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Dalit activist Jignesh Mevani is visibly excited about Kerala’s “fantastic" response to his call for a consolidated ‘land’ struggle that he plans to launch right across the country.
After having tasted success with ‘Chalo Una’ in Gujarat and ‘Chalo Udupi’ in Karnataka, it is now time for ‘Chalo Trivandrum’, he said, while speaking to The News Minute.
And for this, Dalits from all over India plan to come together to build a broad democratic platform from where they can fight against the ‘casteist’ mentality of the Indian society.
Prominent Dalit activist from Kerala, Geethanandan reiterates that it is the ‘ghettoism’ mentality that tries to limit the Dalits, tribals and all who comprise the marginalised in today’s world, that needs to be first done away with.
The innate casteism that is ingrained into the Indian psyche – he feels – is the root cause of such a colonial attitude to Dalits.
According to Geethanandan, even while official figures restrict the number of Dalit and tribal colonies to 26,000 and 8,000 respectively, the ground reality was that there are more than 50,000 such habitations in Kerala.
This is seconded by another well-known activist Dhanya Raman, who says that though the state government loves to flaunt an official figure of 3 lakh landless Dalits, the actual figures lie closer to 30 lakh.
“They count one person from every Dalit family, which usually has 10-12 members,” she fumes.
The identification survey of surplus land in the state – Dhanya mocks – has been going on for ages.
Geethanandan points out that there are more than ten lakh acres of surplus land in the state, of which only five lakh acres has been identified for distribution among the marginalised.
“Most of the land has been illegally occupied by private land/estate owners whom no one seems to question. Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan recently announced a scheme of four lakh homes for the homeless, of which 1,000 flats are earmarked for the Dalits/Adivasis/tribals. All these communities are traditionally dependent on natural resources for their livelihood, and have always lived in close commune with nature. Just imagine holing them up in pint-sized flats! Could anyone think of a worse punishment for them?” he wonders.
Geethanandan attributes such Dalit ‘ghettos’ to the result of a colonial hangover that authorities still seem to suffer from.
“Do you know that hardly 10% of the Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribes Planning funds are utilised? And now with the doing away of the Planning Commission and Neeti Ayog taking its place, even whatever little was allocated for our so-called uplift will go down the drains,” he remarks.
That is where a consolidated Dalit struggle against societal ostracism and concerted efforts to ensure that all Dalits have land they can call their own gain relevance, he believes.
“And this is not just land to build a home alone, but land which can be used for agriculture too. That is our target,” he smiles.
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