. A
doctor was sent for. He came. He jeered at them for their
ill-timed adventure and dressed their wounds !
The rowdies then began patrolling the main streets and
assaulting members of the Depressed Classes who were in
stray batches on the way to their villages. But the most
reprehensible part of their conduct was that they sent messages
to their henchmen to punish the delegates of the Conference
in their respective villages. In obedience to this mandate
assaults were committed on a number of Mahar men and
women either before or after they had reached their villages.
Meanwhile, this news of the brutal attack on the delegates
spread like wild fire. When Dr. Ambedkar returned to the
bungalow, he saw about a hundred men impatiently awaiting his
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 9
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 11
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 13
1
: Keer. Pp. 77, 79, 89-90.
2
: Bombay Secret Abstract, dated 16th July 1927.
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II
1
: Source Material Vol. I, P. 13.
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 15
III
No. H/3447
dated 22nd December 1927.
To,
The D. S. P.,
Kolaba, Alibag.
Sir,
Reference.Para 868 of the B. S. A. current.
In this connection a meeting of the Depressed Classes was
held on the night of 21st instant when Dr. B. R. Ambedkar,
Bar-at-Law presided over an audience of about 250 people.
The President, Sambhaji Santoji Waghmare, Nimandarkar,
Kholwadekar and Junnarkar made speeches advising the
people to join the Satyagraha Movement which is coming off on
the 25th instant at Mahad in connection with the prohibition
against the Untouchables use of the water tank.
I have & c.
(Sd.)
D. C. P., S. B.
22nd December 1927.1
Meantime, the Mahad Municipality revoked on August 4,
1927, its resolution of 1924 under which it had declared
the Chawdar Tank open to the Depressed Classes.
Dr. Ambedkar accepted the challenge and on September 11,
at a public meeting in Damodar Hall, Bombay, a committee
was formed to devise ways and means to make the struggle
for re-establishing the right of the Depressed Classes to the
Mahad Tank a success, and to fix the dates and details. Four
days afterwards the committee met at Dr. Ambedkars office
and announced December 25 and 26, 1927, as the dates for
offering the satyagraha.
The day of the proposed Conference and the satyagraha
at Mahad was drawing near. Mahad began to stir again. The
opponents of the struggle held a meeting on November 27, 1927, at
the Veereshwar Temple to formulate a plan to flout the attempts
of Dr. Ambedkar and the Depressed Classes to take water from
1
: Source Material, Vol. I, Pp. 13-14.
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 17
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 19
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 21
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 23
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 25
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 27
moment now has come when you should think twice before
you strike the blow. You know well that the Satyagraha
movement started by Gandhi, he proceeded, was backed
up by the people as it was against a foreign domination.
Our struggle is against the mass of Caste Hindus and
naturally we have little support from outside. Taking these
facts into consideration. I feel, we should not antagonise
the Government and put it on the side of our opposition.
It is not beneficial either.
Do not suppose, asserted the leader, that if you
postpone the issue humiliation will be its concomitant. As
regards my position, I assure you I am prepared to face
the three-fold danger-breaking of an order, being charged
with a breach of rules governing the conduct of a lawyer
and the possibility of imprisonment. My brothers, he
sofetly concluded, you rest assured that a postponement
of this struggle will not mean that we have given up the
struggle. The fight will go on till we establish our claims
to this Tank. l
Satyagraha postponed
As a result of deliberations, the following resolution was
adopted:
Taking into consideration the fact that the touchable
classes of Mahad by obtaining a temporary injunction from
the Civil Court at the last hour against the Depressed
Classes bring them into conflict with the Government
which had yesterday morning resolved to offer Satyagraha
have after listening to the Collector and after taking into
consideration the assurance given by him in the open
Conference that the Government have every sympathy
for the Depressed Classes in the struggle for equal rights
resolved that Satyagraha be postponed till the decision of
the Civil Court. 2
1
: Keer, Pp. 102-103.
2
: The Indian National Herald, dated 31st December 1927.
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 29
Maharashtras Mind
For some weeks past Dr. Ambedkar and the Satyagraha
Conference of Untouchables at Mahad have been the subject
of much adverse comment not only in the Orthodox Hindu
Press but also in journals that are definitely committed to
the removal of Untouchability. Most of the Marathi journals
came under the second variety and may generally speaking
be divided into three classes, viz, N. C. O., Responsivist
and Non-Brahman. The principal points that these journals
make in their attacks against Dr. Ambedkar and his friends
are (1) his alleged excess of burning the Manusmriti, and
(2) his alleged acquiescence in the Kolaba Collectors order
to stop Satyagraha. In the whole controversy there are many
other charges and countercharges made against either party,
but they are not very material. Dr. Ambedkar has now
published in Bahishkrit-Bharat quite a lengthy account of
the Conference and met the charges made against him. He
does not fight shy of the first accusation against him and
defends it by saying that in as much Manusmriti ordains
and sanctifies the age-long oppression and exploitation of the
Untouchable Hindus by the socalled High-Class Hindus, this
main source of present day Hindu law deserves to be burnt.
While meeting the second charge, Dr. Ambedkar takes the
wind out of the sails of his opponents when he states that no
gagging order was ever passed against and therefore there
never arose any question of disobeying it. All that he did, he
was pursuaded to postpone the Satyagraha to a later day by
the Collector of Kolaba and he did entirely in the interests
of the Satyagrahis and the Untouchables. He leaves perfect
liberty to his critics to say anything against him on this
distinct ground. 1
The case, Hindu versus Untouchables regarding
ownership of Chawdar Tank was fixed for hearing on
12th January 1928 in the Court of Second Class Sub-
Judge; Mahad. Dr. B. R. Ambedkar started preparation
for pleading the case. He wrote a letter on 24th
January 1928 to Advocate Markand Dattatraya Vaidya to
1
: The Bombay Chronicle, dated 27th February 1928.
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 31
Yours sincereley
Sd/-B. R. Ambedkar 1
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 3, Pp. 239, 244, 245.
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 33
Within A Month
To see them and to say they were Untouchables would be
absurd. All the same in the eyes of the orthodox they were
so. They have not only to cure themselves of Untouchability
but have to uplift the orthodox who are immersed in the
slough of prejudice. Their struggle is an essentially patriotic
and essentially human struggle.
With such a huge dead weight the nation cannot rise. So
long as equal elementary rights are not conceded and assured
to them, Hinduism shall stand shackled and manacled. In
asserting their rights and in raising themselves, these warriors
of the so-called Untouchable classes are raising the country
and the Hindu religion. Dr. Ambedkar is now busy organising
the next campaign in right earnest. It has been decided to
start it within a month probably on the Hindu New Years
Day when every Hindu house-holder flies a flag. The leaders
of these Depressed Classes propose to fly their flag of equal
human rights to all on that day and, God willing, they will
do it. 1
This is an article by D. V. Pradhan about Mahad
Satyagraha
TRIUMPH OF JUSTICE
When in March last, Dr. Ambedkar led the Untouchables
to the Chawdar Tank at Mahad, the orthodox section of
the Caste Hindus lost their sleep, appetite and all over the
Sacrilege and mercilessly belaboured the poor unsupported
Untouchables while they were returning from the tank.
Soon after, criminal proceedings were taken against the
rowdies and they were punished for disturbing the public
peace. Every effort was made by these so-called Protectors
of the religion to oppose the Untouchables from coming
near the tank and they were encouraged in their action by
the orthodox press. It was to assert their right of ordinary
human privileges, the Untouchables launched the Satyagraha
Movement, and in December last, a conference of about 10,000
assembled and unanimously resolved to march on to the
tank. But the Orthodox Caste Hindus who smelt this resolve
1
: The Indian National Herald, dated 28th February 1928.
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 35
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 37
No Special Preserve
Whatever may be the final decision of the suit on its
merits, I am, for the present, thoroughly satisfied, that the
Chawdar Tank in suit is Government Municipal property
and not the private property of particular individuals as
alleged by Plaintiffs. The question then is whether plaintiffs
have a right to exclude Defendants from enjoyment thereof.
The answer is obviously No. In the case of such property
there cannot be any reservation in favour of a particular
class of community, and the Defendants have as much a
right to its enjoyment as the Plaintiffs have. No question of
irreparable injury therefore arises. In this case the property
being Municipal property and the Defendant having as much
a right to use it as the Plaintiffs, their exercise of that right
cannot be said to cause any injury to Plaintiffs.
Lame Arguments of Plaintiffs Counsel
It is argued for the Plaintiffs by their learned pleader
Mr. Virkar that on their own admission, the Defendants
have not up to now enjoyed the use of the tank in suit.
But, when once it is shown that the property is not private
but public and open to all members of the public, the mere
non-user of the tank by the Defendants during howsoever
long a term of years cannot in any way derogate from their
title. I am satisfied from the evidence produced before me
that the tank in suit is not the private property of the
Plaintiffs, but that it is Government Municipal property,
and the Defendants have as much a right to its enjoyment
as the Plaintiffs have and that any interference with the
exercise of such right would be wholly illegal.
I cannot conclude this order without expressing my regret
at the inconvenience and hardship caused to the Defendants
by the injunction granted by me, temporary though it was,
and at having been instrumental in heaping one more wrong
upon a community already labouring under the most cruel
and unjust social wrongs. I dissolve the injunction issued
by me. 1
1
: The Bombay Chronicle, dated 3rd March 1928.
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MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 39
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 41
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 43
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 45
MAHAD SATYAGRAHA 47
are not really on all fours. In such case long practice acquiesced
in by the other castes and communities may naturally give
rise to a presumption of dedication to the exclusive use of the
higher castes, and may throw upon the Untouchables the
burden of proving that they are among the people for whose
worship a particular temple exists. No such presumption of
a lawful origin of the custom can be said to arise here.
We therefore agree with the learned Assistant Judge that
the appellants have not established the immemorial custom
which they allege. Had they succeeded on this point it might
have been necessary to consider whether the custom were
unreasonable or contrary to public policy (though strictly
speaking, it was not pleaded in the lower courts). It would
certainly have been necessary to consider the legal effect of
the vesting of the Chawdar Tank in the Municipality, and the
question whether in any case the appellants could be granted
any relief in this suit in which the legal owner is not a party.
But as it is not necessary to decide these questions in the
view we take of the case, and as they have not been very
fully or effectively argued, we prefer to express no opinion.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
The seal of the By order of the Court
High Court at Sd/- R. S. Bavdekar,
Bombay. Registrar
Sd/-
High Court Appellate For Deputy Registrar
Side certified copy the 28th day of June 1960.1
Bombay.
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 3, Pp. 258-263.
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SECTION II
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1
I HAVE NO HOMELAND
In the third week of July 1931, the names of the delegates
to the second session of the Round Table Conference were
announced. Dr. B. R. Ambedkar and Mahatma Gandhi were
invited to attend the Conference in London. It was not
decided as yet whether Mahatma Gandhi would attend the
Round Table Conference. Naturally all eyes were focussed on
Manibhuvan at Bombay where Mahatma Gandhi was staying.
Gandhiji wanted to sound Dr. Ambedkar as to his demands.
So Gandhi wrote Ambedkar,
Dr. Mr. Ambedkar,
I would come to see you to-night at 8 p.m. if you can
spare that time. I would gladly come over to your place if it
is inconvenient for you to come.
I HAVE NO HOMELAND 53
for the responsibilities of our action lie with the land that
dubs me a traitor. If at all I have rendered any national
service as you say, helpful or beneficial, to the patriotic cause
of this country, it is due to my unsullied conscience and not
due to any patriotic feelings in me. If in my endeavour to
secure human rights for my people, who have been trampled
upon in this country for ages, I do any disservice to this
country, it would not be a sin; and if any harm does not
come to this country through my action, it may be due to
my conscience. Owing to the promptings of my conscience
I have been striving to win human rights for my people
without meaning or doing any harm to this country.
The atmosphere turned grim. Faces changed colour.
Gandhi was growing restless. He wanted to give a turn to
Dr. Ambedkars talk. Just then Dr. Ambedkar asked him
the most pertinent question which was the object of the
interview.
Ambedkar: Everybody knows that the Muslims and
the Sikhs are socially, politically and economically more
advanced than the Untouchables. The first session of the
Round Table Conference has given political recognition to the
Muslim demands and has recommended political safeguards
for them. The Congress has agreed to their demands. The
first session has also given recognition to the political rights
of the Depressed Classes and has recommended for them
political safeguards and adequate representation. According
to us that is beneficial to the Depressed Classes. What is
your opinion?
Gandhiji: I am against the political separation of the
Untouchables from the Hindus. That would be absolutely
suicidal.
Ambedkar (Rising): I thank you for your frank opinion.
It is good that I know now where we stand as regards this
vital problem. I take leave of you.*
Dr. Ambedkar left the hall, his face beaming with a fiery
resolve to fight out the issue with all his might and to win
human rights for his down-trodden people.
* The NavyugAmbedkar Special Number, 13 th April 1947.
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I HAVE NO HOMELAND 55
1
. The Times of India, dated 17th August 1931.
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2
WHY I SHOULD BE PROUD OF
THAT RELIGION......
At the Ballard Pier, Dr. B. R. Ambedkar received a
telegram from Gandhi asking him to see the latter in Yeravda
Jail. Dr. Ambedkar wired back to Gandhi that he would see
him on his return from Delhi. The next day Dr. Ambedkar
received a wire from Dr. Ba Maw of Rangoon which said:
Burma anti-separatist leaders proceeding to Delhi next week
to meet Indian leaders during the Assembly session. They are
anxious to discuss Burma constitutional situation with you
and other leaders. We, therefore, request you to meet the
deputation in Delhi on 4th and 5th February. Kindly wire
your Delhi address to enable us to get in touch with you there.
Reply U Chit Hlaing, 80, Hermitage Rd., Rangoon,U Chit
Hlaing and Dr. Ba Maw. Several congratulatory messages
were received in Dr. Ambedkars office from all quarters of
the country. One of them was from the Thiya Yuvajan Samaj
of Ernakulam, congratulating their great leader gratefully on
the bold fight he gave at the Round Table Conference for the
rights and liberties of the Depressed Classes and the people
of the Native States.
Immediately Dr. Ambedkar left Bombay for Delhi to
attend the informal meeting of delegates to the Round Table
Conference convened by the Viceroy. After his return from
Delhi, he wired to Gandhi that he would be able to see him
on the 4th February. Gandhi informed Dr. Ambedkar by
wire on February 3: Wire just received tomorrow 12-30 will
suitGandhi. It is clear that Dr. Ambedkar could not meet
the Burma delegation in Delhi as he wanted to see Gandhi
in Yeravda Jail on February 4, 1933.
Accompanied by S. N. Shivtarkar, Dolas, Upasham, Kowly,
Ghorpade and Keshavrao Jedhe, Dr. Ambedkar entered Yeravda
Jail at 12-30, on February 4. In a happy mood Gandhi got up and
welcomed the visitors. After a while, the conversation turned to
the question of temple entry. Gandhi requested Dr. Ambedkar
to lend his support to Dr. Subbarayans Bill and that of Ranga
Iyer. Dr. Ambedkar flatly refused to have anything to do with
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1
: Keer, Pp. 226-227
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3
WHAT MORE GANDHI EXPECTED
FROM THE SANATANISTS?
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar decided to sound Gandhi on the
question of the panel and primary elections of the Depressed
Class candidates in the light of the coming constitution of India.
He was in a hurry to make preparations for his departure
to London. Yet he had to attend meetings, to attend courts
or dispose of the cases, to make arrangements for domestic
affairs, and to select books. Accompanied by Mr. More, Shinde,
Gaikwad and Chavan, he saw Gandhi on April 23, 1933 in
Yeravda Jail. Gandhi and Ambedkar sat in chairs under the
mango tree and Mahadev Desai sat nearby with a note book
and pencil.
At first Dr. Ambedkar said that the method of panel
would be expensive and told Gandhi that candidates from the
Depressed Classes, who would contest the general election,
should have secured at least 25 per cent of the votes of the
Depressed Classes in the primary election. Gandhi replied
that he would give consideration to the matter and would
inform him about his reaction to his London address. Gandhi,
then, gave a bunch of flowers to Dr. Ambedkar and diverted
the conversation to the question of removal of Untouchability
and said that the Sanatanists were decrying him (Gandhi) as
a devil, Daitya. Dr. Ambedkar asked Gandhi what more he
expected from the Sanatanists ! Gandhi caught the thread and
said that the leader of the Depressed Classes himself was not
pleased with his work. In the end Gandhi asked Ambedkar
about the date of his return from London. Dr. Ambedkar
replied that it would be about August 1933. Gandhi wished
Dr. Ambedkar bon voyage and the interview ended. 1
ll
1
. Keer, P. 238.
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4
TO TAKE LEGAL STEPS AGAINST HIGH CASTE
HINDUS WHO HARASSED UNTOUCHABLES
Talk with Dr. Ambedkar
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar and members of his group had a lengthy
talk with Mahatma Gandhi at Mani Bhuvan on Saturday, the 16th
June 1934 morning on the question of the progress of the Harijan
Movement has done since Gandhiji launched the campaign against
Untouchability.
Gandhiji, it appears, told the deputationists that his tour in
more than 200 villages had impressed him with the fact that the
movement against Untouchability was making rapid progress and
the evil is slowly dying away.
Dr. Ambedkar is stated to have a different view from this view
and said that Gandhijis presence in a village or place, created an
abnormal atmosphere as the presence of a saint or sadhu would do,
and people temporarily forget the difference. Gandhi was, therefore,
not in a position to judge the exact situation.
He is also stated to have suggested to Gandhiji that the Harijan
Board should render financial assistance to Harijans to take legal
steps against High Caste Hindus who harassed the former.
Gandhiji is stated to have replied that persuasion was the best
method of removing the evil and that the question of giving legal
aid would have to be considered by the Board.
One of the members of the deputation is stated to have asked
Gandhiji whether the Harijan Board would be in existence after
August 7? upto which time Gandhiji is under a vow to take part
only in non-political activities. The same member asked Gandhiji,
if he had received any divine inspiration as to his future action.
Gandhiji replied that he had received none so far and restored,
If you want you can as well receive inspiration from God.
Ambedkar Deputation
The members of the Deputation led by Dr. Ambedkar who met
Mahatma Gandhi on Saturday were:
Mr. G. V. Naik
Dr. P. G. Solanki
Mr. Amritrao Khambe, and
Mr. Baburao Gaikwad. l
1
: The Bombay Chronicle, dated 17th June 1934.
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SECTION III
BLANK
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SUMMARY OF RECOMMENDATIONS
SECTION I
SECTION II
SECTION III
SECTION IV
SECTION V
his teacher in the school. All eyes were rivetted upon the
speaker. He was not the least agitated. He knew his mind;
he knew what to say and how to say it. Except the Premier
MacDonald and Joshi none from that August Assembly had
seen poverty in its crudest and ugliest form. There were
highlights in the Conference, Pundits and literateurs, but
he was the only leader who had attained the highest degree
in the academic world, the Doctorate in Science. This man
was Dr. Ambedkar, the leader of the suppressed humanity
in India.
At the outset, Dr. Ambedkar declared that in speaking
before the Conference, he was placing the viewpoint of one-
fifth of the total population of British Indiaa population
as large as the population of England or Francewhich was
reduced to a position worse than that of a serf or a slave. He
then declared to the surprise of all that the Untouchables in
India were also for replacing the existing Government by a
Government of the people, for the people and by the people.
He said that this change in the attitude of the Untouchables
to British rule in India was surprising and a momentous
phenomenon. And justifying his stand, he observed with a
rise in his voice and a glow in his eyes: When we compare
our present position with the one which it was our lot to bear
in Indian society of pre-British days, we find that, instead of
marching on, we are marking time. Before the British, we
were in the loathsome condition due to our Untouchability.
Has the British Government done anything to remove it?
Before the British, we could not draw water from the village
well. Has the British Government secured us the right to
the well? Before the British, we could not enter the temple?
Can we enter now? Before the British, we were denied entry
into the Police Force. Does the British Government admit
us into the force? Before the British. we were not allowed
to serve in the Military. Is that career now open to us? To
none of these questions can we give an affirmative answer.
Our wrongs have remained as open sores and they have
not been righted, although 150 years of British rule have
rolled away.
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Condition No. IV
ADEQUATE REPRESENTATION IN THE
LEGISLATURES
The Depressed Classes must be given sufficient political
power to influence legislative and executive action for the
purpose of securing their welfare. In view of this they demand
that the following provisions shall be made in the electoral
law so as to give them
(1) Right to adequate representation in the Legislatures of
the Country, Provincial and Central.
(2) Right to elect their own men as their representatives
(a) by adult suffrage, and
(b) by separate electorates for the first ten years and
thereafter by joint electorates and reserved seats,
it being understood that joint electorates shall not
be forced upon the Depressed Classes against their
will unless such joint electorates are accompanied
by adult suffrage.
N.B.Adequate Representation for the Depressed Classes
cannot be defined in quantitative terms until the extent of
representation allowed to other communities is known. But
it must be understood that the Depressed Classes will not
consent to the representation of any other community being
settled on better terms than those allowed to them. They will
not agree to being placed at a disadvantage in this matter. In
any case the Depressed Classes of Bombay and Madras must
have weightage over their population ratio of representation,
irrespective of the extent of representation allowed to other
minorities in the Provinces.
Condition No. V
ADEQUATE REPRESENTATION IN THE SERVICES
The Depressed Classes have suffered enormously at
the hands of the high caste officers who have monopolized
the Public Services by abusing the law or by misusing
the discretion vested in them in administering it to the
prejudice of the Depressed Classes and to the advantage
of the Caste Hindus without any regard to justice, equity
or good conscience. This mischief can only be avoided by
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Condition No. VI
REDRESS AGAINST PREJUDICIAL ACTION
OR NEGLECT OF INTERESTS
In view of the fact that the Majority Rule of the future
will be the rule of the orthodox, the Depressed Classes
fear that such a Majority Rule will not be sympathetic to
them and that the probability of prejudice to their interests
and neglect of their vital needs cannot be overlooked. It
must be provided against particularly because, however
adequately represented the Depressed Classes will be in a
minority in all legislatures. The Depressed Classes think it
very necessary that they should have the means of redress
given to them in the Constitution. It is therefore proposed
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1
: Proceedings of the Sub-Committee No. III (Minorities) Pp. 168-176.
