By
Ram Madhav
October 14,
2023
Sixty-seven
years ago, on October 14, 1956, just seven weeks before his demise, B R
Ambedkar — architect of the Indian Constitution and leader of the Depressed
Classes — took the life-changing decision to renounce Hinduism and convert to
Buddhism. A revered Buddhist monk from Burma (Myanmar), Bhikkhu Chandramani,
initiated Ambedkar, his wife and a few lakh people, who had gathered from all
over the country, into Buddhism on that morning of the Hindu festival of
Dussehra. The venue in Nagpur has since come to be recognised as Deekshabhoomi
and is a major pilgrimage site for neo-Buddhists.
Ambedkar’s
conversion was the culmination of a vow he took exactly 21 years earlier. On
October 13, 1935, Ambedkar was at Yeola in Nashik district, Maharashtra, to
address a conference of the Depressed Classes. In an emotional address that
lasted for an hour and a half, Ambedkar told his audience of more than 10,000
that while he was born a Hindu because it was not in his hands, he wouldn’t
want to live under the humiliating conditions of the religion. “I solemnly
assure you that I will not die a Hindu,” he declared.
In an
article in these columns two weeks ago on the occasion of the birth anniversary
of Mahatma Gandhi, I wrote about the intense discussions Gandhi and Ambedkar
had over the question of varna and jati (caste) in Hinduism. I stated that the
Poona Pact, through which Gandhi was able to bring Ambedkar around to an
agreement for the Depressed Classes to be given a political share in the governance
as a part of the Hindu society, remained just a political deal. Ambedkar and
Gandhi continued to drift away from each other after the Poona Pact. Their
ideological differences kept growing and at one point in early 1946, Ambedkar
himself told an audience in Sholapur that Gandhi had declined to meet him
“saying that there was nothing common in their angles of vision”.
Coming just
one year after the Poona Pact, Ambedkar’s declaration of leaving the Hindu
religion rattled Gandhi. Describing Ambedkar as “high-souled” and “highly
educated”, Gandhi urged him to reconsider the decision because “despite
isolated events” untouchability was “on its last legs”. He also insisted that
Ambedkar should examine “his ancestral religion” on its own merits and not
through the weaknesses of its “unfaithful followers”.
Ambedkar
disagreed with Gandhi on that fundamental premise. While Gandhi blamed the
faithful, Ambedkar blamed the teachings of Hinduism. For him, as long as caste
and varna existed, there was no freedom for “untouchables”. In a long speech he
delivered in May 1936 at Dadar in Bombay, Ambedkar insisted that the struggle
between the “Caste Hindus” and “untouchables” is a “permanent phenomenon”
because “the religion which has placed you at the lowest level of the society
itself is eternal”.
As regards
Gandhi’s efforts at integrating the members of the Depressed Classes — whom he
called “Harijans” — into the Congress fold, Ambedkar was categorical that it
was a trap that the “untouchables” shouldn’t fall into.
Delivering
an important speech at the All-India Depressed Classes Conference in Nagpur on
July 18-19, 1942, Ambedkar explained the reasons for his opposition to Gandhi.
By then, the Depressed Classes Conference had started attracting large crowds.
There were more than 75,000 people in the audience at the Nagpur conference.
Their numbers in the British Army and administration too witnessed a rise in
the years after the Poona Pact. Ambedkar referred to this awakening but
insisted that it was “not the result of Hindu charity” but “entirely the result
of our own labour”.
Ambedkar
argued that political power was critical for securing the rights of the
Depressed Classes, without which “we will perish”. Of all the adverse forces in
winning the political battle for the “untouchables”, Ambedkar found Gandhi to
be “the most formidable force”. However, Ambedkar’s battle against varna and
the caste system in Hinduism went beyond power politics. A landmark
intervention in this regard was his 1936 book, Annihilation of Caste.
Annihilation
of Caste was originally drafted as the text of a speech he was invited to
deliver at the Jati Pati Todak Mandal’s event in Lahore. However, Ambedkar’s
strong critique of the Vedas and other Hindu scriptures in the context of the
chaturvarna system was seen by the organisers as too controversial and the
event itself was eventually cancelled. Ambedkar then published the essay as a
book.
Ambedkar
called the caste system “a planned misfortune” and added, “I would be glad to
take a leading part in the destruction of the caste system if the Hindus are
willing to work in earnest towards that end, even if they had to forsake their
kith and kin and their religious notions.” He firmly believed that caste cannot
be overcome by inter-caste dining or marriages because it is a “mindset” and a
“disease of mind”. He waited for two decades to see if the Hindus accepted his
proposition of dismantling caste. Several so-called caste Hindus joined
Ambedkar in conversion at Deekshabhoomi.
Justifying
his conversion, Ambedkar described Buddhism as a revolt against the discriminatory
Hindu social order. He insisted that liberty, equality and fraternity were not
ideas that we borrowed from the French Revolution but the essence of the
“teachings of my master, Buddha”.
As caste
re-enters the political discourse of our country in a big way, the history of
Ambedkar’s journey from the Poona Pact to Deekshabhoomi also returns in
relevance. Ambedkar insisted that since the institution of caste had divine
sanction, its rejection also must come from an appropriate religious authority
in Hinduism. There was some progress in the late 1960s when the Hindu saints
came together to declare that all Hindus were brothers and sisters.
Yet,
instead of absolutely rejecting varna and caste as desired by Ambedkar, we,
unfortunately, continue to fortify those very institutions for political
expediency or out of religious orthodoxy.
Source: Babasaheb’s
Conversion
URL: https://newageislam.com/current-affairs/babasaheb-bhimrao-ambedkar-conversion/d/130900
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