The Annihilation of Caste System in India with Special reference to Ambedkar

Vol-07 | Issue-05 | May-2020 | Published Online: 15 May 2020    PDF ( 379 KB )
Author(s)
Mohasina Khatun 1

1Research Scholar, Dept. of Philosophy, Vidyasagar University

Abstract

Ambedkar examined Hindu society prior to beginning his battle against untouchability and the station framework. He was a researcher as much as a man of activity – regardless prior to getting one. In his works, Ambedkar made a decent attempt to show the instruments of the standing framework and explained the starting point of untouchability to help his battle for correspondence. As far as he might be concerned, if the lower stations were not in a situation to topple their oppressors, it was a direct result of two reasons: they had halfway disguised pecking order; and due to the actual attributes of rank based imbalance. The sort of imbalance characteristic in the position framework is designated ‘graded inequality’ by Ambedkar in an extremely discerning way. In Untouchables or the Children of the India’s Ghetto, he stands out it from different assortments of disparity which were not all that hard to annul or address. In the Ancient Regime, the Third State had the option to raise itself against the nobility and the government. In mechanical social orders, the middle class can raise itself against the bourgeoisie. In this paper, I propose to exhibit the Ambedkar was first to join the Dalits and, at that point, the Bahujan Samaj and, second to invest them with a different character that would offer them an elective course out of sanskritisation.

Keywords
Annihilation, caste, Dalit, Untouchability, Inequality.
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