2
:Keer, P. 153.
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Assam .. 100 38 13 51 35 3 .. 1 .. 10
REPRESENTATION IN LEGISLATURES
Figures in brackets=Population basis 1931 figures and depressed percentages as per Simon Report.
Hindus Europeans
Stength of Anglo- Tribal
Muslims Christians Sikhs
Chamber Caste Depressed Total Indians etc.
N.W.F.P.
C.P. .. 100 58 20 78 15 1 .. 2 2 2
(71.3) (15.4) (86.7) (7.1) (3.7)
Madras .. 200 102 40 142 30 14 .. 4 2 8
(15.1) (13.5) (28.6) (56.5) (13)
Panjab .. 100 14 10 24 51 1.5 20 1.5 .. 2
10-10-2013/YS-19-11-2013
Sind and N.W.F.P. Weightage similar to that enjoyed by the Musalmans in the Provinces in which they constitute a
minority of the population shall be given to the Hindu minority in Sind and to the Hindu and Sikh minorities in the N.W.F.P.
98
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Dr. Ambedkar, Sir Mirza Ismail, Jinnah, Tambe and few others
attended it. The British Premier took some of the delegates to
his country home at Chequers. They had a talk there relating
to the Indian problem, but there, too, they could not come to a
settelment.
The Minorities Sub-Committee submitted its report to the
Conference. The last paragraph of that report recorded that the
Minorities and Depressed Classes were definite in their assertion
that they could not consent to any self-governing constitution of
India unless their demands were met in a reasonable manner.
Like Joshi, Jadhav and Paul, Dr. Ambedkar dissented from
the proposals of the Franchise Sub-Committee as in their opinion
the proposals were inadequate, and they pleaded for immediate
introduction of adult franchise. In the written speech, which he
could not make for want of time, Dr. Ambedkar warned the British
Government that it would be betraying the Depressed Classes if
by limiting the franchise the Labour Government left them to
the mercy of those who had taken no interest in their welfare.
Such was his sincerity and devotion to the problem and to
the welfare of his people that Dr. Ambedkar worked day and
night, sought interviews, gave interviews, supplied information,
and even addressed a meeting of some Members of the British
Parliament to acquaint them fully with the problem of the
Untouchables. He took every opportunity of contributing articles
to foreign journals, of issuing statements to the foreign press
and of addressing meetings in London with the sole object of
exposing the intolerable humiliations and unbelievable suffering
under which the Depressed Classes were groaning in India for
ages. In appeal after appeal to the Press he said that the cause of
the Untouchables in India needed the support of the enlightened
world. He, therefore, urged that it was the sacred duty of the
people at large to help the solution of their problem on the basis
of humanity!
The result was that the world came to know for the first time
that the fate of the Untouchables in India was worse than that
of the Negroes in America. The appeal moved some of the British
leaders and consequently a deputation consisting of some Members
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The Indian Daily Mail, in its issue dated 21st July 1931,
congratulating the Doctor upon his nomination to the Federal
Structure Committee, paid a glowing tribute to Dr. Ambedkar.
It said: I congratulate Dr. Ambedkar upon his invitation.
Dr. Ambedkar made a tremendous impression at the Round
Table Conference and his speech at the opening session was
one of the finest bits of oratory delivered during the whole
Conference. His final attitude to the Sankey report was that
of one who does not approve but also who does not object. He
pointed out that he had a mandate to see that no responsible
Government was established unless it was at the same time,
accompanied by a truly representative Government. He
voiced a fear that the proposed form of Government would
be one of the massses by the classes, and his protest found
much echoing sympathy in the Labour and Liberal Party
of Great Britain. On the other hand Dr. Ambedkar will not
play the old fashioned minority game. He is a patriot and is
vitally interested in securing self-government. In the future
discussions, which will centre round the franchise of the senate
and the Federal Assembly, this brilliant representative of the
Depressed Classes is certain to play a most important part.1.
The Sunday Chronicle in its issue dated 26th July
1931. under the initials A.T.T., appreciating the services of
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar as a true nationalist, said; One of the
delegates nominated to the Federal Structure Committee is
my friend Dr. Ambedkar. When he was in London last year
attending the R.T.C. I saw a good deal of him. At heart a
true nationalist he had to put up a stem fight against the
persuasive coquetry of the British diehards who are anxious
to win him over to their side and at the same time his task
was made more difficult by his anxiety to retain his brother
delegate Rao Bahadur Srinivasan within the Nationalist fold.
At the Chesterfield Gardens, time and again, he complained
that Sir Tej Bahadur was giving more to the Princes in the
process of give and take. But he admitted that Sir Tej had
to manouvre through a very difficult situation.2.
: Reprinted, Ganvir, Ambedkar-Gandhi: Teen Mulakhati, (Marathi)
1
Pp.6-7.
2
: Ibid. Pp. 7-8.
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The Kesari and several other news-papers expressed
satisfaction at the nomination of Dr. Ambedkar. Congratulating
the Doctor and N. M. Joshi, the Journal of the Servants of
India Society observed: Being drawn from the humble ranks
of the society. one representing the labour classes and the
other Depressed Classes, they are necessarily strangers to
high politics as they are understood in this country. They
have the simple faith of the simple folk whose cause they
have espoused, and they will not be deterred by the superior
smile of the eminent personages surrounding them, from
insisting on the literal application of certain principles which
they have been taught to hold as inviolable. A little before
this the London representative of the Free Press Journal,
a leading nationalist daily in Bombay, in his reply to Miss
Mayo had eulogised the services which Dr. Ambedkar had
rendered at the first session of the Round Table Conference,
and said that Dr. Ambedkar was a fearless, independent and
patriotic-minded leader whose fearlessness was unbearable to
both Hindus and Muslims, and that his opening speech at
the first session of the Round Table Conference was the best
speech in the whole proceedings of the Conference.
It was not decided as yet whether Gandhi would attend
the Round Table Conference. Naturally all eyes were focussed
on Manibhuvan at the Malabar Hill in Bombay, owing to
the mysterious suspense created by Gandhis stagecraft and
statecraft. In the bustle and hurry Gandhi wanted to sound
Ambedkar as to his demands. So Gandhi wrote to Ambedkar
on August 6, 1931, informing him that he would come to see
the latter at eight oclock that night if Dr. Ambedkar could
spare the time. Gandhi added that he would gladly come
over to Dr. Ambedkars residence, if it was inconvenient to
Dr. Ambedkar to come to him.1.
Accordingly the meeting between Ambedkar and Gandhi
was held on August 14, 1931, at Manibhuvan, at two in the
afternoon.
SEGREGATING UNTOUCHABLES
Dr. Ambedkar, the Depressed Classes leader, who saw
Mr. Gandhi before he sailed by the Mooltan to take part in the Round
Table Conference, is said to have told the Mahatma a few hometruths
1
:Keer;Pp. 163-64.
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The next day Gandhi expressed his views that the Round
Table Conference delegates were not the chosen ones of the
nation, but chosen ones of the British Government. Not
that Gandhi was not aware of this before his departure to
London. But he now began to twit the delegates. Regarding
Dr. Ambedkars views on States representation on the Federal
Legislatures, Gandhi said that while his sympathies were,
broadly speaking, with Dr. Ambedkar, his reason was wholly
with Gavin Jones and Sir Sultan Ahmed, who echoed the
views of the Princely Order. Gandhi favoured the proposal for
Federation, but supported the standpoint of the Princes as
against the States people, saying: Here we have no right,
in my humble way, to say to the States what they should do
and what they shall not do !
Gandhi then turned to the pivotal problem that was
haunting the delegates. He referred to the problem of special
representation claimed by the different communities, and
said: The Congress has reconciled itself to special treatment
of the Hindu-Muslim-Sikh tangle. There are sound historical
reasons for it, but the Congress will not extend that doctrine
in any shape or form. I listened to the list of special interests.
So far as the Untouchables are concerned, I have not yet
quite grasped what Dr. Ambedkar has to say, but of course,
the Congress will share the onus with Dr. Ambedkar of
representing the interests of the Untouchables. The interests of
the Untouchables are as dear to the Congress as the interests
of any other body or of any other individual throughout the
length and breadth of India. Therefore, I would most strongly
resist any further special representation.
This was nothing but a declaration of war, Ambedkar
observed, by Gandhi and by the Congress against the
Untouchables. With this declaration by Mr. Gandhi, he
added, I knew what Mr. Gandhi would do in the Minorities
Committee which was the main forum for the discussion of
this question.
On September 18 Ambedkar rose and asked Gandhi
in the Federal Structure Committee whether the views
placed by Gandhi regarding the Federal Legislature
and the formation of the Federal Executive were his
own or those of the Congress. When Diwan Bahadur,
Ramaswami Mudaliar stated that the public servants,
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Reservations
IV. Nomenclature
In dealing with this part of the question we would like
to point out that the existing nomenclature of Depressed
Classes is objected to by members of the Depressed Classes
who have given thought to it and also by outsiders who take
interest in them. It is degrading and contemptuous, and
advantage may be taken of this occasion for drafting the
new constitution to alter for official purposes the existing
nomenclature. We think that they should be called Non-Caste
Hindus, Protestant Hindus, or Non-Conformist Hindus or
some such designation, instead of Depressed Classes. We
have no authority to press for any particular nomenclature.
We can only suggest them, and we believe that if properly
explained the Depressed Classes will not hesitate to accept
the one most suitable for them.
We have received a large number of telegrams from the
Depressed Classes all over India supporting the demands
contained in this Memorandum.*
While the session was going on, His Majesty the King-
Emperor gave a reception to the Indian Delegates on November
5. It was arranged that a few Members should speak at the
party. Gandhi was present bareheaded. He was clad in his
customary loin-cloth and wore sandals. The king-Emperor
asked Dr. Ambedkar about the condition of the Untouchables
in India, and when he heard the harrowing tales from
Dr. Ambedkar who narrated them with his flowing heart,
eloquent eyes and scintillating face, he shuddered. The king-
Emperor then inquired of Dr. Ambedkar cordially about
his father and the place of his education, and how he had
achieved academic eminence. 1
*: For previous memorandum see. Appendix to Proceedings of the
Minorities Sub-Committee of the First Session of the Conference. This
Supplementary Memorandum dated 4th November 1931 is printed as
Appendix VII in the original proceedings at Pp. 1409-11.
1
: Keer, p. 181.
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Stereotyped Replies
The hundreds of the Stereotyped replies to the questionnaire
circulated repeat.
The .................... (the blank space is to be filled up by
the name of the Association) is of opinion that the Depressed
Classes cannot secure representation in the general electorates.
Much less can they secure representatives of their own choice.
Even if there was adult suffrage. The reasons are as follows:
(a) In every territorial constituency the Depressed
Classes are in minority of the population and will be a
minority of voters in the electorate much too small to
win a seat for themselves.
(b) Owing to social prejudices no voter of the Higher
Caste will vote for the Depressed Classes candidates.
(c) On the other hand owing to economic dependence
on the higher castes and the religious and social
influence of the Higher Classes voters may be led to
vote for a high caste
1
: Ganvir, Ambedkar Gandhi: Teen Mulakhati, Pp. 22-23.
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1
: The Bombay Chronicle, dated 7th April 1932.
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Misleading Information
Mr. Gavai has taken an early opportunity to issue the
following statement to members of Depressed Classes. Certain
misleading information is being circulated to you that the
Indian Franchise Committee cannot discuss the question of
the system of electorates with individuals or associations that
submit memoranda to it on behalf of the Depressed Classes.
This is very misleading. For in the questionnaire sent by
the Committee under the item representation of Depressed
Classes in paper 2, it is clearly stated what specific proposals
would one make to secure representation of the community
in the legislature.
advice in the matter and asking him about the possibility and
possible date of the Premiers decision on the communal issue.
In another letter written during the same week, Dr. Ambedkar
poured his disgust upon the Hindu Members of the Franchise
Committee and said that he hated their frame of mind which
allowed them to be self-centred and aggressive inside their
own camp and cowardly and yielding outside. He wrote that
he was utterly disgusted with their selfish and thoughtless
attitude and that he would try to keep himself away from
Hindu Society. He was working under mental and physical
pressure. In addition, he was suffering from diarrhoea.
In April the Bengal Namashudra Association held its 14th
Annual Session at the Albert Institute Hall, Calcutta, under
the presidentship of Dr. Kalicharan Mandal. The session
unanimously endorsed Dr. Ambedkars demands. Denouced the
newspapers which unjustly criticized Dr. Ambedkars stand,
and declared that the Congress attitude to their problem was
unsympathetic and impractical.
The Franchise Committee finished its business on May
1,1932; but, as lord Lothian desired to have some discussion
with him on some vital points, Dr. Ambedkar stayed for
a day or two more. The Franchise Committee drafted its
report giving detailed proposals on which to face the revision
of Franchise, and distribution and demar cation of the
constituencies for the new legislatures, Central and Provincial.
As Dr. Ambedkar differed from the Hindu Members of the
Comittee, he submitted to the Committee a separate note. One
of the most important decisions of the Committee was on the
exact definition of the term Depressed Classes. The Indian
Legislature Committee in its decision in 1916, Sir Henry Sharp,
the Educational Commissioner under the Government of India,
and the Southborough Franchise Committee had all grouped
the Depressed Classes with the aboriginals or Hill Tribes,
Criminals or with others, but now the Lothian Franchise
Committee said that they were of the opinion that the term
should be applied only to those who were Untouchables. This
was clearly Dr. Ambedkars victory as he had insisted in his
note to the Committee that the test of Untouchability must
be applied in its notional sense as Untouchability in its literal
sense has ceased to obtain.1
1
: Keer Pp. 196-198
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were never held. Silver bullets were freely used for creating
divisions in the ranks of the Depressed Classes. There have
been also a few clashes ending in violence.
If the Mahatma does not want all this to be repeated on
a larger scale, let him for Gods sake, reconsider his decision
and avert the disastrous consequences. I believe the Mahatma
does not want this. But if he does not desist, in spite of his
wishes these consequences are sure to follow as night follows
the day.
Before concluding this statement, I desire to assure the
public that although I am entitled to say that I regard the
matter as closed I am prepared to consider the proposals of
the Mahatma. I however, trust the Mahatma will not drive
me to the necessity of making a choice between his life and
the rights of my people. For I can never consent to deliver
my people bound hand and foot to the Caste Hindus for
generations to come.1
The declaration of the fast unto death by Mr. Gandhi made
the people learn more about the condition of the Untouchables
and opened their eyes for a while to the passions that were
seething in the bosom of the Untouchables. The people, the
Press and patriots were roused to a realisation that there was
a blot on their society. There was an endless talk about Dr.
Ambedkar in every political party, in every social circle and
in every religious institution. He was flooded with telegrams
and letters, some threatening his life, some appealing to his
conscience, and some supporting his stand.
As declared, the Conference of the Hindu leaders was
held amidst this tense situation at the spacious Hall of the
Indian Merchants Chamber on September 19, 1932, under the
presidentship of Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya. Dr. Ambedkar
and Dr. Solanki were seated just near the Presidents chair.
Rajah and Dr. Moonje came to the Hall arm-in-arm.2
Among those present were: Rajendraprasad, C. Rajgopalachari,
Pandit Kunzaru, T. Prakasham, Dr. Chauthiram, Swami
Satyanand, Mr. Aney, G. A. Gawai, Mr. Shivraj, Mr.
Jagannathan, Mr. Dharmalingam, Mr. Mandal, Sir Chunnilal,
1
: Janata, dated 24th September 1932.
2
: Keer, P. 208.
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They were:
1
: Janata, dated 24th September 1932.
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1
: Reprinted, Khairmode, Vol. 5, Pp. 5657.
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1
: Writings and Speeches, Vol. 9, Pp. 87-90.
2
: Keer, P. 220.
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SECTION IV
BLANK
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enter the Temple. But the entry in the Temple would not
solve the whole problem. Our problem is comprehensive.
It is political, social, religious, economic, educational etc.
The issue of Kalaram Temple entry is a appeal to the
Hindu mind. The high caste Hindus deprived us from the
far ages. Whether the same Hindus are willing to grant
our humanitarian rights will be the question raised from
this Temple entry Satyagraha. Whether the Hindu mind is
willing to accept us as human beings, this is the question to
be tested through this Satyagraha. The high caste Hindus
looked down upon us and treated us even worse than cats
and dogs. We wish to know whether those very Hindus
would give us the status of man or not. This Satyagraha will
provide answer to this question. This Satyagraha is one of
the efforts for bringing about a change of heart among the
high Caste Hindus. Hence the success of this effort depends
on the Hindu mind-set.
Our real problem is not going to be solved by the entry
into the Ram Temple. It will not bring about any radical
change in our life. But this is a test to judge the high
caste Hindu mind. Whether the Hindu mind is willing to
accept the elevated aspirations of the new era that man
must be treated as man; he must be given humanitarian
rights; human dignity should be established is going to
be tested. In order to achieve this goal, we have launched
this Satyagraha. The main question is whether the high
caste Hindus are going to consider these aspects and act
accordingly.
We know that in this temple resides God made of stone.
By having a mere glance at him or by worshiping him, our
problem will not be solved completely. Millions of people
might have visited this temple and have had a glance at the
god uptill now. But who would say that their basic problem
was solved by this act? We know this. But our Satyagraha
today is an effort to bring about a change of heart among
the Hindus. With this principled position we are launching
this Satyagraha. 1
1
: Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkaranchi Patre (Marathi); Shankarrao Kharat,
Pp. 46, 47. English Translation by Editors.
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I beg to remain,
Your Excellencys Most Obedient Servant,
(Sd) B.R.Ambedkar.1
1
: Khairmode. Vol. 3; Pp. 321323.
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Second letter:
BHIMRAO R. AMBEDKAR, Damodar Hall Parel,
M.A., Ph. D., D. Sc, Bombay-12.
Bar-at-law, 11th April 1930.
Member, Legislative Council,
Bombay.
To,
His Excellency the Rt. Honourable Sir,
Frederick Sykes, P. C, G. C. I. E.,
G. B.E.,K. C.B.,C.M.G.,
Governor of Bombay,
Bombay.
May it please Your Excellency,
The Government of Bombay must have received a report
from the District Magistrate of Nasik on the riot that took
place there between the touchables and the Untouchables on
the 9th instant. I feel it necessary to submit to Your Excellency
my reversion of the riot.
Origin of the Riot:According to the practice of the Kala
Ram Temple at Nasik, the Rath (carriage of the God Ram)
was to be taken out in the procession through the city. I
was asked by Inspector Karnik (one of the Police Officers on
duty at the Kala Ram Temple) what attitude I proposed to
adopt the connection with the Rath procession. I told him
that if equal treatment was accorded to Untouchables I had
no objection to the Rath being taken out and I also specified
the nature of the equality of treatment. I had stipulated for
stating that I would insist upon two things
(1) That the Untouchables will participate in dragging
the Rath alongwith the touchables, and (2) the Untouchables
will offer Puja to the Idol in the Rath. Mr. Karnik
then left and turned with the District Magistrate. The
District Magistrate told me that my conditions were
accepted by the touchable Hindus and that the touchables
would bring the Rath to the main door of the temple
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and after they had dragged it for 10 feet from the gate the
Untouchables could join, and together with the touchables
join carrying by holding the rope fastened to the Rath, and
questioned me whether I had any objection to the Rath
procession, to which I replied I had none and in order to
help the cause of peace I went out of my way to sort out
about 50 out of a 5,000 Untouchables and told them that
they alone want to take part in the dragging of the Rath.
Accordingly the Rath was brought out to the temple gate by
the touchables. But the touchables who wanted to decieve both
the Untouchables and the Police Officers did two things
(1) the touchables held the rope so close to one another that
no room was left for the Untouchables to join in, and (2)
the touchables instead of stopping the Rath at-the temple
gate, as previously agreed to, began to run away with it so
as to give no chance to Untouchables to catch the rope and
participate in carrying the Rath. This menacure to violate the
most important condition in the agreement naturally enraged
the feelings of the Untouchables. But the immediate cause of
the fight was the action of the Police Sepoys a great majority
of whom were Caste Hindus, they at once started to assualt
those Untouchables who were struggling to hold a bit of the
rope. The fight was started by the Caste Hindu Police who
openly took the side of the touchable Hindus.
The batch of 50 Untouchables was thus subjected to an
assault from two-sides. The touchable Hindus who had held
the rope were brushing them away and preventing them from
taking a position near the rope and when the Untouchables
were struggling to take a position the caste Hindu Police
were charging with their batons and butt-ends of their rifles.
Seeing their men assualted in this way the rest of the
Untouchables followed the Rath with which the touchables
were running away at a terrific speed. Seeing that the crowd
of the Untouchables pursuing the Rath had come very near
it, the touchables abandoned Rath on the road and went to
adjoining field and began to throw a volley of stones on the
crowd of Untouchables who were standing on the road.
The road was lined on one side by barbed wire and on the
other side by cactus, and consequently the Untouchables could not
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and prohibited people coming from near the Kala Ram Temple.
I do not know if this order contemplates the prevention of
our Satyagrahis from sitting at the temple doors as they have
been doing heretofore.
I most respectfully submit to Your Excellency that there
is a chance (I use this word advisedly as I do not know the
opinion of the Satyagraha Committee) of this order being
respected only if the District Magistrate gives an assurance
that the temple doors will remain closed during the period
stated in his order and that the private door of the Priest
will not remain open to the public.
As I have made clear in my last letter, the fight is between
touchables and the Untouchables and I have no desire to bring
the latter into the conflict with the Government.
I am anxious to have an interview with Your Excellency
to discuss the situation personally and if Your Excellency is
inclined to grant one I am available till 2 p.m. tomorrow.
