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Now the Powerless Speaks: A Study of Bama's Sangati and Baby Kamble's
'The Prisons We Broke' From a Dalit Feminist Standpoint
Abstract
In the context of the powerful and the powerless in the social formation of India, caste
system has been a matter of immense debate and discussion. Continuing for the
centuries, (presumably from the time of the arrival of Aryans) caste system has been a
parasitical condition prevailing, thriving and continually reforming, throughout India.
Being an Indian one cannot but face its grips from the birth. Moreover, due to the
recent phenomenon of reservation on the basis of caste, debates have been more
frequent than before. In this paper, I intend to focus on dalit women, who are often
considered as ‘dalits among dalits’, as represented in the literature written by them.
For my present purpose I have chosen Bama’s Sangati and Baby Kamble’s The
Prisons We Broke, two seminal novels written by dalit women writers, in order to
discuss whether and how the dalit women are affected by the power dynamics
functioning not only through the upper caste people (both men and women) but also
lower caste men. And we will discover in the course of the study that state, gender,
caste, class, religion, and community, each of them form an intersection in order to
continue this disbalance of power. And this power here is not just electoral power but
a state-generated, religion-fed hierarchy which continues to uphold gender and caste
discrimination. And this becomes apparent when we see how the image of dalit
women as represented by male writers stand in stark contrast to that of the female
writers. A story of helplessness and limitation then becomes a courageous struggle for
survival and self-identity.
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Introduction
In context of the powerful and the powerless in the social formation of India, caste
system has been a matter of immense debate and discussion. Caste, according to noted
historian, Romila Thapar, is a form of social control based on heredity and a ritual
observance of fourfold division. According to M. N. Srinivas, a well-known Indian
sociologist, relations between castes are governed by the concepts of endogamy,
pollution and purity, and maximum commensality. In a caste system, people are
divided primarily into four categories: the ‘brahmins’ (or priests), the ‘kshatriyas’ (or
warriors), the ‘vaishyas’ (or traders), and the ‘shudras’ (or slaves). A fifth category
was added at a later period of the Vedic era comprising of ‘atishudras’ (or
untouchables), now also known as ‘dalits’ (literally meaning ‘crushed’). Treated as
pariahs, the untouchables were forced to live outside the boundaries of the villages
and even their shadows were considered polluting. Continuing for centuries, the caste
system has been a parasitical condition prevailing, thriving and continually reforming,
throughout India.
The conference aims to explore why and how the vast networks of power relations get
transformed into various institutions of state, legislature and religion, and affect the
society. But at the wake of the growing influence of dalit studies we need to look at
those people who are at the lowest stratum of the society. Our perspective therefore
calls for a representational analysis from the standpoint of the lower caste people who
get most affected by inequal distribution of power.
For this paper I have chosen Bama’s Sangati and Baby Kamble’s The Prisons We
Broke, two seminal novels in dalit literature in order to discuss whether and how dalit
women are affected by the power dynamics functioning not only through the upper
caste people (both men and women) but also through the lower caste community. And
this power here is not just electoral power but a state-generated, religion-fed, and
community based hierarchy which continues to uphold gender and caste
discrimination. This becomes apparent when we see how the image of dalit women as
represented by male writers stand in stark contrast to that of the female writers. A
story of helplessness and limitation then becomes a courageous struggle for survival
and self-identity.
In a 1995 article titled, “Dalit Women Talk Differently”, Gopal Guru argues that dalit
women need to speak ‘differently’ because they face exclusion not only in the
political field but also in the cultural field. He writes: “Dalit male writers do not take
serious note of the literary output of dalit women and tend to be dismissive of it.”
(Guru, 1995, p. 2549) And he mentions three reasons for this attitude: “(1) It is not
only caste and class identity but also one’s gender positioning that decides the validity
of an event; (2) dalit men are reproducing the same mechanisms against their women
which their high caste adversaries had used to dominate them; (3) the experience of
dalit women shows that local resistance within the dalits is important.” (Guru, 1995,
p. 2549) Two points that come out of his opinion are that: ‘differences’ exist not only
among ‘Indian’ women but also within the dalit community based on gender, and that
writing becomes a way for dalit women to articulate their struggles and resistances.
Although Guru’s argument in favor of an identity based politics for dalit women
(where only dalit women can speak for themselves) has been critiqued for a more
affiliative approach by Sharmila Rege who argues that in order for dalit feminism to
flourish, there needs to be “a transformation of ‘their cause’ into ‘our cause’” (Rege,
p. 45), the idea of ‘difference’ pointed out by Guru is of utmost importance.
Writings by dalit women, on the other hand, provide a different picture. Containing
stories from the daily lives, songs, and folktales, dalit women’s writings present a
narrative of survival and protest. Some of the major facets of contemporary dalit
women’s writings have been identity, resistance, community, a critique of
brahmanical and dalit patriarchy, and a critique of mainstream Indian feminism.