Awaiting the favour of Your Excellencys early reply,
I remain,
Your Excellencys Most Obedient Servant,
Sd/- B. R. Ambedkar.1
----------
My dear Bhaurao,
I am in receipt of your letter of the 23rd Feb. It is very
kind of you to have asked me for my views on the propriety
of the Depressed Classes launching upon a Satyagraha at
the Kala Ram Temple in Nasik on the coming Ram Navami
Day. I have no position in saying that such a move would be
quite uncalled for and should not merely be suspended but
should be stopped altogether. This may appear strange and
surprising coming as it does from one who was the author
of the Satyagraha. But I am afraid to declare this change of
front. I did not launch the temple entry movement because I
wanted the Depressed Classes to become worshippers of idols
which they were prevented from worshipping or because I
believed that temple entry would make them equal members
in and an integral part of the Hindu Society. So far as this
aspect of the case is concerned I would advise the Depressed
Classes to insist upon a complete overhauling of Hindu Society
and Hindu theology before they consent to become an integral
part of Hindu Society. I started temple entry Satyagrha only
because I felt that was the best way of energising the Depressed
Classes and making them conscious of their position. As I
believe I have achieved that purpose I have no more use for
temple entry. I want the Depressed Classes to concentrate
their energy and resources on politics and education and I
hope that they will realise the importance of both.
Your sincerely,
Sd/-B. R. Ambedkar.1
Accordingly the Satyagraha was stopped immediately.
Editors
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 3; Pp. 357-358.
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No Longer Needed
1
: The Times of India, 21st November 1934.
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1
: Writings and Speeches, Vol. 9, Pp. 246-249.
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blank
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SECTION V
OTHER MOVEMENTS
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1
I AM A MAN OF CHARACTER
Subhedar Ramji Maloji, father of Bhimrao Ambedkar passed
away on February 2, 1913. Bhimrao Ambedkar was now left to stand
on his own feet. His insatiable thirst for knowledge and the spur
of ambition made him restless. He was now in no mood to return
to his job in Baroda. His short stay there had been unhappy. At
last another chance came his way in June 1913. The Maharaja of
Baroda*, at this juncture, thought of sending some students to the
U.S.A for higher studies at Columbia University.1
While H. H. Maharaja was at Bombay, Bhimrao met him at the
Malbar Hill Palace in order to apprise him of the inconvenience faced
by him in service and residental facilities while at Baroda. H. H.
Maharaja was already knowing almost everything about Bhimrao.
Without mentioning a single word about the inconvenience faced
by Bhimrao, H. H. Maharaja was discussing various subjects with
him. Bhimrao gave his considered opinion on whatever questions the
H. H. Maharaja asked. After about half an hour discussion the
H. H. Maharaja asked him to come tomorrow at the same time.
Since H. H. Maharaja did not speak anything about the complaints
Bhimrao had made felt unhappy.
The Next day, H. H. Maharaja asked which subject would he
like to study. Bhimrao replied, Sociology, Economics and especially
Public Finance.
H. H. Maharaja : What will you do by studying these
subjects?
Bhimrao : The study of these subjects would give me
clues for improving the depressed condition
of my society and I shall undertake the
work of social reforms on those lines.
H. H. Maharaja : (Laughingly) But you are going to serve us,
ist it? Then how are you going to study,
serve and also do the social service?
(2) Mr. Bhimrao Ambedkar will not devote any time to the
study of other subject or subjects to the detriment of his study
of those mentioned in the agreement without the consent of
His Highness Government.
(3) He shall submit quarterly reports of his conduct and
progress to the Minister of Education, Baroda State, through
the Educational Authorities under whom he may be studying
or through Dr. H. C. Pumpus under whose care he may be
placed and shall abide by the insrtuctions that may be sent
to him from time to time.
(4) He will receive before departure Rs. 500 for his outfit.
(5) For his onward journey from Bombay to America His
Highness Government will provide second class passage by a
French or German Steamer. He will also be provided with the
same for the return journey, if he returns after successfully
finishing the subject or subjects as mentioned in clause I or
if he is compelled by sickness to return, under a Medical
Certificate, before the completion of his studies. He will also
receive second class railway and boat fare and actual expenses
for bona-fide journeys made in connection with his studies.
(6) Mr. Ambedkar will receive from the date of his starting
from Bombay an allowance of 230 ( two hundred and thirty
pounds) per annum, and in addition the Government will pay
all expenditure.
Incompleteone Page missing
A. C. Joshi
Bhimrao R. Ambedkar
(on Eight Annas Stamp)
Signed and attested before me this day on fourth of
June 1913.
G.M. Shah
Assistant Minister of Education,
Baroda State.
On behalf of Government.1
1
: Rattu: Little known facts of Dr. Ambedkar, Pp. 227-228.
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IN AMERICA
Rs. As. P.
5900-0 Passage
IN ENGLAND
20,434-0-6 1
1
: Rattu: Little known facts of Dr. Ambedkar, Pp. 21-24.
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2
INSTEAD OF A STATUE, A PUBLIC
LIBRARY WILL BE THE BEST MEMORIAL
OF SIR MEHTA
This is the earliest letter of Dr. B. R. Ambedkar sent for
publication while he was a student of Columbia University,
New York, U.S.A. in 1916. A proposal to erect a statue of
Sir Pherozshah Mehta was mooted in the city of Bombay to
be erected in front of the Municipal Office. Dr. Ambedkar
having learnt this through the newspapers, considered it a
most trivial form of memorial of a great man. According to
him the memorial should have utility to the society especially
for spreading the knowledge. He, therefore, proposed a
memorial in the form of a public library in memorium of Sir
Pherozshah Mehta. This letter may be found instructive and
guiding even to-day to the Indian people who have craze for
erecting statues of illustrious personalities. 1
The Late Sir Pherozshah Mehta
To,
The Editor of The Chronicle
Sir,
You will agree with me when I say that in a country like
India so badly situated socially, economically and politically,
the paramount need of the hour is for honest leaders to take
upon themselves the enormous task of regeneration. Such
leaders were found in the persons of the late Messrs Gokhale
and P. M. Mehta, both of whom were entitled to everlasting
gratitude for the zeal and sacrifice with which they represented
our cause. Their identification with the people and the latters
repose in them were so complete that their sudden death
seemed for a while as though it was all natures trick.
It is to their lasting credit that they grappled with many of our
problems, solved a few of them and left the rest for us to face. But
our feelings for the work done by them have completely set aside
our feelings of the future work to be done by us- so much is our
devotion to them. And it is quite natural that we should be more
concerned about raising fitting memorials for those who have
1
: Lokrajya: Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Special Number, April 16, 1981, P.33.
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ll
3
PUBLIC BODIES SHOULD HELP CANVASSER
This is an authority letter of Dr. B. R. Ambedkar issued
to a Canvasser-Editors.
|| Jai Bhavani ||
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 6, Pp. 217-218.
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4
BHAURAO PATILS INSTITUTION
DESERVES SUPPORT
This is a remark made by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar in the
Visit Book of the hostel run by the institution of the Great
Social Reformer and Educationist Karmavir Bhaurao Patil at
SataraEditors.
I am extremely happy to have been able to pay this visit
to the Hostel. It is an unique institution and deserves support
of every man who cares for the best interests of this nation.
Every credit is due to my friend Bhaurao Patil. I am paying
Rs. 20/- to this institution.
Satara:
29-07-1928 Sd./- B. R. Ambedkar.1
ll
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 4, P. 14.
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5
COMPLAINT AGAINST ME IS
ABSOLUTELY UNFOUNDED
Denies Statement alleged to have been made before
Commission.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar has sent us a lengthy statement from
which we take the following material points:
My attention is drawn to the statement appearing in your
issue of 6th instant in which the President of the Sholapur
Municipality has given publicity to the resolution of the
Municipality strongly repudiating the implied suggestion in
my evidence to the statement that the grant to the Depressed
Classes Hostel at Sholapur was stopped as a repercussion of
Hindu-Moslem riot and explaining the facts that led to the
stoppage, of the grant..
The complaint against me seems to be based upon the
supposition that, in the course of my evidence before the Simon
Commission, I stated that the grant given to the Depressed
Classes Hostel at Sholapur was deliberately discontinued by
the Municipality because the Depressed Classes of Sholapur
had refused to help the Higher Class Hindus during the
Hindu-Moslem riots in 1925 which the Municipality holds is
an untrue statement.
My reply to the statement by the Municipality is that its
complaint against me is absolutely unfounded and is based
upon a deliberate misreading of my evidence.
I am sure, every fair-minded man would agree that in
my evidence I have never stated that the grant was stopped
because the Depressed Classes refused to aid the Caste Hindus
in the Hindu-Moslem riot. On the contrary I have clearly
stated that I did not know what the cause was
I wish the Municipality had stopped with vilifying
me for the implication that, it thinks, arises from the
statement made by me on the course of my evidence. It
goes a step further and tries to give what it considers
to be the true reasons for the stopping of the grant
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1
: The Indian National Herald, dated 10th December 1928.
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6
FORWARDING LETTER
BHIMRAO R. AMBEDKAR RAJGRIHA
M.A., Ph.D., D. Sc, NEW DADAR,
Barister-at-law, BOMBAY-14
J.P.,M.L.C.
Dear Sir,
Your special correspondent in India wrote to me that you
wanted a statement of my views on the Report of the Joint
Parliamentary Committee on Indian Reforms for publication
in the Manchester Guardian. In accordance therewith, I am
sending alongwith this a statement of my views. I am sorry,
I have not been able to compress my statement within 1200
words prescribed by you and the statement exceeds the limit
by about 300 words. In view of the importance of the subject
and the necessity of complete clarity, I have to make a special
request to let the statement appear in full without curtailment.
Yours faithfully,
B. R. Ambedkar
ll
7
PAY MORE ATTENTION TO ECONOMIC,
EDUCATIONAL AND SOCIAL
IMPROVEMENT RATHER
THAN TEMPLE ENTRY
Special Census
He also drew Mr. Gandhis attention to the proposal of
the League to arrange for a special census of the Depressed
Classes people in India and pointed out to the Congress leader
that such a proceeding was unnecessary.
Mrs. Sarojini Naidu was present during the interview
and Mr. Gandhi and those who met Dr. Ambedkar after
the interview appear to have received the impression that
Mr. Gandhi favoured Dr. Ambedkars proposal regarding the
composition of the Anti-Untouchability League Committees.
Mr. Gandhi is perfectly fit according to the latest news
from Yerawda and Dr. Ambedkar has told his friends that
the Congress leader is full of life and is completely restored
to normal health.
ECONOMIC INEQUALITIES
Dr. Ambedkars Advice to his Community
There certainly is a general slackening off in the Anti-
Untouchability Movement, said Dr. Ambedkar in an interview.
But, as the movement only dealt with the spectacular removal
of the ban against Untouchables entering temples and with
inter-dining, I am greatly perturbed over this fact. That with
spectacular certainty, they caused much ill-feeling between
the people and brought them no substantial advantage.
The attention of the Anti-Untouchability League and
workers in the same cause should be directed more to
the economic, educational and social improvement of the
Untouchables rather than to temple entry and inter-dining.
Public opinion should be mobilised by them to throw open
wells and to admit Untouchable children to public schools.
Referring to Belgaum district where a request had been
received from the Depressed Classes people themselves for
the constrution of a separate well, he said that the Board
should not grant such a request. Untouchables should insist
on their right to draw water from the general public wells.
He suspected that in this case there might be some interested
party influencing them.1
ll
1
: The Times of India, dated 19th October 1932.
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8
NOTHING CAN EMANCIPATE THE
OUTCASTES EXCEPT THE
DESTRUCTION OF CASTE SYSTEM
Mahatma Gandhi started newspaper named Harijan on
February 11, 1933, to propogate the cause of the Untouchables.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar on this occasion stated.1
I cannot give a message.2
The out-caste is a by-product of the caste system. There
will be outcastes as long as there are castes. Nothing can
emancipate the outcastes except the destruction of caste
system. Nothing can help Hindus and ensure their survival
in the coming struggle except the purging of Hindus faith of
this odious and vicious dogma.
In reply Gandhi said that many educated Hindus held
this view; but he was not able to share it.3 Untouchability is
the product not of the caste system, but of the distinction of
high and low, that has crept into Hinduism and is corroding
it. The attack on Untouchability is an attack upon this high
and lowness.4
ll
1
: Keer, P. 227
2
: Kuber, B. R. Ambedkar, P.47
3
: Keer, P. 227
4
: Kuber, B. R. Ambedkar, P.47
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9
DEPRESSED CLASSES AGAINST SECOND
CHAMBERS
Dr. Ambedkar on Joint Parliamentary Committee
Report Provision for Better Representation
Demanded
While it is a matter of great satisfaction to me and to
the Depressed Classes that the Poona Pact has not been
disturbed by the Joint Parliamentary Committee. I must point
out that the Depressed Classes have been unjustly treated
by the changes introduced by the J. P. C. in the matter of
representation in the Provincial Second Chambers and in the
Upper Chamber of the Federal Assembly. Thus writes Dr. B. R.
Ambedkar in a statement of his views on the Joint Select
Committees report in so far as it relates to the Depressed
Classes.
Dr. Ambedkar continues:
The Depressed Classes opposed the establishment of
the Second Chambers in the Provinces. They were deemed
unnecessary under the Montague-Chelmsford reforms. They
were not recommended by the Simon Commission. They are
condemned by all the political organisations of India. In the
opinion of the Depressed Classes they constitute a retrograde
step and will prove a hindrance to the progress of the country.
The Composition
The second ground of the opposition of the Depressed
Classes to the Second Chambers arises from the Composition
of these Second Chambers. It is obvious that in some of the
Provinces in which Second Chambers are instituted, is there
any seat reserved for the Depressed Classes? Special provision
is made for the representation of Muslims, Europeans and
Indian Christians in these Provincial Second Chambers. But
in no Province is any such provision made for the Depressed
Classes. The Depressed Classes of Bombay, Madras, and the
United Provinces are left to get such representation as they
can out of the general seats in a straight election fight with
High Caste Hindu candidates.
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1
: The Times of India, dated 15th January 1935.
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10
REMOVE BASIS OF SMRITI RELIGION
Nasik, November 28.
Owing to the lowering of franchise the Caste Hindu
masses will secure the real power under the new constitution
but they are opposed to social reform. They will be extremely
unwilling to change the existing custom and usage. My
grievance is especially against them and not against the social
reformers. Even the Congress candidates will not be able to
win the elections if they declare that, if elected, they will
enact legislation for abolishing Untouchability. I challenge
the Congress to seek election on this mandate.
The above is the gist of the interview between Dr. Ambedkar
and the deputation, elected by the Nasik Progressive Hindus
at a meeting held on October 26, 1935.
The Nasik Progressive Hindus have now issued an
authoritative statement summarising the interview.
The deputation, says the statement consisting of five
progressive Caste Hindus, headed by Mr. R. G. Pradhan,
former M.L.C., waited upon Dr. Ambedkar at his residence
on November 10 and the interview which lasted over three
hours, was of a cordial, friendly and frank nature.
Progressives Views
At the outset, the deputationists placed before Dr. Ambedkar
the following resolutions adopted by the Nasik Hindu
Progressive Citizens in a conference presided over by Shri
Shankaracharya (Dr. Kurtakoti). The resolution runs thus:
(A) The question regarding public temples, public places
of pilgrimage and thirtas being extremely controversial and
outside the sphere of immediate practical achievement,
every possible effort should be made to bring about a
change of public opinion with regard to that question.
(B) Barring the above question except to the extent of
bringing about a change of public opinion with regard to,
continuance and unflinching efforts should be made both
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New Sect
Referring to the offer made by Dr. Kurtakoti, regarding
his creation of a new order and throwing it open to the
Untouchables in common with others on equal footing and
status, Dr. Ambedkar said: I shall not undertake the
responsibility of starting a new sect nor will I advise my
community to join it. Let Dr. Kurtakoti start the sect if he
so desires and let it spread among the touchables and then
we shall think over it. I cannot say today what the Harijans
will think of it if it is established. Their attitude towards it
will depend upon its numerical strength and upon the extent
to which it will promote the uplift of the Harijan community.
We shall consider whether to join it or not just as we may
consider whether or not to join any other sect, but such a
sect must be of a living religion
There are some difficulties in the way of our accepting
Buddhism. I think that the Harijan community should be
completely absorbed into some powerful community. It has
decided not to join the Arya Samaj. We shall consider the
question of joining the Sikh religion.
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1
: The Times of India, dated 30th November 1935.
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11
HINDUS SHOULD NOT BE INDIFFERENT TO
CONVERSION OF DEPRESSED CLASSES
Regarding conversion, Dr. B. R. Ambedkar consulted his
colleagues from different provinces in the matter of choosing
the proper religion for conversion. He had now decided
to embrace Sikhism. His friends and colleagues felt that
Dr. Ambedkar should seek the support of the Hindu Sabha
leaders in their conversion to Sikhism; for, the Hindu Sabha
leaders believed that Sikhism was not an alien religion. It was
an off-spring of Hinduism and therefore the Sikhs and the
Hindus intermarried and the Sikhs were allowed to be members
of the Hindu Mahasabha.
Accordingly, Dr. Moonje, the spokesman of the Hindu
Mahasabha, was invited to Bombay. In the presence of two other
friends, Dr. Ambedkar had a talk with Dr. Moonje at Rajgriha,
on June 18, 1936, at half past-seven that night. Dr. Ambedkar
cleared all issues and had a free talk with Dr. Moonje. Next day
the purport of Dr. Ambedkars views was reduced to a statement
and was given to Dr. Moonje who approved of it personally.1
The following is the statement:
The Hindus cannot afford to be indifferent to the movement
of conversion which is gaining ground among the Depressed
Classes. It would undoubtedly be the best thing from the
standpoint of the Hindus if the Depressed Classes were to be
persuaded to drop the idea of conversion. But if that is not
possible, then the Hindus must concern themselves with the
next move which the Depressed Classes will take, because their
move is bound to have serious consequences upon the destiny
of the country. If they cannot be persuaded to stay, the Hindus
must help if they cannot lead them, to embrace a faith which
will be least harmful to the Hindus and to the country.
It seems very unlikely that the Depressed Classes will
formulate a new religion. Most probably, they will embrace one
of the existing faiths. At any rate the Hindus can well proceed
on that assumption. The first question is what is the faith that
the Depressed Classes are likely to embrace? Obviously, the
one most advantageous to them.
1
: Keer. P. 277.
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ll
For reaction on this statement by Dr. Moonje, Mr. Raja, Mahatma Gandhi
and others see Appendix- X.Editors.
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12
RIGHTS NOT AFFECTED IN THE EVENT OF
CONVERSION
Talk of the possibility of the Depressed Classes having to
forego their political privileges under the Poona Pact in the
event of their leaving the Hindu Community is discounted
by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, who regards it as a Congress stunt
to frighten him and his party from contesting the elections.
I have evidence in my possession to show that it is a
Congress stunt calculated to frighten me and my party from
contesting the forthcoming elections and to coerce us into
remaining within the Hindu fold.
This is Dr. Ambedkars reaction to the reports current in the
city that the resolutions of the Yeola and Bombay conferences
of the Depressed Classes and Dr. Ambedkars own declared
intention to renounce Hinduism must militate against the
enjoyment by the Depressed Classes of the privileges secured
under the Poona Pact.
Dr. Ambedkar is inclined to laugh at these reports as they
are, in his opinion, based on ignorance of the constitutional
position and of the provisions of the Communal Award as
amended by the Poona Pact.
The original provision of the Communal Award in respect
of the Depressed Classes was that they should vote in the
general constituencies, but in order to ensure adequate
representation to them special seats were to be allotted to
them the basis of this provision was a separate electroate for
the Depressed Classes.
The Poona Pact, briefly put, substituted joint electorates
with the Hindu community for separate electorates for the
Depressed Classes. In order to ensure that the representatives
of the Depressed Classes carried the confidence of their
community with them, a device for a primary election by the
community itself was evolved; the electorate of the joint Hindu
community was to make its choice from among the panel of
four candidates for each seat selected by the voters on the
list of the Depressed Classes.
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Insistence of Rights
Intention to leave a religious sect born of disgust with
current practices or injustice does not sever ones connection
with the religion which he is nominally believed to profess.
Surely, not all the present day Christians are true
Christians. What about the Sunday parades in Europe where
people who do not believe in Christianity or are indifferent
or are rationalists demonstrate in front of Churches on
Sunday morning? They, too, are nevertheless Christians in
the eyes of the State.
You may call me a statutory Hindu if you like, said
Dr. Ambedkar humorously, but I wilt insist on my political
lights irrespective of the depth of my religious fervour.
To support his contention Dr. Ambedkar cites two
instances from the Punjab, where two sections of Depressed
Classes have been classified as Scheduled Castes in spite
of the proved fact that they are not Hindus. The instances
mentioned are those of Ad Dharmis and Ramdasis. The first
of these have gone out of their way formally to intimate
to Government that they are not Hindus, and yet they
have been classed under Scheduled Castes in the general
constituency.
The Punjab Census Report of 1931 says:
The most notable feature of the present census from the
stand-point of return of religion has been the adoption of
the term Ad Dharmi by numberous Chamars and Shudras
and other Untouchables. A new instruction to the religion
was given this year, namely, Persons returning themselves
as Ad Dharmis should be recorded as such.
The Punjab Ad Dharmis Mandal had petitioned the
Punjab Government before census operations started in
1930, representing that the Depressed Classes should be
permitted to return Ad Dharmis as their religion at the
time of the census, as they were the oborigines of India and
while the Hindus kept them at a respectable distance, they
did not believe in the Hindu religion. The President of the
Punjab Ad Dharm Mandal was informed that a clause was
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ll
1
: Times of India: dated 24th July 1936.
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13
CONVERSION MOVEMENT SANS
SELFISH MOTIVE
Dr. Ambedkars comments on Rao Bahadur M. C.
Rajahs statement against conversion of the Untouchables:
At the outset I would like to say that to send this
correspondence to the newspapers for publication, is
in itself an indecent act on the part of Mr. Rajah. Dr.
Moonje had clearly mentioned at the end of his letter
that till the final decision regarding conversion, this letter
might be treated as personal and confidential. It cannot
be believed that this fact did not come to the notice of
Mr. Rajah. Mr. Rajah should have sought the permission
of Dr. Moonje before releasing the correspondence to the
press. This act on the part of Mr. Rajah is ill-becoming
of a decent man.
The Untouchables may choose Sikhism for conversion.
This fact is known to many of my Hindu friends and
such members of the Untouchable community as are
seriously interested in the question of conversion of the
Untouchables.
The correspondence regarding the possibility of the
Untouchables embracing Sikhism, which took place
between Rao Bahadur M. C. Rajah and Dr. Moonje has
been published in the newspapers. I have gone through it.
There is no reason for Rajah to rejoice that he had
exposed some great secret of Dr. Ambedkar. I do not
attach any importance to the letters of Mr. Rajah. In
my opinion Rajah commands little respect among the
Untouchable masses nor do his views regarding conversion
have any worth or value. Had I felt that his views had
any value at all, I would have co-operated with him to
change his mind.
Ignoring Rao Bahadur Rajah, Rao Bahadur Srinivasan
and I were invited to the Round Table Conference to
represent the Untouchables. This led to heart-burning
and animosity against me in the mind of Rajah who has
since then been constantly criticising and opposing me.
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14
THE INDEPENDENT LABOUR PARTY:
A SOURCE FOR BETTERMENT OF THE
DEPRESSED CLASSES
On 14th January 1937, Dr. B. R. Ambedkar reached
Bombay from London. The Journalist from Times of India had
interviewed Dr. Ambedkar. The interview is as follows: Editors.
Dr. Ambedkar said that he visited Europe purely for reasons
of health and he stayed most of the time in Vienna and Berlin.
He was in London only for a week. He had no conversation of
a political nature with any one in London.
Asked if he had come to any decision regarding his intention
to leave the Hindu fold, he said that the decision still remained,
although he had not finally made up his mind which new faith
he should embrace.
Dr. Ambedkar said that his immediate concern was
the ensuing elections to the Bombay Legislative Assembly
and he would devote himself to the election campaign. The
Independent Labour Party, which he had started, would work
for the betterment of the political and social condition of the
Depressed Classes in the Legislature, and he was sanguine
that all the candidates put up on behalf of his Party would
come out successful in the elections.
Dr. Ambedkar was given a rousing reception on arrival.
More than a thousand Khaki-clad volunteers belonging to the
Social Equity League lined up the entire route from Ballard Pier
Station to Alexandra Dock No. 18, cheered him as he passed.
Most of the candidates put up by the Independent Labour
Party of which Dr. Ambedkar is the founder, for the ensuing
elections to the Bombay Legislative Assembly were present on
the wharf to meet him. Among them were B. K. Gaikwad (Nashik
District), Mr. PrabhakarRoham (Ahmednagar), Mr. B. H. Varale
(Belgaum), Mr. R. R. Bhole (Poona), Mr. B. J. Sawadkar, Mr.
S. G. Tipnis (Kolaba), Mr. G. R. Ghatge (Ratanagiri), Mr. R.
E. Bhatankar (Thana) and Mr. V. A. Gadkari.1
ll
15
CIVIL LIBERTIES OF INDIANS
It is interesting that for him Untouchability and
exploitation were a violation of civil liberties, not in the
conventional sense, but because of the breach of the dignity
of whole communities. His reply to the Secretary of the Civil
Liberties Union, Dr. K. B. Menon, way back in June 1937,
makes meaningful reading;
ll
1
Justice V. R. Krishna Iyer, Exordium P. VII.
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16
IN ANY OTHER COUNTRY SUCH A MINISTER
WOULD HAVE BEEN DISMISSED
To the Editor,
The Times Of India
Sir,
Following close upon the action of the Home Minister
of Bombay in suspending the sentences passed upon two
gamblers by the High Court; there comes the news of the
action taken by the Home Minister of the C.P. in remitting the
Sentences passed by the Court of the Judicial Commissioners
upon a person by name Jaffer Hasan who was condemned
to three years, rigorous imprisonment on a charge of rape
upon a girl of 14 years. The conviction took place in 1936.
The accused had only undergone one years imprisonment
so that he has been given a remission of two years.
I think that this act of the Congress Minister in the
C. P. is a most shameless act, for which I can find no parallel.
What does the Hindu public which is so blindly supporting
the Congress, think of these acts?
I would not have troubled you with this letter if the
matter concerned the Caste Hindusnot that it would not
have been a grave thing if the girl was a Caste Hindu girl,
but because the Hindus have cultivated a religious faith
that no party other than the Congress and no man other
than the Mahatma can bring them salvation ! They have
placed their destiny in the hands of one party and have
refused to examine the acts of those in whom they trust.
If they come to grief, it is their fault. But the girl belongs
to the Depressed Classes. She is Chambhar by caste. It is
because of that I feel deeply concerned. We are destined to
be in a minority. We can only criticise. We can never hope
to control.
What hope have the Depressed Classes of fair play and justice
if such acts as those of the Home Minister in the C. P. are tolerated
by the Hindu public, are endorsed by the Prime Minister and
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1
: The Times of India: Dated 19th March 1938.
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17
SOCIALISTS NOW INACTIVE
On his arrival in Bombay, on 21st May 1938 in the
course of an interview, Dr. B. R. Ambedkar expressed great
satisfaction at the growing support of the people to his Party
and their grateful appreciation of his efforts towards abolishing
their serfdom.
He said that in its own way his Independent Labour Party
was striving to redeem its election pledges, but if the Congress
Ministry refused to give relief through constitutional methods,
and if peoples faith in it was thus lost, the alternative was
obvious. He, however, was surprised at the attitude of the
Socialists, who, he said, had been all those years shouting for
the confiscation of all Zamindari lands and the abolition of
the capitalist system, but now inactive when a concrete Bill
was brought forward to put an end to the Khoti system.1
ll
1
: Keer, P.310.
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18
LET SUCH INSTITUTIONS GROW INTO
BIG LIBRARIES
Dr. B. R. Ambedkars remarks in the Visitors Book of the
Rajwade Sanshodhan Mandal, Dhulia (Maharashtra) on 18th
June 1938 Editors:
As who has spent some six or seven years in various
libraries of Europe and America I was greatly pleased to
go round the collection of manuscripts and paintings of the
Rajwade Sanshodhan Mandal. As compared with the European
Libraries this of course is indeed a very small place. The
responsibility for this, however, does not lie on those who
have given birth to the institution. It is to be hoped that
the new government will pay adequate attention to such
institution and see that they grow into big libraries. I wish
this institutions every success.
ll
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19
A BILL TO CONTROL
AND
REGULATE MONEY-LENDING
BY
Dr. B. R. AMBEDKAR,
M.A., Ph. D., D. Sc., Bar-at-Law.
A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 261
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I
Preliminary
Sec. 1 Short Title, Extent and Commencement.
Sec. 2 Definitions
Sec. 3 Provisions of the Act not affected by laws,
customs or contracts.
CHAPTER II
Licensing of Money-lenders
Sec. 4 Prohibition of Money-lending without license.
Sec. 5 Name in which license to be taken out.
Sec. 6 Particulars to be stated in the license.
Sec. 7 Necessity for certificate for license.
Sec. 8 Particulars to be stated in the certificate.
Sec. 9 Authority competent to grant certificate.
Sec. 10 Ground for refusing certificate
Sec. 11 Recording of reasons for refusal.
Sec. 12 Appeal against order of refusal.
Sec. 13 Authority competent to grant licence.
Sec. 14 Duration of license.
Sec. 15 Fee for license.
Sec. 16 Penalty for breaches of provisions regarding
license.
CHAPTER III
This is the text of the Bill which gives details about money-lending. The
Bill was prepared in the year 1938 Editors
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CHAPTER IV
Mode of Carrying on Business
Sec. 20 Prohibition of advertisements etc. in respect of
Money-lending.
Sec. 21 Prohibition against employment of agents.
Sec. 22 Penalty for breach of Section 20 and 21.
Sec. 23 Agreement for payment by borrower of costs,
charges etc. void.
CHAPTER V
Duties of Money-lender
Sec. 24 Transaction to be reduced to writing.
Sec. 25 Copy of Memo to be supplied to debtor.
Sec. 26 Transactions in contravention of Sec. 24 or 25 void.
Sec. 27 Agreement to pay compound interest void.
CHAPTER VI
Method of keeping accounts
Sec. 28 Money-lender to give Pass-Book to debtor.
Sec. 29 Money-lender to supply annually a statement of
debtors account.
Sec. 30 Money-lender not entitled to sue during default.
Sec. 31 Penalty for default.
Sec. 32 Accounts to be kept in books obtained from
Government.
Sec. 33 Production of Books of Account used during the
year for authentication.
Sec. 34 Entries in Books not in accordance with Section 32
and 33 inadmissible in evidence.
CHAPTER VII
Suits and Proceedings
Sec. 35 Jurisdiction of Small Causes Court excluded.
Sec. 36 Particulars of license to be given in the Plaint.
Sec. 37 Interrogatories to be delivered to money-lender.
Sec. 38 Power of Court to re-open certain transactions.
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A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 263
CHAPTER VIII
Proceedings in Respect of Offences.
Sec. 49 All offences cognizable.
Sec. 50 Appeals from convictions or acquittals.
CHAPTER IX
Supplemental
Sec. 51 Power to make rules.
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A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 265
A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 267
A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 269
A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 271
A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 273
* Section 23 or be inserted.Editors
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Chapter VI
Method of keeping Accounts
Money-lender to give pass-book to debtor
28. Every money-lender shall give to his debtor a pass-
book provided by Government and shall enter therein every
payment made by the debtor or to the debtor and authenticate
the same by his signature.
Money-lender to supply annually a statement of
debtors account.
29. Every money-lender shall deliver to hi s debtor
and such other persons from whom he is entitled to claim
payment of the debt, on or before the 31st January of every
year, a statement of his accounts in respect of the debt in
such form as may be prescribed by Government, upto the
31st December of the previous year authenticated by his
signature.
Money-lender not entitled to sue during default
30. A money-lender, who fails to comply with the provision
of section 28, shall not, as long as the default continues, be
entitled to sue for or recover any sum due under the contract
on account either of principal or interest, and interest shall
not be chargeable in respect of the period of the default.
Penalty for default
31. A money-lender who contravenes the provision of
section 28 or 29 shall be liable to a fine not exceeding
Rs. 100/-.
Accounts to be kept in books obtained from
Government
32. Every money-lender shall obtain from Governemnt
on payment of such fees as may be prescribed, such books
of accounts as may be necessary for him for the purpose
of recording his transactions as a money-lender and shall
regularly record and maintain accounts of all his transactions
relating to the loans made and security for such loan, if any,
in such account books, containing such details and in such
script and numerals and in such ink as may be prescribed
by Government from time to time.
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A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 275
A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 277
A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 279
A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 281
(2) Before any such rules are made under this section a
draft thereof shall be laid before each chamber of the
legislature for a period of not less than 21 days during
the session of the chamber, and if either chamber
before the expiration of the said period passes a
resolution against the draft or any part thereof, no
further proceedings shall be taken thereon, but without
prejudice to the making of a new draft rule.
Statement of Objects And Reasons
This Bill is intended to control and regulate the business
of money-lending. For that purpose it provides
Firstly- (i) that no money-lender shall carry on the business
of money-lending unless he has taken out a license
and that license shall not be granted to any person
who does not posses a certificate of good character;
(ii) that the license issued to a money-lender shall
be liable to be suspended or revoked if he is found
guilty of breach of any duty imposed upon him
by this Bill.
Secondly- (i) the bill provided that all loans made by a
moneylender whether secured or unsecured shall
be evidenced by writing signed by the borrower;
(ii) that a money-lender shall give a pass-book to
the borrower in which all transactions between
them shall be entered by the money-lender;
(iii) that annualy the money-lender shall send to
the borrower a statement of his accounts;
(iv) that charging of compound interest or other
costs shall be illegal.
Thirdly- the Bill lays down the mode of keeping accounts
by the money-lender. It requires:
(i) that the money-lender shall keep his accounts
in the books obtained by Government;
(ii) that at the end of every year he shall produce
his books before a government official, who shall
initial the first and last entries in such books;
(iii) that no books of accounts shall be admissible in
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A BILL............MONEY-LENDING 283
20
I SHALL STAND FOR PRINCIPLE AND WILL
FIGHT ALONE FOR IT
Ahmedabad, October 22.1938.
I do not believe any progress has been made by the
Congress Ministry of Bombay by bringing in the Trade Disputes
and Tenancy Bills. We have fundamental differences with
the Congress for years. We are not fighting for offices in the
province, but we fight for our rights.
Thus observed Dr. Ambedkar who came here this morning
in an interview with the pressman.
Continuing, he said if I join hands with the Congress
today, I can have what I like, but our case is entirely different.
I do not care if the whole of my community differs from me
and join the Congress, but I shall stand for principle and will
fight alone for it.
Referring to Mr. Jinnah, he said, Mr. Jinnah is totally
carrying the Muslims on the wrong path. I do not understand
what differences he has with the Congress. If the League
really stands for the interests of the Minorities, I welcome
Mr. Jinnah to join hands with other sections who differ from
the Congress, and make a united front of all these sections
against the Congress. The Muslim League, to my mind, is
fighting for elections and ministry.
Mr. Jinnah on one side is fighting with the Congress,
while on the other side he intends to come to a pact with
the Congress, which is entirely meaningless. Appeal to him
to learn a lesson from the Poona pact.1
ll
1
The Bombay Chronicle: dated 22nd October 1938.
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21
MINISTRY SEEMS TO BE INTOXICATED
WITH POWER
Bombay, Thursday.*
In the name of the working class of Bombay, in
the name of Law and Order and in the name of decent
administration of the province I demand an impartial and
public inquiry into the scandalous mismanagement of the
protest strike by the police department under the control of
the Hon. Mr. Munshi. I demand a public inquiry into the
absolutely uncalled for firing and lathi charges to which
the police repeatedly resorted said Dr. B. R. Ambedkar
leader of the Independent Labour Party in the course of
a statement to the Press.1
What has come over the Congress Ministry, asked
Dr. Ambedkar, that it should not be able to manage a
single days strike without resorting to such disgraceful
terror.
There were strikes that lasted for days and weeks
and months in the past. There was one that lasted for
seven and a half months with processions and meetings
and demonstrations every day. There were no such lathi
charges and firing during the whole of this period.
Today under Congress Raj we cannot have a single
days strike without repression and terrorism being let
loose. That i s what the Congress has come to.
The Press
What about the press, the press that stood for freedom
and rights of workers and championed their cause as long
as the Congress needed their help?
Today that press is resorting to lies and falsehoods
and distortions and suppression of facts that must make
the British and Anglo-Indian journal blush with shame.
1:
Free Press Journal, dated 9th November 1938. i.e. Wednesday.
* The 3rd November 1938.
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Ministry Warned
22
INJUSTICE TO TILLERS OF SOIL
Analysis of Prakasam Committees Recommendations
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, Leader of the Independent Labour
Party, has issued the following statement:
I have read the recommendations of the Prakasam
Committee on conditions in zamindari areas. While the view
that the zamindar is no more than an assignee of revenue
may be justified, the stand that the Committee has taken
that no tenancy rights for the actual cultivator can accrue
in lands belonging to proprietors of the soil is neither legally
correct, nor just to the cultivator, nor conducive to the sound
development of the agricultural economy.
It is legally incorrect, because grades of proprietary rights
grown during that last century and have been recognised in
law in all tenancy legislations. It is unjust to the cultivator,
because the purpose of fixing a low rent or revenue is to
leave a wide surplus for him and to provide him with a living
income, to improve his farm and tide over scarcity years,
and not to create a large number of smaller zamindars to
enrich themselves both at the expense of the zamindar and
the cultivator.
It is against the interests of agriculture, because proprietary
interests ought not be allowed to exploit land as a property
for rack-renting the cultivator as against its conservation for
use for agricultural purposes.
The report of the Prakasam Committee is nothing more
than an assessment of the distribution of the rack-rent collected
from the cultivators among the superior holders.
MR. PRAKASAMS RECENT REPLIES TO A QUESTION
IN THE LEGISLATURE THAT TENANCY LEGISLATION
WILL NOT BE UNDERTAKEN IN RAYATWARI AREAS
BECAUSE RAYATWARI HOLDERS ARE PROPRIETORS
OF THE SOIL SHUTS OUT ALL HOPES OF ANY GOOD
COMING TO THE CULTIVATOR FROM THE CONGRESS
MINISTRY.
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1:
The Bombay Chronicle : dated 18th January 1939.
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23
DR. AMBEDKAR CHALLENGES GWYER AWARD
Since February 1939 trouble had been brewing in the
Rajkot State where a strong agitation was going on for
political reforms. Defeated and disappointed by Subhas Boses
election to the Presidentship of the Congress, Gandhi hurried
to Rajkot apparently to settle the State problem, but with an
inward desire to create a crisis just at the time of the Tripuri
Congress Session over which Subhas Bose was to preside.
Dr. Ambedkar was urgently called by the local Depressed
Classes to intervene in the dispute regarding their non-
inclusion in the Reforms Committee of the State. He therefore,
left by air for Rajkot and on the evening of April 18, saw the
ruler, the Thakor Saheb, and at night addressed a meeting of
the Depressed Classes, urging them to carry on their struggle
for political rights.
The next morning he had a talk with Gandhi for forty-five
minutes on the question of representation for the Harijans
on the Reforms Committee. He stated in an interview at
Rajkot that he could not discuss in detail all the points with
Gandhi, as the Mahatma had a sudden temperature. He,
however, revealed that the suggestion that his, alternative
proposal should be submitted to a constitutional expert like
Sir Tej Bahadur Sapru was not acceptable to Gandhi. At last
Gandhi failed in his attempt to effect a change of heart by
his non-violent methods and resorted to coercive methods by
appealing to the Viceroy to intervene. Gandhi, the apostle
of the principle of change of heart and non-violence, himself
publicly confessed that his non-violence had not yet been
developed to the fullest power, and so he left Rajkot, to quote
his words, with hopes cremated and body shattered.
Accordingly, a few days thereafter Sir Maurice Gwyer,
the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, gave an Award
on the disputes in the State of Rajkot. Dr. Ambedkar
challenged the interpretation of the word recommend
given by Sir Maurice Gwyer. He stated that Gwyer
had given his decision on the footing that There is
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I
HARIJAN REPRESENTATION IN COMMITTEE
Dr. Ambedkars Telegram to Gandhiji
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, Leader of the Independent Labour
Party, has sent the following telegram to Mahatma
Gandhi:
Would like knowing if Rajkot Depressed classes get
representation on the Reforms Committee.2
II
ANOTHER CLAIM FOR SEAT
Dr. Ambedkars Wire to Virawalla
The Muslim Deputationists to-day denied that the
negotiations had broken down and added that they will
be seeing Gandhiji again to-night. Meanwhile they are in
communication with a prominent Muslim League leader
in Bombay to receive instructions.
The Girasyas and Bhayats whose claim for representation
on the Reforms Committee have not been accepted are
waiting in a deputation on the Thakore Saheb to-night.
The latest claimant for a seat on the Reforms Committees
are some members of the Depressed Classes in Rajkot. Dr.
Ambedkar has wired to Durbar Virawalla to-day hope
you wont forget your State representation to Depressed
Classes on your Reforms Committee as already promised.
The First Member of Rajkot Council has handed over
the above telegram to Gandhiji.
1:
Keer, pp 322-323.
2:
The Bombay Chronicle, dated 14th April 1939.
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III
IV
Alternative Proposal
1:
The Bombay Chronicle, dated 19th April 1939.
2:
The Bombay Chronicle, dated 20th April 1939.
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VI
DR. AMBEDKAR CHALLENGES GWYER AWARD
Quotes Cases to Show Recommendation
Is Not Command
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, in a legal analysis of the Gwyer Award
says:
The award given by Sir Maurice Gwyer on the dispute between
the Thakore Saheb of Rajkot and Mr. Vallabhbhai Patel over the
interpretation of the word recommend is not only of importance
to the parties to the dispute but to the general public at large.
The parties to the award being bound by the award the
question whether that interpretation is right or wrong may not
be of much use to them. The same cannot however be said of
the public. To them the question is still full of interest. It is
true that the award is not a decision of a court of law. Yet it
has behind it all the authority of so great a name as that of
Sir Maurice Gwyer.
Last Word With Sardar
For an intelligent appreciation of such principles it is
necessary in the first place to state what the contention of the
Thakore Saheb was and how it was disposed off by Sir Maurice
Gwyer.
Sir Maurice Gwyer sums it up thus, The gist of Thakore
Sahebs argument is contained in the following sentence in the
written case submitted on his behalf. It is obvious that the
word recommend itself clearly indicates that it (each name)
is to be considered and it was open to the Thakore Saheb to
reject any of the names on the ground, for instance, that any
one of the names recommended was not a suitable person, was
incapable or undesirable. This contention Sir Maurice Gwyer
has not upheld.
He says, In my opinion the true construction is that
the Thakore Saheb undertakes to appoint the persons
whom Mr. Vallabhbhai Patel may recommend and that
he does not re-serve to himself any discretion to reject
those whom he does not approve. He is no doubt entitled
to criticise the recommendations and to urge reasons for
reconsidering them, but, unless it can be shown that any of the
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Prior. As wife died and the children were placed under the
care of Mary Prior by Mr. Cottee the surviving executor and
testamentary guardian. The case proceeded on the assumption
that the word recommend meant that a binding trust was
created on the testamentary guardians so that Mr. Cottee
was bound to appoint Mary Prior as the person to take care
of the children.
Inherent Powers
The issue was this .... Did the recommendation take
away all the powers of control belonging to Mr. Cottee
as the testamentary guardian? In deciding this issue
the Lord Chancellor (Lord Denman) said.... I have had
frequent opportunities of considering the effect of words of
recommendation. One was in a recent case in this Court, where
the question was whether a recommendation by the testator,
that a certain person should be employed as receiver and
manager of his property, gave that person any legal interest.
Another case was of Shaw vs. Lawless where the House of
Lords laid it down as a rule which I have since acted upon,
that, though recommendation may in some cases amount
to a direction and create a trust, yet that, being a flexible
term, if such a construction of it be inconsistent with any
positive provision in the Will. It is to be considered as a
recommendation, and nothing more.