The two novels subject to study are important because they capture two different
moods of two different times. Baby Kamble’s The Prisons We Broke symbolizes the
energy and hope of the dalit female autobiography writers of the 1980s who
participated in Ambedkarite movements, while Bama’s Sangati articulates the
pessimism of the 21st century.
It is interesting to see that while on the one hand there is Joothan, a well know dalit
male autobiography, where the writer Omprakash Valmiki recounts his painful and
deliberate attempt to keep his caste identity a secret, on the other hand dalit women
writers are proud of their caste origins. Such assertion stemmed from Ambedkar’s call
for self-respect. The very fact that the book itself is intricately linked to dalit women’s
participation in the Ambedkarite movement, underline the lives of dalit women as a
continuous struggle both within the house and outside.
In the sphere of the ‘within’ Kamble describes how her father took pride in keeping
her mother at home. She writes: “In those days, it was the custom to keep women at
home, behind the threshold. The honour enjoyed by a family was in proportion to the
restrictions imposed on the women of the house.” (5). Here therefore, we see an
internal patriarchy imitating the upper caste practices of keeping women within the
house. However, this intra-patriarchy was not just a reflection of upper caste
patriarchy. It had its own workings of patriarchal systems as well. In Baby Kamble’s
narrative we hear stories of young girls married off at an early age becoming subject
to the verbal torture of the mother in law. Any attempt to escape this situation resulted
in heavy physical torture such as beating and chopping off nose. With the mother-in-
law fuelling the son with stories of the daughter-in-law’s ‘indecency’, ‘loss of
respect’, and her ‘ill-starred’ fate, extreme violence was a daily occurrence for the
young mahar women of Baby Kamble’s community.
Segregated both within and outside home, dalit women thus carry a memory of
deprivation and repression writ through generations. However, these memories
become a way of self-expression, rather than mute acceptance of fate. Baby Kamble
writes about one incident during her childhood when Ambedkarite movement was at
its peak. In school the upper caste girls would tease the mahar girls by saying: “That
Ambedkar has educated himself, that’s why these dirty Mahars are showing off! That
filthy Mahar, Ambedkar, eats dead animals but look at the airs he gives himself!”
(109). To this, Babytai and her friends would reply: “You shaven widows, how dare
you take our Ambedkar’s name! You have your own baldy, that stupid Gandhi! He
has neither a shirt on his body, nor teeth in his mouth!” (109). This dialogue appears
with a consciousness about differences within women, and the failure of Indian social
reformists to meet the needs of the lower caste people. This narrative presents a
struggle rather than a silent suffering.
Replete within the caste system is the concept of purity and pollution. In The Prisons
We Broke, a huge conflict breaks out after a mahar boy touches the idol of god
Viththal. Religion becomes instrumental in continuing the caste discriminations.
However, as Rege points out in her article “Dalit Women Talk Differently: A Critique
of ‘Difference’ and Towards a Dalit Feminist Standpoint Position”, these practices
were prevalent not so much to keep the polluted lower caste people away as it was to
preserve the purity of the upper castes. Such discrimination practiced through
religion also raised among the dalits a desire to break the shackles of Hinduism. The
religious conversion of 1954 which followed after Ambedkar converted to Buddhism,
is recounted in the book with great enthusiasm because it brought hope among the
dalits of a change.
In The Prisons We Broke, Baby Kamble argues that memories of humiliation and
perpetual slavery need to be reiterated because future generations must know the fiery
ordeal that the earlier generations have gone through. Threaded within the narrative
are occasional recounts of dalit women’s participation in activism. In the novel people
gather at the chawde and discuss about Ambedkarite movement, his conversion, and
their opinions on these movements. Their writing emphasises on dalit feminism’s
claim that their theorization grows out of their activism because they consider
mainstream Indian feminism to be elitist and incapable of understanding the true
voice of the dalit women. Although this leads us to a broader question as to who can
speak for whom and whether dalit women’s identity-based autonomy ultimately puts
dalit feminism in the margins, dalit women’s writings become important, as Guru
writes in the Afterword to The Prisons We Broke, “both for self-interrogation [here
the ‘self’ being the non-dalit people] as well as the interrogation of the system that
forced Baby Kamble to write her story.” (170).
In Bama’s Sangati, the narrator as a young girl of twelve learns that boys have
different roles to play than girls. And these roles are perpetuated in the form of gender
games that they are made to play as children. While kabadi and marbles are meant for
boys, girls are supposed to play cooking or getting married, home keeping, and so on.
Conversion from one religion to another offers no respite. While Hinduism defines
the ultimate form of oppression towards dalits, Christianity does the same. The white
nuns, patti tells the narrator, “made a big effort” (30) to teach dalit women how to
become ideal wives.