In that case, the interest supposed to be given to the party
recommended was inconsistent with other powers which the
trustees were to exercise; and those powers being given in
unambiguous terms, it was held that, as the two-provisions
could not stand together, the ....... flexible term was to give
way to the inflexible term. Accordingly it was held that
notwithstanding the fact that the recommendation was binding
it did not take away the powers of control of Mr. Cottee as
a testamentary guardian, over the children.
Not Binding Direction
The case is no doubt one relating to trust. But a trust is only
another name for legal obligation and whether one speaks of
recommendation creating a trust or creating a legal obligation it is
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Positive Powers
In this as in the other two cases there are on the one hand
positive powers of the Thakore Saheb which is an inflexible
term and on the other there is recommendation which is
always a flexible term. That being so according to the rule
the flexible term must give way to the inflexible term. That
is to say recommend cannot mean direct or bind.
The case reported in (1917) I. K. B. 19 referred to by
Sir Maurice Gwyer seems to be in conflict with the two
cases I have referred to. But on a closer examination it
will be seen that there is no conflict and the case is easily
distinguishable. In 1917 I.K.B. 19 the appointing authority,
was just an appointing authority and no more. It had no
positive powers which could be said to be in danger of being
nullified by interpreting the word . . . . . . recommend to
mean a binding direction.
The rule as laid down in the two cases referred to by me
seems to be that where there exist positive powers which are
capable of being exercised independently, the word recommend
cannot mean a binding direction, but where there are no
positive powers it may have that meaning. In the two cases
referred to by me there were positive powers and therefore
the decision was that recommendation did not mean binding
direction.
In the case referred to by Sir Maurice Gwyer there were no
positive powers and therefore it was held that recommendation
could mean a binding direction. The case of Thakore Saheb
vs. Vallabhbhai is one which in my opinion falls in the class
under which the two cases cited by me fall and not under
the class of cases reported in (1917) L K. B. 19.1
ll
l:
The Bombay Chronicle: dated 2nd May 1939.
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24
I AM ANXIOUS MORE THAN MR. JINNAH...
Harijans Position
25
WHEN BUDDHA STOPPED ANIMAL
SACRIFICES, COWS WERE
SANCTIFIED BY THEM
Untouchability Was Punishment For Sticking to
Buddhism Brahmins Adaptability
A novel theory on the origin of Untouchability was
expounded by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, Leader of the Independent
Labour Party, in the course of a talk with our representative.
Untouchability, it may be mentioned, is an institution
or social practice that is the exclusive property of India and
does not exist anywhere else in the world. In more than one
sense it is an institution that is unnatural and runs counter
to human psychology and social forces. The reasons for the
origin of Untouchability that can carry conviction, therefore,
must be such as will override all social and psychological
considerations.
According to Dr. Ambedkar, Untouchability is of
comparatively recent origin and could not possibly have existed
in Vedic times or for centuries after that period. There is
certainly no mention of Untouchability anywhere in the Vedas.
How did it come into existence then?
Semi-Tribal State
Dr. Ambedkar pictures a period when some of the people
had only recently settled down to agricultural life while others
were in a nomadic state moving about from place to place
with their flocks of sheep and cattle.
The former with their encumbrances of landed property,
houses, crops, etc., and higher state of civilisation than that
of the pastoral tribes naturally did not want their peaceful
life to be disturbed by the pastoral tribes. Nor were they a
match for the pastoral tribes who were not burdened with any
immovable property and were for obvious reasons physically
hardier and more robust.
To guard their property against the depredations of the wandering
tribes therefore the agricultural villages engaged the services of
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men from the pastoral class whose tribes had been broken up
by internecine wars. These men were allotted pieces of land
and houses just outside the villages and their main dutyas
is their main duty todaywas to maintain law and order.
This duty of defending the villages against pastoral tribes
they discharged for generations. The relations between the
villagers proper and the protectors of the villagers living on
the village fringe were normal human relations without any
conception of Untouchability. How did it come in then?
For that, according to Dr. Ambedkar, we have to look to
the rise of Buddhism in India.
Buddhism, says Dr. Ambedkar, swept the land as no
physical conqueror had ever done in Indias history. Within
a few generations almost the entire country especially the
masses and the trading classes went over to Buddhism.
Brahminism was in the grip of mortal fear. In fact, it
would have been wiped out had it not been for the shrewd
adaptability of the Brahmins who were prepared to throw
overboard every social and religious institution which they had
championed for centuries and on which they had flourished
for ages if only Brahminism could be saved. What did the
Brahmins do?
that the Brahmins did not accept was the theory of equality
and abolition of the Chaturvarna caste system. But they did
one thing. They, for the time being, put the Kshatriyas on
the same level as themselves, relegated the Gods of Brahmin
birth to the background, installed Kshatriya Gods in their
places and came to other time-serving compromises.
Unexpected Development
A development of a most unexpected nature which would
have been utterly abhorrent to Buddha took place in the
process of Brahminical campaign of accommodation and
compromise. Sacrifice of cows was stopped by Buddha. The
animal was sanctified by the Brahmins. The Hindu society in
general accepted the sanctification and stopped killing of cows.
So did the present-day Untouchables. But the Untouchables
being too poor to use fresh meat or beef at any time continued
their age-old practice of eating the carcasses of dead cows.
Neither Buddha nor the Brahmins had forbidden
consumption of carcasses. The ban was only against
slaughtering live cows. But the present day Untouchables had
committed one great crime. Being the poorest of the poor and
socially on the lowest wrung of ladder they stuck to Buddhism
the longest. It required a mighty big force exerted over a long
period of years to bring them round. When nothing else would
work, social ostracism and Untouchability were applied.
Their practice of eating dead cows was exploited against
them. It was something that naturally repelled the Hindu
mind. It was obnoxious. The Brahmin could use the situation to
his advantage without much difficulty. And so Untouchability
was imposed on the entire class. It was really a punishment
for sticking to Buddhism when others had deserted it. And
so Untouchability continues today in spite of education and
all modern ideas of freedom and social equality.1
ll
1.
The Bombay Chronicle: dated 24th February 1940.
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26
MAHARS HAVE BEEN MARTIAL PEOPLE
The Mahars have been a martial people. The army of the
East India Company which successfully fought against the
army of the Peshwa was recruited from the Mahars. The
last battle between the Peshwa and the British was faught
at Koregaon in the Poona district. There is a column at
Koregaon raised by the British to commemorate the battle.
On the column are inscribed the names of the soldiers who
fell in the battle on the side of the British. Nine out of
ten names are of Mahars. The recruitment of the Mahars
continued upto 1892 and in all the wars, the Mahars have
proved their martial qualities. All of a sudden the recruitment
of Mahars was stopped in 1892. Ever since the Mahars have
nursed a grievance against the British Government for what
they regarded as very ungrateful conduct. There is much
justification for this grievance for there can be no doubt that
without the help of the Untouchables the British would never
have been able to conquer India.
The Mahars carried on a great agitation against their
banishment from the Army. But it bore no fruit. It was
during the war of 1914 that the British Government under
necessity lifted the ban and raised one Mahar battalion. It
was raised at the fag end of the war and the battalion had
no apportunity to go on war service and show its mettle. It
was posted in Waziristan in the North-West Frontier Province,
and it is on record while almost every battalion stationed in
the N.W.F. lost some rifles and ammunition to the Pathans,
who are in the habit of raiding ammunition and rifle depots
to arm themselves, the Pathans did not succeed in stealing
a single title or a single cartridge from the Mahar battalion.
It was expected that the British Government, having re-
enfranchised the Mahars for Military puiposes, would continue
the Mahar battalion and add to it more Mahar battalions.
But instead the British Government on the excuse of economy,
disbanded the Mahar battalion. This caused great bitterness
in the minds of the Mahars. When the present war came,
the Mahars hoped that their turn would come. But the steps
taken by the British Government in the early stages of the
war only added insult to injury. The Mahars were only wanted
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for labour corps and not for the combatant ranks. The labour
corps is safer than the combatant ranks, but the Mahars
wanted to join the combatant ranks.
One of the banalities of the British Government in India
is this distinction between martial and non-martial classes.
Nothing has been more disastrous. It is a pity that so great
a catastrophe as the war was necessary to force the British
Government to give up this senseless distinction. It is stated
that Government have directed to raise a Mahar battalion.
The credit must go to H. E. the Governor of Bombay. On my
making it a grievance he took up the matter with the Central
Government and brought it to a successful issue. I appeal to
the Mahars to take advantage of this apportunity; both for
their sake as well as the sake of the country and also appeal
to the British Government to keep faith with the Mahars and
not to disband them from the army after the war is over.
ll
1
: The Times of India, dated 18th June 1941.
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27
REPRESENTATION RELATING TO THE
GRIEVANCES OF THE
WATANDAR MAHARS, MANGS ETC.
To
HIS EXCELLENCY SIR ROGER LUMLEY
G.C.S.I.E., T.D., GOVERNOR OF BOMBAY.
MAY IT PLEASE YOUR EXCELLENCY.
Rs. a. p.
Poona .. .. .. .. 34,091 11 11
Sholapur .. .. .. .. 10,651 13 9
Ahmednagar .. .. .. 30,590 12 5
Satara .. .. .. .. 25,447 9 3
Khandesh .. .. .. .. 38,714 5 5
Bijapur .. .. .. .. 11,738 12 1
Nasik .. .. .. .. 47,037 10 4
Belgaum .. .. .. .. 32,875 12 4
Ratnagiri .. .. .. .. 1,079 2 3
Kolaba .. .. .. .. 1,655 10 6
Dharwar .. .. .. .. 30,091 0 3
Southern M.C. .. .. 3,378 15 1
Total .. 2,67,501 11 7
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Rs. a. p.
35. From this extract it becomes clear that one reason and
perhaps the real reason for reducing the remuneration of the
Mahars by increasing the Judi is to make provision for the
better remuneration of other Inferior Village Servants. There
can be no doubt that all Inferior Village Servants are grossly
ill-paid and the Mahars are no better paid than other Inferior
Village Servants having regard to the duties they have to
perform. But assuming that there is a case for increasing
the remuneration of other Inferior Village Servants, I must
respectfully submit that the policy adopted by Government
for carrying it out is worse than that of robbing Peter to pay
Paul and is contrary to the declared policy of Government
and to the provisions of the Watan Act.
36. In the matter of increase of Judi there are several
Government Resolutions which lay down the terms and
conditions under which Government have reserved the right to
increase the Judi all of which have been referred to, summarised
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from the Government Treasury. The first and the last are not
to be found in each district. There are many districts in which
the Mahars have no Inam land and no cash allowance. It is
only the second, namely, the Baluta which is found all over
the Presidency and forms the principal mode of remuneration
to the Mahars. The number of such villages is by no means
small. In Belgaum District there are 317, in Bijapur District
there are 543, in Dharwar District there are 572 and in
Sholapur there are 463 villages in which there are no lands
and in which the main source of income is Baluta to be
collected from the villagers. The same is the condition in the
Thana, Kolaba and Ratnagiri Districts. This list of villages
wherein Baluta is the only source of remuneration to the
Mahars is not a complete list. But from the data available it
is clear that while in some villages the Mahars are mainly
dependent upon Baluta, in other villages they are entirely
dependent upon it for their remuneration.
43. With regard to the Baluta as a mode of remunerating the
Mahars, I would like in the first place to draw Your Excellencys
attention to the vicious character of this mode of remuneration.
The Mahars are Government servants, Government takes
service from them; but for their remuneration Government
refers them to the villagers. Such a system of treating
Government servants will be deemed to be very strange, if
not disgraceful. The practice is certainly unbecoming to any
Government which calls itself civilised.
44. This vicious system of Baluta results in stark injustice
to the Mahars in the matter of their remuneration. Government
takes into its calculation the payment of Baluta by the
villagers to the Mahars in fixing the total remuneration of the
Mahars. But it is the universal experience that the Mahars
never get the Baluta. The reason is obvious. The relations
between the Mahars and the villagers are never cordial.
There is no village where there is no conflict between the
Mahars and the villagers. Often it happens that the relation
between the Mahars and the villagers remain friendly and
the Mahars work for the whole year for the villagers as
well as for Government in the hope that they will get their
Baluta from the villagers. But something happens just at the
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like the villagers between whom and the Mahars had no direct
contractual relation exists and at the same time not prepared
to exercise any pressure to see that payment is made by the
third party.
46. The question is, therefore, pertinent. The Patil is not
asked to depend on Baluta. The Kulkarni, while he was a
village servant, was also not made to live on Baluta. Why
then is the helpless Mahar alone asked to serve Government
and look for the payment to the villagers with no legal means
open to him for its enforcement? It is time that Government
did justice by taking the responsibility of remunerating the
Mahars on its own shoulders.
47. As to the cash payment as a source of remuneration, the
sums fixed by Government as remuneration to Mahars are the
paltriest that can be conceived of. They were fixed somewhere
about 1869. Remunerations of other Government servants
fixed in those days have since been increased considerably
from time to time. In fairness and justice to the Mahars it
cannot be denied that an increase in their remuneration is
long overdue.
II. INCREASE OF DUTIES OF INFERIOR VILLAGE
SERVANTS.
48. The Government of Bombay have passed Government
Resolution No. 7420/33 of the Revenue Department dated
13-9-1938 containing a list of duties to be performed by
Mahars, Mangs, Vethiyas in this Presidency which impose
upon them an intolerable burden and which it is impossible
for these Watandars to bear. The duties prescribed in the
Government Resolution came in for a good deal of angry
criticism in the Haregaon Conference. The Resolutions passed
in the Conference, which are appended to this Memorial, state
the objections of the Inferior Village Servants to the duties
prescribed by Government.
49. The contention of these Watandars is that they should
not be called upon to perform duties listed at item Nos. 1, 3,
5, 9, 13 and 19 without payment of extra remuneration in the
form of daily wages of not less than annas eight whenever they
are called upon to perform these duties. In this I am sure, there
is justice on their side. I have received several complaints from
the Watandars of this Province that the Village and the Taluka
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III. CONCLUSION
53. In conclusion, I beg to state that the grievances
referred to in this Memorial are crying for redress. I have
no complete information regarding the amount of Judi so
far recovered from the Mahars. From the figure relating to
Nasik district which have been supplied to me it appears
that in the Nasik district alone the amount of Judi levied on
Maharki lands so far under the new policy comes to about
Rs. 2,201-4-11 per year. This has produced a great tension
and I am afraid that if the grievances are not redressed the
Watandar Mahars may go on a strike as per last resolution
of the Haregaon Conference. I had advised them to suspend
action in the hope that Government will alter their policy
and do justice to them. But nothing has so far been done. I,
therefore, request Your Excellency to treat this question as
urgent and redress the wrong which is being done to these
Watandars by the new policy launched by Government. If
the Mahar Watandars affected by this policy go on a strike
or come in conflict in the matter of the recovery of Judi by
attachment of their property which I hear is going on in
some places, the responsibility thereof will be on Government
alone, inasmuch as the Mahar Watandars will have ground
to say that they have tried to get their grievances redressed
by constitutional means and failed.
54. I would respectfully urge that the policy adopted by
Government in dealing with the Inferior Village Servants
should be suspended. The issues involved are very large and
controversial. They cannot be settled by the executive action
of Your Excelllencys Advisers, however competent they be.
They can be settled only by the vote of the Legislature after
all sides had the opportunity of putting their case. This is
not possible now owing to the suspension of the Legislature.
But the question is an old one and can wait for its solution. I
am sure that the Mahars and other Inferior Village Servants
will prefer to wait for a just and agreed solution.
APPENDIX I
Resolutions Passed at the Haregaon Conference
Resolution No. 1:-
This Conference of Watandar Mahars and Mangs, Vethias
and other Inferior Village Servants strongly protests against
the policy of enhancing Judi on Mahar Inam lands recently
brought into operation in the Province under which an
addition to the Judi out of all proportion has been made on
already poverty-stricken Watandar Mahars and Mangs and
demands that the same policy be withdrawn immediately
and the levy made thereunder be cancelled inasmuch as the
said policy is contrary to the underlying principles of the
Hereditary Village Offices Act and is also harsh and unjust.
Resolution No. 1 A:-
This Conference resolves that the G. R. No. 7420/33, R.
D. dated 13th September 1938, containing a list of duties
to be performed by the Mahars and Mangs imposed an
intolerable burden which it is impossible for the Watandars
to bear. This Conference is of opinion that these Watandars
should not be called upon to perform duties listed as item
Nos. 1, 3, 5, 9, 13 and 19 without the payment of extra
remuneration in the form of daily wages of not less than
annas eight whenever they are called upon to perform these
duties.
Resolution No. 1 B:-
This Conference is of opinion that these Watandars be
exempted from discharging duty No. 15 for the same is in
the opinion of the Conference the duty of the Police.
Resolution No. 1 C:-
This Conference is of opinion that the duty No. 2 should
be confined to call villagers by Bataki and not be extended
to running after several times after a recalcitrant villager.
Resolution No. 2:-
This Conference is of opinion that the Maharki Watan be
commuted on the same principles as were made applicable to the
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APPENDIX II
APPENDIX III
ll
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28
I SHALL BE MORE DEADLY AGAINST THE
BRITISHERS THAN HINDUS IF
The Viceroy constituted the Defence Council of India on
27th July 1941. There were Eight Indians out of total thirteen
members. Dr. B. R. Ambedkar was one of the members of
the Council. He expressed his views about the evil policies
of BritishersEditors.
I have directed for these many years bitter and virulent
attacks on Hindu Society and its numerous evils, but I can
assure you that I shall direct attack a hundred-fold more
bitter, more virulent, more deadly against the Britishers
than I have done against Hindus if my loyalty is going to be
exploited for crushing my own people and taking away from
them last dry bone from which they draw their sustenance.
(Ten Years To Freedom, Pp. 58-59)1.
ll
1
: Quoted, Khairmode, Vol. 9, P. 130.
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29
EXCLUSION OF DEPRESSED CLASSES
FROM VICEROYS COUNCIL
AS AN OUTRAGE AND BREACH OF FAITH
Bombay, Thursday*
Depressed Classes regard their exclusion from the Viceroys
reconstituted Council as an outrage and breach of faith,
says Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, Leader of the Depressed Classes
in a cable addressed to the Secretary to State for India,
Mr. L. S. Amery.
The cable adds: Your flouting of 60 million Depressed
Classes altogether and giving 43 per cent representation
to Muslims, which is nearly equal to that of Hindus, is
astounding. Government appears to have been mortgaged to
some communities only.
After solemnly recognising the Depressed Classes as
an important distinct element in the Indian national life
after insisting that their consent to constitutional changes
is essential after exploiting their co-operation in war, their
exclusion from the Council bespeaks of want of good faith on
your part.
Protesting in the interest and name of the Depressed
Classes, personally I have never asked, depended or had
support from the British. I can do without it in future. You
are absolutely free in your choice.
I want justice for the Depressed Classes. I warn you that
the Depressed Classes are not prepared to surrender their
right to representation in the Council. I strongly urge you
to recognise the same. Adding one member to the Council
cannot hurt.
ll
30
CONFERENCE OF ALL LEADERS OF THE
DEPRESSED CLASSES ALL OVER INDIA
Bombay, September 26, 1941
The United Press learns that a decision to mobilise
all forces of the Depressed Classes in the country under one
political body which will speak with authority and represent
the interests of the sixty millions population of the Depressed
Classes in Maharashtra held in Bombay yesterday, Dr. B. R.
Ambedkar, Leader of the Community, and Mr. P. N. Rajbhoj,
President of the All-India Harijan Political Conference, were
among others present.
It was decided at the meeting, the United Press further
learns, to hold a conference of all leaders of the Depressed
Classes all over India under the guidance of Dr. Ambedkar
for the purpose during the last week of October either at
Bombay or at Poona. Mr. Rajbhoj was appointed convener of
the proposed conference, exact date and venue of which will be
announced after consultation with Depressed Classes leader.
It is further learnt that the proposed body of the Depressed
Classes will be a permanent one on the lines of other political
bodies like the Muslim League or the Hindu Mahasabha.
United Press.1
ll
1
: Bombay Chronicle, dated 27th September 1941.
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31
Dr. AMBEDKAR AND THE JEWISH PEOPLE
ll
1
: Praja bandhu, dated 30th December 1991.
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32
I AM NOT LEAST INTERESTED
IN FORMATION OF MINISTRY
Bombay, Saturday*
I am not in the least interested in the formation of Ministry
in Bombay, said Dr. B. R. Ambedkar in an interview to a
representative of the Chronicle, referring to a New Delhi
message of November 25, in this connection. The message
suggested that during his stay in New Delhi next week,
Dr. Ambedkar was expected to meet the Viceroy presumably
in connection with the formation of Ministry in Bombay on
the lines of Orissa.
There is absolutely no foundation for this suggestion,
added Dr. Ambedkar.
The news as contained in the New Delhi message that
certain individuals have already seen the Viceroy in
connection with Ministry formation does not seem to have
any basis. An attempt at Ministry formation is necessarily
to be preceded by feelers with a view to find out possible
weak spots in the Congress Party. There is no indication of
any attempt so far in the matter of weaning away any of the
members of the Congress Legislature Party.
That Orissa will never be repeated in Bombay is the
opinion expressed in Congress Circles. A prominent member
of the Congress Legislature Party said that he had not the
least doubt about the solidarity of the party.1
ll
33
HINDUISM IS POLITICAL IDEOLOGY
AS THE SAME CHARACTER AS
Monstrous
But I cannot understand this demand for 50 per cent
representation for the Muslim community. Nor can I see
how this immediate demand of 50 per cent is related to the
ultimate demand of Pakistan. I am sure this demand of the
Muslim League is a monstrous thing and I have no doubt
that Lord Linlithgow has done the greatest service to India
by putting it down.
I am definitely of opinion that no National Government
ought to be established in India as an interim measure, if it
means conceding to Mr. Jinnahhis claim for 50 per cent. After
all, I cannot believe that the National Government can do more
in the matter of war effort than what is being done. India
simply cannot do more, her capacity has not been developed.
The fault lies entirely with the British Government. They had
chosen not to develop the resources of India in peace time
and it has therefore become impossible for the Government
or the National Government to do more than what is being
done. If she had been fully developed she could have defended
the Empire. She cannot now defend herself. She must, indeed
she is compelled to look to England to defend her from the
impending Japanese invasion; such is her helpless condition.
The appointment of an Indianas a Defence Member may
be good, but is that enough? Without the means of defence
at his disposal, what an Indian Defence Minister can do it
is difficult to understand.
I should have thought that the wiser course for Indians
would be to ask England to send out to India the means of
defence, which she is hoarding for her own safety. Therein
lies the immediate interest of India and therein also lies the
duty of England.A. P.1
ll
1
: The Bombay Chroricle, dated 26th February 1942.
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34
WE ARE A SEPARATE ELEMENT
IN THE NATIONAL LIFE
to soap and pray, and pray and soap, and soap and pray, so
that the filth of Dr. Ambedkar (M. A. London)* the shame
of Dr. Ambedkar (high honours at Columbia University) the
plague and scourge of Dr. Ambedkar (special distinction at
Heidelberg) should be washed for ever from their immaculate
and immortal souls. (P. 30)
Dr. Ambedkar said to me: The keynote of my policy is
that we are not a sub-continent of the Hindus but a separate
element in the national life.
Gandhi says to us Trust us-trust the Caste Hindus ! I reply
We will not trust you, for you are our hereditary enemies.
In every village there is a tiny minority of Untouchables. I
want to gather those minorities together and make them into
majorities. This means a tremendous work of organisation-
transferring populations, building new villages. But we can
do it, if only we are allowed. (P. 40.)
We are as staunchly nationalist as any of the Congress.
But we do not want the British to quit India till our rights
are safeguarded. If they do, our fate will be mere terrible than
the fate of any of the oppressed people of Europe.
(Verdict on India, P. 41)1
ll
35
SCHEDULED CASTES SETTLEMENT BE MADE
AT PAR WITH BANTUS
Hyderabad (Deccan), April 22, 1946: The view that the
demand of the Scheduled Castes for separate villages was not
an encroachment on the rights of any party, was expressed
by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, Labour Member of the Government
of India, in an interview.
Dr. Ambedkar said that there were large areas of cultivable
waste land lying untenanted in the country which could be
set apart for the settlement of Scheduled Castes. Government
could form a trust to give effect, to the proposal.
Objection, he thought, would come only from those who had
been accustomed to using the Scheduled Castes as a source
of labour which was available to do all the unclean jobs and
who could be forced to work at the cheapest wage-rate. They
would like to perpetuate this slavery. Because of intolerable
condition under which the Scheduled Castes lived in Provinces
like Bombay and Madras, it was necessary to have separate
villages for them.
Dr. Ambedkar explained that the village being a social
and not an economic unit of society, there was no need to
fear an economic strangulation of these separate villages.
The product of these areas would be sent to places where it
would be welcomed.
Asked if the demand applied to the Pakistan areas,
Dr. Ambedkar said that it did. At present there was nothing
concrete about Pakistan. The question of setting up separate
villages would arise when it took concrete shape.
The position of the Scheduled Castes, he said, was
analogous to that of the Bantu and other tribes of South
Africa. He did not see why provision should not be made in
the future Indian Constitution to safeguard the interests of
the Scheduled Castes in the same way as was done in the
South African Constitution in the case of the Bantus.A.P. I.1
ll
1
: The Times of India : dated 23rd April 1946.
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36
HINDUS ALWAYS REGARDED SCHEDULED
CASTES AS OUTSIDE THE PALE OF
HINDU SOCIETY
In an exclusive interview given to Globe at Bombay on
20th November 1946, shortly after his return from England
where he had been representing the case of Indias 50,000,000
Untouchables, Dr. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar said he had
found no reason to modify his statement made in London
when he drew a gloomy picture of the Indian political scene
and forecast a dismal future of the country until they were
laid by a real coalition representing all important elements
of their national life.
Asked if he considered it advisable in view of Mr. Jinnahs
latest statement and the unsatisfactory state of the country
to postpone the meeting of the Constituent Assembly which
is fixed for December 9, Dr. Ambedkar said, The question
to my mind is whether the Constituent Assembly would
have any moral authority behind it if the Muslims absent
themselves from the Constituent Assembly. If the Muslims
decide to absent themeselves, I dont know that the Constituent
Assembly could do anything if it met on the 9th or any other
subsequent date.
PROPORTIONATE REPRESENTATION
With regard to the question whether proportionate
representation will be a solution of this dispute, I might
say that I have considered the question and I find that it
will not work because if we keep the number of members of
the Legislature within the bounds now prescribed or which
may be regarded as reasonable, nowhere will the Scheduled
Castes, be able to have the quota of voter necessary to have
their own men elected in the Legislature.
Dr. Ambedkar next answered the question, Is it not
possible for the Scheduled Castes to merge themselves into
the Hindu community on the basis of a charter of common
rights, privileges and removal of all social disabilities?
The question of a merger of the Scheduled Castes into
the Hindu community is really dependent upon the wishes of
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IGNORANCE, OBSTINACY
From this point of view the political safeguards which the
Untouchables want are in no sense in conflict with the desire of the
Hindus to absorb and assimilate them. Because the Untouchables
have Separate Electorates it is difficult to understand
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HINDUISMS SHORTCOMINGS
The thinking section among the Untouchables are
convinced that Hinduism, as it exists today, does not furnish
to the Untouchables the sort of spiritual home and social
communion which religion is intended to furnish to men.
Secondly, the thinking portion of the Scheduled Castes is
of the opinion that it is not easy to uproot humanity as one
can uproot and transplant from one soil and to another. It
is a difficult operation and cannot be treated as adventure.
It has to be a planned action which would take time to
formulate and carry out.
Thirdly, the Untouchables feel that probablyalthough
they have grave doubts in the matterHinduism in the course
of time will so reform itself that it may become acceptable, and
the Untouchables are, therefore, prepared to stay on where
they are, provided that during the interval the Untouchables
get enough political safeguards so as to withstand the cruelty
oppression and injustice that is inherent in Hinduism and
from which they have been suffering all these ages, and from
which they apprehend they will suffer more than they have
if the Hindu majority obtains calumniated political power
in its own hands such as would be the case if India become
completely independent. If the Hindus refuse to recognise
this situation, and does not grant the Untouchables political
safeguards they want, I have no doubt that conversion to
some other religion by the Untouchables would become an
emergent issue.
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1
: Jai Bheem (Weekly), Madras, dated 25th December 1946.
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37
SCHEDULED CASTES CASE
TO BE PRESENTED BEFORE U. N. O.
Bombay, Jan. 17, 1947.
The Working Committee of the All-India Scheduled Castes
Federation adopted a resolution today, seeking to submit to
the United Nations Assembly the case of the sufferings of
the Scheduled Castes in India against the Hindus for their
acts of social, economic and political tyranny. The Committee
concluded its two-day session held under the Chairmanship
of Mr. N. Shivraj, President of the Federation.
The Committee approved the memorandum prepared by
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, for submission to the UNO and directed
the President of the Federation to take early steps to submit
the case formally to the Secretary of the UNO and to organise
a delegation of the Federation for the purpose.
The memorandum among other complaints added that the
tyranny and the constant and shameless resort to violence by
Hindus, makes the position of the Scheduled Castes far worse
than the position of Indians in South Africa. The memorandum
also complains of the failure of the British Government
to give protection and do justice to the Scheduled Castes
and requests the intervention of the UNO for necessary
international action.
With regard to the problems arising out of the framing
of the future Constitution of India, the Working Committee
declared in another resolution that the Federation stood for
a United India and a strong Central Government. The
Federation according to the resolution would be prepared to
accept the proposals of the Cabinet Mission regarding Grouping
in order to secure the co-operation of all parties and to arrive
at a peaceful solution of Indias constitutional problems.
1
: Jai Bheem, dated 26th January 1947.
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38
I FAIL TO UNDERSTAND ATTLEES
STATEMENT
Dr. Ambedkar, former Member of the Viceroys Executive
Council and leader of the Scheduled Castes in an interview
with Globe when asked for his reactions to Mr. Attlees
statement on India, said I have not studied it. In fact, I fail
to understand the statement,
Continuing, Dr. Ambedkar said: There is not a single
point in the statement on which I can put my finger and say
that it is clear to me. Nothing is explicit in the statement.
Perhaps my intelligence is so limited that I fail to know what
the statement is about.
In reply to the question whether the Scheduled Castes
Sikhs were part and parcel of the All-India Scheduled Castes
Federation, and if so, what was their motive in joining the
Leagues demonstration against the Punjab Government.
Dr. Ambedkar said: I have no idea as to whether they are
part of the Scheduled Castes Federation. The question will
be better answered by the Sikhs themselves in the Punjab
Globe.1
ll
1
: Reprinted, Jar Bheem, dated 16th March 1947.
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39
SECURE ADEQUATE SAFEGUARDS
FOR THE UNTOUCHABLES
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar expressed his thoughts regarding the
safeguards for Scheduled Castes in the letter addressed to
Jogendra Nath Mandal. Letter follows: Editors.
CONFIDENTIAL
My dear Mandal,
Your letter of the 30th May, 1947 was delivered to me
by Mr. Meshram yesterday. I am sorry that for the whole of
last month owing to severe pain in my left leg I have been
confined to bed and disabled from taking any active interest
in public affairs. I wish to come to Delhi on the 4th by air
to attend the Union Constitution Committee to which I have
been appointed. But that depends upon my fitness to move.
In case I am still advised by Doctors not to move, I shall let
you know my views about the question of partition of Bengal.
I have always felt that the British have refused to recognise
the Scheduled Castes as a separate and independent entity.
The Scheduled Castes were incapable of doing anything
precisely with regard to the question of partition. They could
neither force partition nor could they prevent partition if it
was coming. The only course left to the Scheduled Castes is
to fight for safeguards either in a United Bengal or a Divided
Bengal. I also hold the view that the Muslims are not greater
friends of the Scheduled Castes than the Hindus and that if
the Scheduled Castes should by their own circumstances are
destined to live in a minority whether a Hindu Bengal or a
Muslim Bengal, the only one course is to fight for safeguards
for every possible emergency. It is possible for the reasons you
have mentioned that the Scheduled Castes in Eastern Bengal
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will elect to stay where they are even when partition comes. I
have of course told the Hindus that in case there is partition
they shall have to agree to reserve some land in Western
Bengal for the Scheduled Castes of Eastern Bengal when
the Damodar Valley Project matures and more land is made
available for cultivation and in case the Scheduled Castes
of Eastern Bengal express a desire to migrate to Western
Bengal. This is however a somewhat remote possibility. In
the meantime I agree that you should work in allianee with
the League and secure adequate safeguards for them, I am
not quite so hopeless as you are with regard to the attitude
of the Hindus in Evelock to give political safeguards to the
Scheduled Castes. There isnt a chastened mind. In so far as
I am able to judge I think they will agree to almost all the
safeguards that we want. The only thing they will insist on
is some modified form of Separate Electorates. The Muslim
League however, will be ready to give to the Scheduled Castes
Separate Electorates more probably because they themselves
want Separate Electorates for their own community. So far
as the Eastern Bengal Scheduled Castes are concerned that
no doubt is an advantage.
You have asked me to let you have what demands you
should put up before the Muslim League. I have formulated a
set of demands in my Memorandum which has been printed
and circulated to the Members of the Minorities Committee.
I am sending a copy of it to you for your information. In my
view that Memorandum contains all that we need for our
protection, not only in Eastern Bengal but in every Province
in India. I think you should make this Memorandum the best
use in your negotiations with the Muslim League. Of course,
you are free to add to it any new safeguard for our people
in Eastern Bengal which you think there are some special
circumstances which call for such safeguards.
I have been already apprised of the plight of the Satyagrahis
in Lucknow Jail. I am sending two of my representatives to
Lucknow in order to inspect and state the condition of the
Satyagrahis in Jail. I have also referred to the Prime Minister.
U. P. Of course, our own people having thrown a challenge to
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Yours sincerely,
Sd/- B. R. AMBEDKAR
Honble Mr. J. N. Mandal,
Law Member to the Govt. of India,
NEW DELHI.1
ll
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 8, Pp. 164166.
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40
INDIAN CENSUS
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar expressed his opinion on Indian Census
on 26th October 1947, as follows: Editors.
The Census of India has over a number of decades ceased
to be an operation in demography. It has become a Political
affair. Every community seems to be attempting to artificially
argument its numbers at the cost of some other community
for the sake of capturing greater and greater degree of
political power in its own hands. The Scheduled Castes seem
to have been made a common victim for the satisfaction of
the combined greed of the other communities who through
their propagandists or enumerators are able to control the
operations and the results of the Census.1
ll
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 10, P. 22.
Place is not mentionedEditors.
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41
SCHEDULED CASTES IN PAKISTAN
SHOULD COME OVER TO INDIA
Open Invitation
All I can do is to invite them to come to India. For, the
condition of the Scheduled Castes in India is as it is in Pakistan. In
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1
: The National Standard, dated 28th November 1947.
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42
SCHEDULED CASTE REFUGEES NEGLECTED
I
(1) The Pakistan Government are preventing in every
possible way the evacuation of the Scheduled Castes from
their territory. The reason behind this seems to me that they
want the Scheduled Castes to remain in Pakistan to do the
menial job and to serve as landless labourers for the land
holding population of Pakistan. The Pakistan Government is
particularly anxious to impound the sweepers whom they have
declared as persons belonging to Essential Services and whom
they are not prepared to release except on one months notice.
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II
With regard to those Scheduled Castes who have come over
from Pakistan to Eastern Punjab, they have also sent their
complaints. They are far more numerous than those coming
from persons who are impounded in Pakistan. I have their
gist below:
(i)
(1) The Scheduled Castes evacuees who have come to Eastern
Punjab are not living in the refugees camps established by the
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(ii)
(1) In the allotment of lands made by the Government
of Eastern Punjab the interests of the Scheduled Castes are
completely overlooked. The administration of Eastern Punjab
being entirely in the hands of the Caste Hindus, there is nobody
either to take a personal interest in the rehabilitation of the
Scheduled Castes evacuees nor is there any agency appointed
by the Government of India especially charged with the duty
of bringing to the notice of the Eastern Punjab Government
that the interests of Scheduled Castes are overlooked.
(2) It is, therefore, essential that there should be a number
of officers appointed by the Government of India to work in
East Punjab charged with the special duty of seeing that the
allotment of land is fairly made and that the Scheduled Caste
refugees get their legitimate share.
(3) I have given to the Honourable Mr. Neogy a list of
persons for being appointed for this purpose who, so far as I
know, are best qualified to carry out this work.
(4) (a) It is a notorious fact that the Sikhs and the
Jats who occupy a very prominent position in East
Punjab are compelling the Scheduled Castes who are
residents of East Punjab to evacuate their original
homes in order to appropriate their houses or their
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Yours sincerely,
(Sd/)B.R. AMBEDKAR.
The Honble Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru,
Prime Minister of India,
New Delhi.1
Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru responded to the
abovementioned letter thus:
Prime Minister, P.M.
India. New Delhi,
The 25th December 1947.
My dear Dr. Ambedkar,
I have your letter of the 18th December about the
evacuation of Scheduled Caste people from Pakistan to India.
1
: Reprinted, Khairmode, Vol. 10, Pp. 26-32.
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Yours Sincerly,
(Sd/) Jawaharlal Nehru.
ll
1
: Reprinted, Khairmode, Vol. 10, Pp. 32-33.
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43
GOVERNMENT SHOULD BE IMPARTIAL
My dear Neogy,
You will recall that you wanted me to recommend the
names of some special workers who could be employed under
your Department for helping the Scheduled Caste refugees who
have come over from Western Punjab to Eastern Punjab in
the matter of their rehabilitation. I gave you a list of persons
who could be employed for this work. I do not know what
you have done with regard to the names contained in the
list. There are, however, two persons whom I recommended
and whom you have appointed, and about whom I propose to
write to you in this matter. They are Messrs B. K. Gaikwad
and R. S. Jadhav. Both of them have been complaining to me
that they are given no work at all and that they are wasting
their time. They also reported to me that they were called
over by Mr. Shevakram Karamchand who is the Director
of the Harijan Section of your Department and who cross
questioned as to their views on the general politics of this
country. The impression left upon them, which they conveyed
to me, is that the Government of India is not prepared to
employ people because they do not belong to the Congress.
It seems to me absurd, if not mischievous, for Government to
insist that its employees should have the same political opinion
as the Party in power, and I am sure that you do not share
the view-point expressed by Mr. Shewakram Karamchand.
What I am concerned about is that these two men who have
been retained are not given the work for which they were
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Yours sincerely,
Sd/B.R. Ambedkar.
Honourable Mr. K. C. Neogy,
Minister for Relief and
Rehabilitation,
New Delhi.1
ll
1
: Reprinted, Khairmode, Vol. 10, Pp. 34-35.
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44
BE YOUR OWN LIGHT !
ll
1
: Dr. Mulk Raj Anand, An eminent writer and author of The
UntouchableTribal World, April, 1991, P. 13.
Reprinted, Rattu Remembrances of Dr. B. R. Ambedkar. Pp. 110114.
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45
HINDUISM IS THE LATEST DEVELOPMENT
OF SOCIAL THOUGHT IN INDIA
Bombay, Wednesday*
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, Minister for Law, Government of
India, who arrived in the city from Delhi this evening declined
to comment on reports about his conversion to Buddhism.
Dr. Ambedkar told pressmen that he intended to start a
college at Ahmednagar on the lines of the Siddhartha College.
The College which will give instruction in both Arts and
Science subject will be started before July next, he stated.
He is leaving for Poona tonight and returning to the city
tomorrow evening.
He said, as one interested in the subject, he had been
collecting pieces of information as to the causes leading to
the birth and fall of Buddhism in India.
Dr. Ambedkar was of the opinion that the significance
of Buddhism would not be understood unless the exact
circumstances which gave birth to it were understood. He
disagreed with most people who were under the impression
that the religion of India had all along been Hinduism
Hinduism is the latest development of social thought in
India, he declared.
Causes of Decline
Turning next to the causes which led to the decline of
Buddhism, Dr. Ambedkar refuted suggestions made by many
people in India that Buddhism was destroyed by the dialectic
of Shankaracharya. This is contrary to facts as Buddhism
existed for many centuries after his death.
Dr. Ambedkar believed that Buddhism faded away in India
because of the rise of Vaishnavaitism and Saivaism. Another
cause was the Muslim invasion of India. When Allauddin
marched into Bihar, he killed over 5,000 Bhikkus. The remaining
*The 3rd May 1950.
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ll
1
: The Free Press Journal, dated 4th May 1950.
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46
SCHEDULED CASTES EMANCIPATION
DRAFT MANIFESTO
An Executive Committee Meeting of All India Scheduled
Castes Federation was held at the Residence of Dr. B. R.
Ambedkar at New Delhi on 6th Oct. 1951 to decide the
Election Manifesto.1
In that meeting a decision was taken, not to have alliance
with Congress, Hindu Maha Sabha, R.S.S., Communist
Party and Jan Sangh. The power to have the alliance with
other Politicat Parties was delegated to the adhoc committee
comprising Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, N. Shivraj and Bapusaheb
Rajbhoj. It was also decided that the adhoc Committee would
take the appropriate decisions.
The emphasis was given to make the Samata Sainik
Dal of Scheduled Castes Federation stronger and effective.
The manifesto prepared by Scheduled Castes Federation
was approved unanimously. The press wrote columns after
columns speculating about the proposed manifesto. Indians
and Western Journals welcomed the manifesto released on 7th
October 1951 which was unique, unparalled and outspoken.2
The copies of manifesto were circulated to the
representatives of news papers well in advance. Accordingly
the leading news paper The Times of India dated October
3rd, 1951 reacted under the above title which is as follows:
... Seeking to fight the battle against poverty on two fronts,
the Federation, it is understood, will advocate birth control to
limit population and urge measures for increased and intensified
agriculture and industrial production. The Federation considers
rapid industrialization as very essential but is of a view that
agriculture would continue to be the foundation of Indian
economy. As regards administration, the Federation will
press for the creation of linguistic provinces. It will insist on
stringent action against corruption and black-marketing in all
phases of life, particularly against Ministers or Officers who are
corrupt. The Federation will advocate reduction of expenditure
in the army, re-levy of the salt tax, abolition of prohibition
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 10, P. 147.
2
: Janata, October 13th, 1951.
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ELECTION MANIFESTO
OF THE
by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar
1
: The Times of India, dated 3rd October 1951, under titleScheduled
Castes Emancipation : Draft Manifesto
Reprinted, Khairmode, Vol. 10, P. 147.
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and in the poverty of the country. This is all the more regre-
table because the situation is not beyond remedy. In this
connection the following figures relating to available land in
India are very instructive:
Total Geographical area 811 million acres.
Total area under agriculture 577 million acres
Total area under forest 84 million acres
Cultivable waste 93 million acres
Uncultivable waste 93 million acres
Current fallow 62 million acres
Net land under agriculture 244 million acres
47. From these figures it will be seen that the total money
in the hands of the Life Insurance Companies per annum is
37 crores. Unlike Bank deposits they are not demand deposits.
Not being demand deposits they can be easily invested in long
term development projects. It is true that Insurance Companies
invest their monies in Government Securities so that it may
be said that in the last resort it is the Government which gets
the Insurane money. But this is no answer to nationalization of
Insurance. For the amount invested in Government Securities
is very small, 9 crores out of 37 crores. Secondly, Government
has to pay interest on these securities which is a needless
burden on the tax-payer. Thirdly, Insurance Companies eat up
annually 29 p.c. of the income from premium which came to
11 crores out of 37 crores for the year 1949. This is intolerable
waste of money. All this could be stopped by nationalization.
48. The Scheduled Castes Federation will not only press
for nationalization of Insurance; it will make Insurance
compulsory for all State and Private Employees. Compulsory
Insurance will give security to the individual and funds for
the Government for further development.
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ll
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47
RESIGNATION NOT DUE TO ILLNESS
Dr. Ambedkars statement, New Delhi, October
12,1951.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar said here to-day that he had not
resigned on grounds of illness.