The possibility of the third axis of patriarchy in Sangati exists in the devaluation of
dalit women’s economic liberty. The very fact that dalit women cross the boundaries
of home and earn money on their own, gives them a higher credibility and a more
privileged position than the Brahmin women who remain economically dependent on
their fathers, or husbands, or sons. However, the dalit women face physical abuse on a
daily basis from the men in their families. As Paatti surmises the situation of women
in her community: “We have to labour in the fields as hard as men do, and then on top
of that, struggle to bear and raise our children. As for the men, their work ends when
they’ve finished in the fields. If you are born into this world, it is best you were born a
man. Born as women, what good do we get? We only toil in the fields and in the
home until our vaginas shrivel” (6-7). Here we have an example of how dalit
patriarchy subjugates the dalit women, not by imitating the upper caste men, but by
making it into an everyday practice.
Interestingly, lower caste women’s participation in social labour has often served as
the justification for the upper caste men for the sexual availability of the lower caste
women. To provide an instance from Sangati: Mariamma, a young woman from the
pariah community is assaulted by an upper caste man, Kumarasami, who, in order to
hide this incident, accuses Mariamma of having an affair with a lower caste boy,
Manikkam. In the end, Mariamma is not only accused of being a ‘loose’ woman, she
is beaten up and forced to pay fine as well. Whereas both Kumarasami and Manikkam
are left unquestioned. Two things that are important here are: Mariamma’s public
humiliation by the upper caste man Kumarasami, and the physical abuse by her father.
By shaming Mariamma in public, Kumarasamy proves that low caste women’s
sexuality becomes accessible because they participate in social labor. Such act also
becomes a way to undermine the masculinity of the lower caste men (i.e. lower caste
men are not men enough because they cannot save their women). At the intersection
of patriarchies, gender ideologies, and caste is therefore the figure of dalit woman
who becomes the site where these multiple structures perform their oppression and
domination.
According to Ambedkar, endogamy is the root of caste system. In Sangati, the fear of
an inter-caste union is recounted through the story of pey. A pey is the ghost of an
upper caste woman named Esakki who was killed by her brothers for marrying a
lower caste man. It is interesting how, even in the lower castes, the community system
functions through similar parameters to control their women that the Brahmins
employ. Transgression of the boundaries of endogamy, it is feared, would result in
pollution. A menstruating lower caste woman who goes out to work is a threat to her
society because she raises possibilities of an intercaste union. The very fact that the
dalit men tell the women about how the pey never attacks the Brahmin women
because they stay inside the house, show the aspirational aspect of the dalit men who
now want to reflect the brahmanical practice of ‘purity’ among women by confining
them within the limits of the house.
According to Raj Gauthaman: “Dalits who have for so long been treated as
commodities owned by others must shout out their selfhood, their ‘I’, when they rise
up.” (97) Using languages exactly spoken by the dalit people, their writings appear
with an unmistakable sense of anger which has taken the form of protest against
injustice. Such language has been used for various purposes. While in dalit male
writing, such usage is directed towards the upper caste men who have kept them in
slavery and ignorance, dalit women often use it against their own husbands in order to
save themselves from being beaten up. In Sangati the narrator writes about an
incident she witnessed among Pakkiaraj and his wife Raakkamma. Pakkiaraj was
abusing her in a vile and vulgar way, and was just about to hit her. And Raakkamma
was replying in equally abusive language in order to save herself from being beaten
up. “Even before his hand could fall on her, she screamed and shrieked, ‘Ayyayyo,
he’s killing me. Vile man, you’ll die, you’ll be carried out as a corpse, you low-life,
you bastard, you this you that…’.” (Bama, p. 61) In this way dalit writing not only
brings a ‘shock’ value to literature, but also takes the readers out of the comfort zone
of reading a ‘literature’ in the canonical sense.
An interesting aspect that these two writings in discussion portray is the transition
from hope to skepticism. While Baby Kamble’s writing holds a firm faith over the
better-future-to-come, following the Ambedkarite movement, Bama’s novel is born
out of the skepticity about the hope and stability that the Ambedkarite movement had
promised. These writings show how caste gets reproduced by modern institutions
such as religion, law, and education, in the neo-capitalist India. In Sangati the narrator
converts to Christianity, gets education, moves to the town but her caste identity does
not leave her.
What binds the two narratives together is the spirit of struggle. These writings become
important in the way they show how dalit women exist not as silent receivers of
violence and brutality, but how they successfully convert their individual suffering
into a collective political awareness. This is an awareness achieved through personal
experiences and the narratives they hear. And it achieves the position of a standpoint
which recovers the dalit woman within the new knowledge system and creates a
possibility for a new narrative being written from a dalit feminist perspective.
References
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Guru, Gopal. (1995, Oct. 14-21). “Dalit Women Talk Differently.” Economic and
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--- (2007). The Outcaste: Akkarmashi. Trans. Santosh Bhoomkar. New Delhi: Oxford
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