In a Statement he said that in his letter of August 10
last, to the Prime Minister, he had referred to his illness but
had not mentioned it as a ground for his resignation. He had
mentioned it is a ground for getting higher priority for the
Hindu Code. In their letter of resigntion of September 27 last,
he had not mentioned illness as a ground for his resignation.
How anybody can spell out from those two letters that I
resigned because of my health, I am unable to understand.
I knew that attempts were being made to give such an
impression, that is why I wanted to make a statement in the
House so that nobody should be under any false impression.
The former Law Minister expressed surprise over the
question about his statement in Parliament on his resignation
having been raised against at 6 p. m. yesterday. After reading
the press reports of what had happened in the House in his
absence, he found that some confusion had been created in
the minds of the members by what was said by the Prime
Minister and the Deputy Speaker.
Unfortunately, Dr. Ambedkar said, the Prime Minister
did not inform me that he was going to raise the question in
the evening at six O clock. If he had told me of his intention
to do so, I would have certainly been present in the House
to hear what he had to say, and offer my explanation there.
But I received no such intimation from him and consequently
was not present in the House.
I, therefore, think it necessary to clarify the position. I
have not been able to understand what exactly the Prime
Minister wanted to gain by reading the correspondence between
him and me. I can only guess. If the impression which the
Prime Minister seems to be desirous of creating by reading
the correspondence was that the ground for my resignation
was my illness, it is not difficult to dispel that conclusion.
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incorrectEditors.
Reprinted: Khairmode, Vol. 10, Pp. 119-121.
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48
ALLIANCES WITH OTHER PARTIES WHOSE
OBJECTIVES ARE NOT OPPOSED TO
THOSE OF FEDERATION
Patna, November 7, 1951. (PIT)
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, Leader of the Scheduled Castes Federation,
told the Press Trust of India in an interview today that his party
would seek to fight the elections not only in alliance with the
Socialist Party but any other party whose objectives did not run
counter to those of the Federation.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar had a talk with Mr. Jay Prakash Narayan,
the Socialist leader, today for about an hour. The talks are believed
to have centred round the question of an election alliance.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar said that his party would not in any case
align with the Communist Party for the plain reason that I do
not believe in Communism,
Asked if he would prevent his party from aligning with the
Communist Party simply because he was personally opposed to
Communism, Dr. Ambedkar said: I am not going to be a slave
to my party so long as I and my party agree, we work together
else we go our own way. I do not live on politics and I do not
propose to live on politics.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar added, however, that on the question
of Communists there was no difference of opinion between him
and his party.
More Time
Dr. Ambedkar said that he had along been opposed to the
holding of the elections hastily. In his opinion at least one years
time should have been given to the people between the passing
of the Peoples Representation Act and the actual holding of
elections to enable them to prepare themselves.
If he had time he would have exerted himself for forming
a single party opposed to the Congress on Unitary or Federal
basis. The provincial branches of the Federation, Dr. Ambedkar
said, had been left free to enter into election alliances with other
parties whose objectives were not opposed to those of Federation.
ll
The Chronicle, dated 8th November 1951.
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49
NO MAN SHOULD BE THE JUDGE IN
HIS OWN CASE
New Delhi. December 10. 1951.
Dr. Ambedkar, former Law Minister of India, and the Chief
Architect of the Constitution, today appeared in the Supreme Court,
as a practising lawyer. He would be shortly arguing the petitions
of some Zamindars.
Mr. P. R. Das, who was advancing his arguments almost thought
today, at one stage made a reference to Dr. Ambedkars presence
in the Court. He told the Court that a particular phrase existed
in the draft constitution but was later deleted at the instance of
Dr. Ambedkar.
Dr. Ambedkar said Mr. Das, is here. Your Lordship must
call upon him to explain why those words were deleted. (Loud
Laughter).UPI.1
New Delhi, March 6.*
Dr. Ambedkar, continuing his arguments before the Supreme
Court, on behalf of the Uttar Pradesh zamindars, said that the State
should not be the judge in determining the amount of compensation
to be paid to the zamindars.
Relying on American doctrines, Dr. Ambedkar said that according
to jurisprudence no man should be the judge in his own case.
Dr. Ambedkar was challenging the Uttar Pradesh zamindars
and Estate Abolition Act on behalf of some zamindars petitioners.
To a question from the Chief Justice as to what should be the
remedy if State fixed the compensation, the counsel said that the
Court should declare the compensation fixed by the State as arbitrary.
Dr. Ambedkar said that the question of fixing compensation
should be referred to an independent body and not to the State itself
who sought to acquire the private properties.
The compensation fixed by the Uttar Pradesh Government
was illusory and they would not get anything at all after the entire
amount of debt was paid from the amount, he addedP.T.I.2
ll
1
: The Free Press Journal, dated 11th December 1951.
2
: The Free Press Journal, dated 5th March 1951,
*One of the date seems to be incorrectEditors.
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50
ELECTION PETITION
The 1st General Elections in India were declared in the
year 1952. Dr. B. R. Ambedkar wanted alliance with like-
minded political parties. In Maharashtra there was a talk
for electoral alliance with the Peasants and Workers Party
and the Socialists. Mr. Jayaprakash Narayan and Mr. Ashok
Mehta contacted Dr. Ambedkar through Acharya Donde, who
met him at Delhi.
The alliance between Scheduled Castes Federation and
Socialist Party took place and Dr. B. R. Ambedkar filed his
candidature for the House of People from Bombay City North
Constituency as a Reserved Candidate. The Election was held
on 3rd January 1952.Editors.
BOMBAY RESULTS SHOCKING
Inquiry Urged
New Delhi, January, 5th, 1952.
Dr. Ambedkar, former Law Minister of the Government
of India, who is contesting the reserved seat from Bombay
north, to the House of the People, said today that the results
of the elections in Bombay City, so far declared, came as a
great surprise and shock to the citizens of Bombay.
In a statement issued today, Dr. Ambedkar said, the
Congress show in the city was comparatively very poor. He
claimed that the polling was heavily in favour of the Socialists
and the Scheduled Castes Federation.
How the overwhelming support of the public of Bombay
could have been belied so grossly is really a matter for inquiry
by the Elections Commissioner he said.P. T. I.1
AMBEDKAR, MEHTA FILE ELECTION PETITION
New Delhi, April 24, 1952
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, former Union Law Minister, and the
Socialist leader, Mr. Ashok Mehta, have filed a joint election
petition before the Chief Election Commissioner to set aside
the election to the House of the People from the Bombay City
North Parliamentary constituency, and declare it illegal.
1
: The Time of India, dated 6th January 1952.
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NEW DELHI
(1) Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar, aged
60 of Bombay Inhabitant residing
at Rajgriha, Hindu Colony, Dadar,
without the Fort of Bombay.
Petitioners.
(2) Ashoka Ranjitram Mehta, aged 39
of Bombay Inhabitant residing at
3, Dadystth Street, near Babulnath
Temple without the Fort of Bombay.
Vs.
To,
The Election Commission,
New Delhi.
THE HUMBLE PETITION OF THE PETITIONERS
ABOVE NAMED RESPECTFULLY SHEWETH:
1. That the Petitioners were candidates for election to the
House of the People from Bombay City North constituency
at the Elections to the House of the People held on the 3rd
January, 1952.
2. That the Petitioners names were duly enrolled in the
electoral roll and the Petitioners thus became eligible to stand
as candidates from the said Constituency to the House of the
People.
3. That the Petitioners duly filed their nomination papers
as candidates from the Bombay City North Constituency. The
Petitioners nominations were duly accepted on 27th November,
1951. The Respondents 1 to 9 were the other candidates to
the House of the People from the same Constituency as that
of the Petitioners. The Respondent Nos. 7, 8 and 9 withdrew
their candidature within the time allowed for such withdrawal.
4. That the said Bombay City North Constituency, as
a plural member Constituency, has a right to elect two
members to the House of the People. Out of the two seats
to be filled in by Election in the said Constituency, one seat
is general and the second one is reserved for the Scheduled
Castes. Every voter in this Constituency has subject to the
restriction prescribed in Section 63 (1) of the Act, two votes
as there are two members to be elected; Section 63 (1) of the
Representation of the People Act, 1951 (Act No. XLIII of 1951)
expressly lays down that no elector shall give more than one
vote to any one candidate.
5. That the election at the polling stations in the Bombay
City North Constituency was held on the 3 rd January, 1952.
6. That the counting of votes polled by the various
candidates commenced on the 7th January 1952 and the same
was completed on the 11th January 1952.
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candidate for the House of the People from the said Bombay
City North Constituency. It was stated, inter alia, that if the
voters wanted their candidate to be elected they should cast
both their votes for the Respondent No. 1. The Respondent
No. 1 stated further that the waste of one of the two votes
did not in any way violate democracy because according to
the Respondent No. 1 giving of a vote by the non-Scheduled
Castes voters to a candidate for the seat reserved for the
Scheduled Castes is itself against the interests of democracy
of the Scheduled Caste voters. Then referring particularly to
the Petitioner No. 1 the Respondent No. 1 stated in the said
pamphlet that as the Petitioner No. 1 as a Scheduled Caste
candidate, was according to the Respondent- entitled to contest
both the seats, it was desirable that the Respondent No. 1
must take both the votes for himself and that all those who
wanted to make United Front of Leftist nomination successful,
should give both their votes to the Engine (the symbol of
the Party on whose ticket the Respondent No. 1 stood for
election). A copy of the English translation of the said leaflet
is annexed hereto and marked D.
15. In a press statement published by the Respondent No.
2 in the Marathi Weekly in Bombay entitled Vividh Vritta,
in its issue of the 30th December 1951 under the caption,
Bombay City North Constituency Parliamentary Election
Trap, Warning to the Voters the Respondent No. 2 warned
the voters in this Constituency, where a reserved seat for the
Scheduled Castes is provided, that a virtual trap to enable
the two Scheduled Castes candidates to capture both the
seats had been laid by the Petitioner No. 1, who beings to
the Scheculed Castes. The Respondent No. 2 further stated
in the said statement that in order to escape the trap, the
voter should cast his votes as he himself wanted to without
paying any heed to any party or pact and completely
disregarding, what he conveys, the influence of self seeking
leaders. He still further added that that alone would be
his duty, meaning thereby that the voters should cast both
their votes to a candidate other than the Petitioner No. 1
if they wanted to avoid the Petitioner No. 1, who belonged
to Scheduled Caste being elected with the Respondent No. 5
who also belonged to the Scheduled Castes, and thereby the
Scheduled Castes candidates carrying both the seats and
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(Sd) B.R.Ambedkar
(Sd) Ashoka Mehta
(Petition drawn by)
(Mr. N. C. N. Acharya,
Advocate O. S.)
(Sd) Kothare & Co.
Attorneys for the
Petitioners.
We, (1) Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar and (2) Ashoka Ranjitram
Mehta of Bombay Inhabitants residing respectively at Rajgriha,
Hindu Colony, Dadar, and 3, Aadyseth Street near Babulnath
Temple without the Fort of Bombay do solemnly declare that what
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(Sd.)B.R. Ambedkar
Before me
S e a l (Sd.) H. K. Patel
Presidency Magistrate,
XI Court, Kurla, Bombay
21-4-1952.
Solemnly declared by )
Ashoka Ranjitram Mehta )
the Petitioner No. 2 )
above named at Bombay )
aforesaid this 21st day )
of April 1952. )
Before me
S e a l (Sd.) H. K. Patel
Presidency Magistrate,
XI Court, Kurla, Bombay
21-4-1952.1
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 10, Pp. 269-280.
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UNDUE INTERFERENCE
He pointed out the difference between the English and
the Indian law and said that the former particularised undue
interference while the latter only used the word in a general sense.
He referred to the statements published by and on behalf
of Mr. S. A. Dange, the Communist candidate, and Dr. G. V.
Deshmukh, the Independent candidate, and said that by asking
voters to cast both their votes in favour of one candidate they
had caused undue influence on them. One of the four witnesses
previously examined had admitted that Mr. Dange knew that
the Left United Front which supported his candidature to
Parliamentary seat, had issued leaflets, but at no stage had
he intervened and asked the Front to stop the issuing of the
leaflets, he said.
The petitioner contended that Mr. Dange was responsible for
his agents doings. The Ugantar, a Marathi weekly, had in an
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DISPOSAL OF VOTES
Dr. Ambedkar submitted that the disposal of one of the two
votes was not left to the wishes of voters or, for that matter,
of candidates. The disposal of the second vote was regulated
by Section 79 (d) which, he said, gave the electorate the option
to vote or not to vote as voting was not compulsory in India.
He raised the following points (1) A voter was free to exercise
his electoral rights; (2) He could go to the polling booth and
receive both his ballot papers and distribute them; (3) He could
use one of them and return the other to the Presiding Officer;
(4) To use one ballot paper and destroy the other was illegal and
an offence according to Section 136(e) (f);(5)To cast one ballot
paper in the ballot box and take the other with him would be
illegal, according to Section 135, and (6) To insert both the ballot
papers in one box was also illegal, according to Rule 25 (1) and
a violation of the Act.
He stated that Section 100 clearly stated that an election
shall be set aside on the ground of corrupt practices extensively
prevailing, and asked if the Tribunal did not consider the 74,333
votes wasted as the result of the perverse propaganda to be
a large figure. I lost my seat by 13,000 votes. I am not very
presumptuous, but out of the 39,000 votes wasted by Mr. Dange,
I would certainly have got a large number had it not been for the
crucial propaganda of his and that of Dr. Deshmukh, he said.
CHAPTER OF MISALLIANCE
Mr. A. S. R. Chari, counsel for Mr. Dange, described the
petitions of Dr. Ambedkar and Socialist leader, Mr. Ashoka Mehta,
as the closing chapter of misalliance between the Socialists and the
Scheduled Castes Federation. He said the petitioners own witness
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Mr. Bapurao Jagtap, had told the Tribunal that the Left United
Front had requested the petitioners with folded hands to
join the Left United Front, a request they had refused only
because they overestimated their strength.
Mr. Chari said that there was no legal obligation on a voter
to use both his votes as he could either vote or refrain from
voting for a candidate in accordance with the clauses of Section
63 of the Act. His arguments were: That the persuasion to vote
only one candidate, or not to vote for any one candidate, did
not constitute interference with the free exercise of the will
of the voters according to the definition of undue influence.
That any of the acts of Mr. Dange or any other candidate,
did not come within the definition of corrupt practice as
set out in the Representation of the People Act. That what
Mr. Dange had done was only to persuade the voter and
he had a right to do so. That the petitioners had filed their
petitions only to provide a plausible excuse for their defeat
before their supporters; and that the defeat of the petitioners
in the last election was due to their arrogant refusal to join
hands with the Left United Front which wanted to fight the
Congress and the communal elements.
UNDUE INFLUENCE
Mr. T. R. Kapadia, counsel for V. B. Gandhi corroborating
Mr. Charis argument, said that the petitioners had failed to
prove who had exerted undue influence on voters. He asked
whether the respondents alone were guilty of that charge or
whether the petitioners were also equally guilty of it.
Dr. Deshmukh, after obtaining consent from -the Tribunal
that he might be allowed to address it in place of his advocate,
said that all parties were responsible for corrupt practices
at the last elections. He admitted that the editor of Vividh
Vritta, a Marathi weekly, was not only his agent but also
his intimate friend.
Hearing will be continued on Wednesday.
The respondents are Mr. S. A. Dange, Dr. G. V. Deshmukh,
Dr. V. B. Gandhi, Mr. K. B. Joshi, Mr. N, S. Kajrolkar and
Mr. N. B. Parulkar.
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51
COMMUNISTS IN MAHARASHTRA
American Journalist Mr. Seling S. Harrison interviewed
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar on 21st and 28th February and 9th
October 1953 on the topic of weaknesses of the Communists
State of Maharashtra. The interview is as follows: Editors.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, who organised Mahars as a political
force, accounted similarly for Communist weakness in
Maharashtra:
The Communist Party was originally in the hands of some
Brahmin boysDange and others. They have been trying to
win over the Maratha community and the Scheduled Castes.
But they have made no headway in Maharashtra. Why?
Because they are mostly a bunch of Brahmin boys. The
Russians made a great mistake to entrust the Communist
movement in India to them. Either the Russians didnt want
Communism in Indiathey wanted only drummer boys or
they didnt understand1
ll
52
STARVING PEOPLE ASK FOR BREAD
Yours Sincerely,
(Sd.) B. R. Ambedkar.
Shri Bindu,
Minister for Home Affairs,
Hyderabad State,
HYDERABAD1
ll
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 11, Pp. 67-68.
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53
BUDDHIST SEMINARY TO BE STARTED IN
BANGALORE
Training Preachers
With the money forthcoming, Dr. Ambedkar said, the
seminary would be ready in about two years time. The
main object of this institution would be to train preachers
for propagating Buddhism among the common folk, he said.
Dr. Ambedkar said that students would be admitted to the
seminary without consideration of caste, creed or nationality
and would undergo courses in comparative study of religions
and other allied subjects. He believed that no one could
uphold Buddhism truly without studying the other religions
also scientifically.
Dr. Ambedkar said the seminary would also have a press
where Buddhist literature would be printed. A group of
eminent scholars from all over the world would be engaged in
translating Buddhist texts in Pali and other languages into
English and they would be published by the seminary, he said.
ll
1
: The Times of India, dated 12th January 1955.
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54
BUDDHISM DISAPPEARED FROM INDIA DUE TO
WAVERING ATTITUDE OF THE LAITY
ll
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 12 First EditionJuly 1992, Pp. 24-25.
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55
IM PREPARED TO SAVE YOUR LIFE
PROVIDED..
I M PREPARED...............PROVIDED............. 433
ll
1
: B.B.C.Talking of Gandhiji, Orient Longmans, Bombay, Calcutta and
Madras. Script and Narration by Francis Watson, Production by Maurice
Brown, Pages 9, 10, 16, 78 and 79.
Reprinted: Rattu, Reminiscences and Rememberance of Dr. B. R.
Ambedkar, Pp. 159-162.
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56
A POLITICAL PARTY DOES NOT EXIST FOR
WINNING ELECTION BUT FOR EDUCATING,
AGITATING AND ORGANIZING THE PEOPLE
A meeting of the Working Committee of Scheduled
Castes Federation was called by its President Dr. B. R.
Ambedkar on 21st August 1955 which was held at Jairaj
House, Bombay.
In this meeting the Constitution of Scheduled Castes
Federation which was printed in January 1955 was
discussed. Some amendments to the various articles were
suggested and accepted.
The Report of this Working Committee along with
amendments is as followsEditors.
The Working Committee of the All India Scheduled
Castes Federation, Jairaj House, Bombay.
The following members of All India Working Committee
of the S. C. F. were present at the meeting of the Working
Committee called by the President, Dr. B. R. Ambedkar,
M. A., Ph.D.,D.Sc, LL.D., D. Litt., Bar-at-Law, Member of
Council of States on 21st August, 1955 at 4 p. m. at Jairaj
House, Colaba, Bombay:
1. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar,
2. Shri Rajabhau Khobragade (Madhya Pradesh)
3. Shri A. Ratnam (Madras)
4. Shri Haridas Awode (Nagpur, Madhya Pradesh)
5. Shri J. C. Adimugam (Mysore)
6. Shri J. S. Bansode (Madhya Bharat)
7. Shri C. M. Arumugam (Mysore)
8. Shri Nilam Singh Gill (Pepsu)
9. Shri B. S. More (Aurangabad)
10. Shri R. D. Bhandare (Bombay)
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the duty of the Govt, to tell the people what other weapon
it has.
Dr. Babasaheb explained that the satyagraha can be
between two parties who agree on the Truth . The only
difference between the parties is on Agraha. The British
people could give freedom to India because both the British
people and the Indians had agreed that the Indians have
the right of Self-Government. In fact this principle of self
Government was enunciated by Macaulay as far back as
1833. Macaulay said that the Indians were not barbarions.
The Indians have a distinct civilization and culture of
their own. They, therefore, should be given the right to
govern themselves. But in the case of Goa the Portugues
Government did not agree on the question of freedom of
Goa. Satyagraha, therefore, as a weapon of liberating
Goa is not only useless but dangerous. I cannot allow our
people to be exposed to bullets and massacre. If we are
given guns, we will fight. We, therefore, want to pass the
above resolution.
The resolution was carried unanimously.
Resolution No. 9.This meeting of the Working
Committee is not satisfied with the foreign policy of
the country. It is neither calculated to strengthen the
parliamentary system of Government nor the defence of
the country.
After this resolution was carried, the President
announced that he has appointed Shri Rajabhau Khobragade
as the General Secretary of the All India Scheduled Castes
Federation.
Resolution No. 10.Resolution congratulating Shri
Khobragade was passed.
The Chairman was thanked for guiding the deliberations
of the Working Committee.
All members of the Working Committee were also
thanked.
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ll
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57
A LETTER TO JAWAHARLAL NEHRU
REGARDING THE BOOK BUDDHA AND HIS
DHAMMA
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar had written a letter, on 14th September
1956 to Pandit Jawahadal Nehru regarding a book on The
Buddha and his Dhamma. It is as follows: Editors.
My dear Panditji,
I am enclosing herewith two copies of a printed booklet
showing the Table of Contents of a book on The Buddha and
His Dhamma which I have just finished. The book is in the
press. From the table of the contents you will see for yourself
how exhaustive the work is. The book is expected to be in the
Market in September 1956. I have spent five years over it. The
booklet will speak for the quality of the work.
The cost of printing is very hevy and will come to about
Rs. 20,000. This is beyond my capacity and I am, therefore,
canvassing help from all quarters.
I wonder if the Government of India could purchase about 500
copies for distribution among the various libraries and among
the many scholars whom it is inviting during the course of this
year for the celebration of the Buddhas 2500 years anniversary.
I know your interest in Buddhism. That is why I am writing
to you. I hope that you will render some help in this matter.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) B. R. AMBEDKAR.
Pt. NEHRUS REPLY
Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru had responded to the letter of
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar. He expressed his inability to purchase
the Book Buddha and His Dhamma. He referred this to
Dr. Radhakrishnan, the Chairman of Buddha Jayanti Commttee.
Following is the reply by Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru: Editors.
Shri Jawaharlal Nehru,
Prime Minister of India,
NEW DELHI.
No. 2196-PMH/56.
NEW DELHI
September 15, 1956.
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Yours sincerely,
(Signed) JAWAHARLAL NEHRU.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar,
26, Alipur Road, Civil Lines,
DELHI.
Dr. S. Radhakrishnan informed on phone to Dr. B. R.
Ambedkar expressing his inability to do anything in this
regard.
ll
58
BHIKHUS SHOULD SERVE THE BUDDHA BY
BECOMING PREACHERS OF HIS DHAMMA
Dr. B. R. AMBEDKAR,
M.A., Ph.D., D.Sc, LL.D., D.Litt., Barrister-at-Law,
Member, Council of States
26, ALIPORE ROAD, CIVIL LINES, DELHI
Dated the 30th October 1956.
My dear Valisinha,
Thank you very much for your letter of 25th October
1956. It certainly was a great event and the crowd that came
forward for conversion was beyond my expectation. Thank the
Buddha it all went well.
I am glad you realize that having begun the task well
we have to look to its continued progress in the future. We
have to consider ways and means of imparting knowledge of
Buddhism to the masses who have accepted His Dhamma
and will accept it on my word. We should no doubt train
large number of workers to teach Dhamma to the people, but
the best agents for carrying out the same are the Bhikkus.
They would carry a great deal of prestige with them which
no layman could do.
The Bhikkus in my judgement ought to be very happy to
find out that a large task awaiting them has been done. The
only difficulty with the Bhikkus is that they dont care to
learn the language of the people. I am afraid the Sangh will
have to modify its outlook and instead of becoming recluses
they should become like the Christian missionaries the social
workers and social preachers. As I told you today they are
neither Arhans nor useful members of the society. This fact
must be hammered into them and make them realize that
they could serve the Buddha well by becoming preachers of
His Dhamma.
I like your idea of opening a sort of the logical seminar where
Bhikkus and non-Bhikkus could be taught the fundamentals
of Buddhism and make to learn the different languages of
India so that they could be sent to the different parts.
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Yours Sincerely,
(Sd.) (Dr. B. R. Ambedkar)
Shri D. Valisinha,
General Secretary,
Maha Bodhi Society of India,
4-A, Bankim Chatterjee Street,
(College Square), Calcutta-2.1
ll
1
: Mahabodhi; May 1957, Number 5, P. 226.
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59
I BELIEVE, MY PEOPLE WILL SACRIFICE
EVERYTHING TO ESTABLISH BUDDHISM
IN INDIA
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar and Mrs. Ambedkar accompanied
by Mr. B. H. Varale and Dr. Mavalankar left for Nepal to
participate in the World Buddhist Conference scheduled to
take place on the 17th November 1956.
While leaving for Nepal, on November 13th, 1956, Mr. Y. C.
Shankaranand Shastri very respectfully enquired at the Air
Port, New Delhi, Baba Saheb, in view of your failing health
how far will it be possible for you to tour India to propagate
the Dhamma? Baba Saheb felt slightly irritated but strongly
asserted, for the task like propagation of Buddhism I am
not at all ill. I am prepared to utilise every moment of my
remaining life for the great task of revival and propagation
of Buddhas Dhamma in Bharat.
I am going to administer Deeksha to lakhs of people in
Bombay in the month of December. The kind of great revival
meeting took place in Nagpur on the 14th October 1956 will
also be arranged in Bombay where millions of people will
be converted to Buddhism. Conversion meeting like the one
which took place in Nagpur will also be organised in other
cities of India.
Not only the people treated as Untouchables but all people,
irrespective of caste or religion, who believe in the teachings
of the Buddha should participate in this Deeksha ceremony
and embrace Buddhism.
During the course of conversation with people present
there, Baba Saheb Ambedkar strongly asserted, It is
very wrong to believe that Buddha is incarnation of
Vishnu. This is a false and mischievous propaganda. The
preachers of this diabolical theory are none other than the
followers of Brahminism. Their sole aim is to maintain
the stratification based on inequality and mutual hatred
in order to maintain their hold on the society. I have been
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ll
1
: Prabuddha Bharat: dated 17th Nov. 1956. Translated by Bhagwan Das
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APPENDICES
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BLANK
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APPENDIXI
BRUTE FORCE WILL NOT SUSTAIN
UNTOUCHABILITY
MAHATMA GANDHI
ll
APPENDIXII
MANS INHUMANITY TO MAN
(By M. K. Gandhi)
II
ll
APPENDIXIII
ORTHODOXY RUN MAD
Alleged Barbarous Treatment of Untouchable
Crime of Being Mahars
Mr. Keshavaji Ranchhodji Vaghela from Ahmedabad has
informed Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, President, Bahishkrit Hitkarini
Sabha as follows:
One Bapoorao Laxman and his brother Kaurao have been
residents of Ahmedabad during the last six years. They used to
mix with some people from the Deccan belonging to Maratha
Caste. Kauraos two sons viz. Damoo and Laxman used to
take part in the Bhajan parties of the Marathas. The latter,
however, recently came to know that the brothers Damoo
and Laxman were Mahars by caste and in order to ascertain
this, two Mahars employed on the parcel train between Surat
and Ahmedabad were specially called to identify Damoo and
Laxman. After it was ascertained, they were called at a
Bhajan party at Kalupur, Bhanderi Pole, at midnight on the
11th instant. Asked as to what caste they belonged to, Damoo
and Laxman replied that they were Somvanshis. This reply
enraged the Marathas who freely abused them for having
defiled their persons and places. The Mahar brothers were
also assaulted by the Maratha. One of the brothers had a
gold ring on his person. It was forcibly taken away from him
and sold for Rs. 11. Out of this amount Rs. 6 was paid to
the Mahars who had been called from Surat to identify the
brothers. Damoo and Laxman entreated the Marathas to allow
them to return to their homes, but the latter refused to do
so unless a fine Rs. 500 was paid. On the Mahar brothers
pleading their inability to pay such a heavy sum, one of the
Marathas suggested that the Mahar brothers should be fined
only Rs. 125. But then one of the Marathas opposed the
proposal for fine saying that they should not be satisfied with
fine, but should punish the Mahars severely for their crime
of concealing their caste. Having decided upon the course,
the Mahar brothers were detained and at about 9 Oclock in
the morning they were subjected to barbarous indignities.
Their mustaches in the left side and eyebrows on the
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1
: The Bombay Chronicle, dated 25th February 1928.
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APPENDIXIV
GANDHI-VALLABHBHAl MEETING ON EVE OF
POONA-PACT
On September 6,1932 in Yervada Jail the discussion
proceeded on these lines:
Vallabhbhai Patel : What do you think will these people
(British Government) do?
Gandhiji : I still feel that they will release me on
or before 19th. It will be the limit of
wickedness if they let me fast, let no
one know about it and then say that
I did what I as a prisoner ought not
to have done, and that they could do
nothing about it. I do not say that they
cannot go that far, only then they will
find it necessary. And they certainly
are not the people to go farther than
it is necessary.
V. Patel : Then what will you do?
Gandhiji : The fast cannot commence on 20th.
We cannot stick to the 20th.
V. Patel : Does it mean then that we have
got time till the new Constitution is
drawn up? or that you can give a
longer notice to the people and the
Government?
Gandhiji : Yes, but that depends on how much
the people will allow me to do after I
get out. I cannot tell what the situation
will be. I may have no idea of the kind
of letter I may have to write. But I
shall have to consider every party
the Hindu Society, the Antyajas, the
Government, the Muslims. It will
be necessary for the Hindus to hold
meetings along with the Antyajas at
every place and reject this thing. The
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GANDHI............POONA-PACT 463
APPENDIXV
COMMENTS ON ROUND TABLE CONFERENCE
AND POONA-PACT
1
Joint Select Committee of Parliament:
Communal Award And Poona Pact
The Committee are definite in their opinion that communal
representation is inevitable at the present time. They describe
as well-thought out and well-balanced the arrangement for
the composition of Provincial Assemblies embodied in the
Communal Award.
As regards the Poona Pact, the Committee express the view
that in their opinion the original proposals of His Majestys
Goverment were a more equitable settlement of the general
communal question, and more advantageous to the Depressed
Classes in their present stage of development. But, since
the Pact has been accepted as an authoritative modification
of the Award, the Committee are clear that it cannot now
be rejected. They are however, disposed to think that if by
agreement some reduction were made in the number of seats
reserved for the Depressed Classes in Bengal, possibly with a
compensatory increase in the number of their seats in other
Provinces, the working of the new Constittuion in Bengal
would be facilitated. (A Summary of the Report of the Joint
Select Committee of Parliament on the proposals contained
in the White Paper on Indian Constitutional Reforms, page
4, dated 22nd November, 1934.)1
2
Joachim Alwa stated in his book Men and
Supermen of Hindustan:
He (Dr. B. R. Ambedkar) just became bold and literally
adopted Spencers maxim Be bolde ! be bolde and ever more
be bolde ! He learnt that by daring and reckless courage, great
fears & weaknesses are removed. He was most powerfully
1
: Reprinted, Khairmode, Vol. 5. Pp. 65-66.
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3
An Author Writing Under Pen-Name
A Student of Public Affairs, in his book Has Congress
Failed? expressed his views as under: Not even his
most ardent supporters will claim that Mr. Gandhis
participation in that Conference was a success. Communal
differences were holding up progress on all sides and the
Minorities Sub-Committee finally was obliged to report
failure to reach a settlement. Mr. Gandhi consistently
refused to consider any proposal for separate electorates for
any community except the Mohammedans, the Sikhs and
the Europeans, and as regards the Depressed Classes he
insisted that they were Hindus and must be kept within
1
: Reprinted, Khairmode, Vol. 4. Pp. 168-169.
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7
Dhananjay Keer, biographer said,
The Poona Pact thus vibrated the whole country and had
repercussions throughout the world. It proved once more that
Dr. Ambedkar whom in pre-Poona pact days the Congress leaders
and the press refused to recognise as the leader of the Depressed
1
: Khairmode, Vol. 4, Pp. 170172.
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ll
APPENDIXVI
DR. AMBEDKAR IS NOW PUTTING MR. GANDHI
TO AN ACID TEST
1
: Source Material, Vol. 1 Pp. 107-108.
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APPENDIX -VII
DR. AMBEDKAR WANTED AN EXTENSION
IN AMERICA
Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar January 16, 1915
35. Vide paragraph 1103 of 1913S. B.,* Bombay, January
16thThe Censor writes: The following letter passed through from
Minister of Education, Baroda. d/o No. 509, dated 8th January
1915, to B.R. Ambedkar. Esquire B. A., 554 West 114th Street,
New York:
Inform him that proposals will be submitted to His Highness
the Maharaja Saheb to grant you an extension in continuation
of the one already sanctioned, and that the result will be
communicated.
Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar January 30, 1915
81. Vide paragraph 35 Baroda, January 25thThe Assistant
Resident writes: Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar is a Parwari **a
resident of Bombay who was sent by the Gaekwad to America
to study Finance and Sociology. He figures in the Baroda Service
List as a Military Probationer, but has done no military training
and was apparently appointed in order to draw pay. He was sent
to America in June 1913 and it is believed that he is still there.
A certificate of identity was given to him.
Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar February 13, 1915
107. Vide paragraph 81 Bombay, February 8thBhimrao Ramji
Ambedkar is a Mahar by caste, native of Ambed, Taluka Dapoli,
District Ratnagiri. He is a graduate of the Bombay University
having passed his B. A. Examination from the Elphinstone College.
He then joined the Baroda State Service and in 1913 was sent to
America by the Baroda State to study Economics. He left Bombay
per S. S. Sardegna on the 15th June 1913.
It appears that Ambedkar had asked for an extension of his
stay in America for two years more within which time he expects
to finish his studies.
ll
APPENDIX -VIII
FOR THE PRESENT DR. AMBEDKAR MUST
WORK AS A PROBATIONER IN ACCOUNTS
DEPARTMENT
LETTER FROM GOVERNMENT OF BARODA
Government of Baroda,
No. 744
Huzur Cutchery
Baroda, 7th June 1918.
My dear Sir Narayanrao,
In reply to your letter of the 5th ultimo, enclosing
Mr. Ambedkars, I write this to say that the papers were
submitted to His Highness the Maharaja Sahab and he has
been pleased to order that Mr. Ambedkar should join Baroda
service on the salary that was agreed to be given to him
when he left for America. If that is inadequate, his request
for improved salary will be considered after a while. For
the present. In view of his conduct which His Highness is
constrained to remark has not proved worthy of his education
or trust reposed in him. His Highness is not disposed to give
him more liberal terms. His Highness has always been taking
a (good) deal of interest in the welfare of Mr. Ambedkars
community and has spent large sums of money on Mr.
Ambedkar himself. Could not be under these circumstances
have set an example of probability and straight-forwardness
even at some loss and discomfort to himself, particularly
when he was promised better prospects in course of time?
As regards his request for professional work in the
College, His Highness will consider the question when there
is a vacancy provided he is found fit for those duties. For
the present, he must work as a Probationer in the Accounts
Department.
Since Mr. Ambedkar is not in a position to furnish
requisite security for repayment of the money spent
over his education in the event of his relinquishing
service, he will have to submit for a period of 5 years
to a deduction of 15 p.c. of his pay which will be
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Your Sincerly,
Manubhai Mehta.
Sir H. G. Chandawarkar,
Redder (Peddar) Road,
Malabar Hill, Bombay.1
ll
1
: Rattu: Little known facts of Dr. Ambedkar, Pp. 230-231.
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APPENDIX -IX
TAKE EARLY ACTION TO REPAY YOUR DEBT
K. E. D. S.F. No. 43 No. 8088 of 1919-20
TELEGRAPHIC ADDRESS Office of the Educational
Commissioner,
EDUCATION, BARODA. Baroda, 13th/14th May 1920
From
A. B. Clarke, esquire, B. A. (Cantab),
The Educational Commissioner,
Baroda State, Baroda.
To,
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar,
The Sydenham College of
Commerce and Economics, Bombay.
Subject: Repayment of debts.
Sir, I have the honour to invite your attention to my
letter No. 4675, dated 24th January 1920* and a subsequent
reminder No. 6121, dated 18th March 1920* on the subject
quoted above and to request that you will be good enough to
expedite the matter and to take early action to repay your
debt to the State.
I have the honour to be.
Sir,
Your most obedient servant,
A.B.Clarke.
Commissioner of Education,
Baroda State1
ll
APPENDIX - X
REACTIONS ON THE STATEMENT DATED
19-6-1936 ISSUED BY DR. B. R. AMBEDKAR
ON CONVERSION
I
Dear Sir,
II
Mr, Rajahs Reply to Dr. Moonje
I have already expressed my view about Dr. Ambedkars
proposal that the Depressed Classes should give up Hinduism
and embrace some other religion. I make a distinction between
conversionwhich is a spiritual change and migration from
one community to another for social, economic and political
reasons.
Dear Dr. Moonje, you will excuse my saying that you
view the whole problem of Depressed Classes, in view of
Dr. Ambedkars proposal, as one of the communal migration
and not as a religious problem. One would expect the
President of the Hindu Mahasabha to view it as a religious
problem and not merely as a political problem, without
even looking at it as a social and economic problem. One
can understand your concern if as President of the Hindu
Mahasabha you placed the spiritual welfare of the Depressed
Classes first and foremost and thought of the social and
economic welfare next and lastly thought of them as a
political factor. Your solicitude for the place of the Depressed
Classes in the political scheme not only exposes the interested
1
: The Bombay Chronicle, dated 8th August 1936.
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III
Rajah Backed
Mr. C. Rajagopalchari writing to Rao Bahadur Rajah
said:
I have your note and enclosures. I read through the
Correspondence. I would not be too strong language to call the
whole thing a diabolical proposal. I am glad, you have sent the
correspondence to Mahatmaji. I am glad, you have replied in the
terms you have done and summarily rejected the Idea.1
IV
RAJBHOJ REPLIES TO DR. AMBEDKAR
Poona Pact Benefits not for Runaways from Hinduism
The Poona Pact does not make any provision for converts
from Hinduism, and even if some of the Harijan community
embraced Sikhism or any other religion in a body, it is not
within the power of the Poona Pact signatories to retain
for those converts any of the advantages secured under it,
says Mr. P. N. Rajbhoj, Harijan leader and Secretary of
the All India Depressed Classes league, in a statement on
Dr. Moonjes plan. Mr. Rajbhoj adds that the Poona Pact
was specially intended to give the utmost concession to
1
: The Bombay Chronicle, dated 8th August 1936.
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Logical Absurdity
Proceeding, Mr. Rajbhoj asks if new converts from
Hinduism are to be given the benefits derived under
the Poona Pact why not the old converts who may for
political, if not religious, reasons want them? He says that
there are large number of Depressed Classes who have
embraced other faiths, but have not been able to throw
off the disabilities attached to the Harijan Community,
and mentions the case of the Christians in some parts of
Madras. Why should concessions and benefits obtained by
those who laboured under disadvantages and difficulties
be given to those who did not want those disadvantages,
but only the benefits of the labours of others.
The Poona leader adds, the formula is a vicious formula
and will lead to more complications and endless trouble. It
should not be accepted by the Hindus or by anybody. We
are Hindus or not Hindus. If we elect to remain within
the Hindu-fold, we are entitled to our right and privileges
as Hindus, and once we leave the Fold, we can have no
claim.
Refuting the statement that the Hindus have not made
any sacrifice by accepting the Poona Pact, Mr. Rajbhoj says
that instead of the 71 seats given to the Depressed Classes
under the Communal Award, the Pact gave them 148 seats.
Concluding Mr. Rajbhoj asserts that the conversion idea has
no universal appeal among the Harjijan community. Even
in Maharashtra only the Mahars favoured such a view,
but the Chamars were solidly opposed to any conversion.
There was no support to the idea in other provinces and
he was surprised how the Hindu leaders were involved
into it.1
1
: The Bombay Chronicle, dated 15th August 1936.
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V
Mahatma Gandhis Views
Mahatma Gandhis letter to Mr. Rajah dated 26th July
1936:
I have no difficulty about giving general endorsement
to your letter to Dr. Moonje. I do not at all understand
Dr. Moonjes or Dr. Ambedkars positition. For me removal of
Untouchability stands on a footing all its own. It is to me a
deeply religious question. The very existence of our religion
depends on its voluntary removal by Savarna Hindu in the
spirit of repentence. It can never be a question of barter to
me. And I am glad you take nearly the same position that
I do (The Annual Register, Vol. II, JulyDecember 1936,
page 276-279).1
VI
Telegram from PanditM. M. Malaviya, dated 30th July
1936 to Rao Bahadur M. C. Rajah: Thanks for the copy of
your letter to Dr. Moonje. I agree with you.A. P.2
VII
The MunjeRajah Pact3
Splitting Depressed Classes
Sir, though Dr. Munje4 and the Hindu Mahasabha have
been unable to wipe out the blot of Untouchability from
Hinduism and thus to make the Hindu Organisation strong
and compact, they have succeeded in trapping a leader of
the Depressed Classes with a view to causing a split in
the ranks of those classes. The Munje-Rajah Pact is being
boosted by the Congress and Mahasabha organs, and it is
being represented to the gullible public that the pact is being
1
Khairmode, Vol. 6, Pp. 191193.
2
The Bombay Chronicle8th August 1936.
3.
The Munje-Rajah PactRao Bahadur M. C. Rajah, a Depressed
Classes leader from Madras and Dr. B. S. Munje, President of Hindu
Mahasabha had discussions on the basis of reserved seats and Joint
Electorates in Delhi. They made a pact which is known as The Moonje-
Rajah Pact.
4
Dr. B. S. MunjeHe was President of Hindu Mahasabha, Delegate,
Indian Round Table Conference.
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ll
GPNY-1054MSDR-BABPOB-8-200315,210-BooksPR-8*
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blank
DR. BABASAHEB AMBEDKAR
WRITINGS AND SPEECHES
PUBLISHED VOLUMES
Vol. 1
l Castes in India
Vol. 2
l In the Bombay Legislature
Vol. 3
l Philosophy of Hinduism
l Schemes of Books
Vol. 4
l Riddles in Hinduism
Vol. 5
l Untouchables or the Children of Indias Ghetto and other Essays on
Untouchables and Untouchability SocialPoliticalReligious
Vol. 6
l Administration and Finance of The East India Company, The Evolution
of Provincial Finance in British India, The Problem of the Rupee [History
of Indian Currency and Banking, Vol. 1] Miscellaneous Essays.
Vol. 7
Who were the Shudras ?
l How they came to be the Fourth Varna in the Indo-Aryan Society ?
The Untouchables
l Who were They and Why They Became Untouchables ?
Vol. 8
l Reprint of Pakistan or the Partition of India
Vol. 9
l What Congress and Gandhi have done to the Untouchables ? Mr. Gandhi
and the Emancipation of the Untouchables
Vol. 10
l Dr. Ambedkar as Member of the Governor-Generals Executive Council
(1942-46)
Vol. 11
l The Buddha and his Dhamma
Vol. 11SUPPLEMENT
l Pali and other Sources of the Buddha & his Dhamma with an Index
Vol. 12
l Ancient Indian Commerce, The Untouchables and the Pax Britannica,
Lectures on the English Constitution, The Notes on Acts and Laws;
Waiting for a Visa, Other Miscellaneous Essays
Vol. 13
Dr. AMBEDKAR
l The Principal Architect of the Constitution of India
Vol. 14
Dr. Ambedkar and the Hindu Code Bill
Part One
l General Discussion on the Draft (17th November 1947 to 14th December
1950)
Part Two
l Clause by Clause Discussion (5th February 1951 to 25th September 1951)
Vol. 15
l Dr. Ambedkar as free Indias first Law Minister and Member of Opposition
in Indian Parliament (1947 to 1956)
Vol. 16
l Dr. B. R. Ambedkars
Vol. 17
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar and his Egalitarian Revolution
Part One
l Struggle for Human Rights
Part Two
l Socio-Political, Religious Activities
Part Three
l Speeches