Bhimrao Ramji
Ambedkar (April 14, 1891 — December 6, 1956), also known as Babasaheb,
was an Indian nationalist, jurist, Dalit political leader and a Buddhist
revivalist. He was also the chief architect of the Indian Constitution.
Born into a poor Untouchable family, Ambedkar spent his whole life
fighting against social discrimination, the system of Chaturvarna - the
Hindu categorization of human society into four varnas - and the Indian
caste system. He is also credited with having sparked the Dalit Buddhist
movement. Ambedkar has been honoured with the Bharat Ratna, India's
highest civilian award.
Overcoming numerous social and financial
obstacles, Ambedkar became one of the first "untouchables" to obtain a
college education in India. Eventually earning law degrees and multiple
doctorates for his study and research in law, economics and political
science from Columbia University and the London School of Economics,
Ambedkar returned home a famous scholar and practiced law for a few
years before publishing journals advocating political rights and social
freedom for India's untouchables.
Early life
Bhimrao
Ramji Ambedkar was born in the British-founded town and military
cantonment of Mhow in the Central Provinces (now in Madhya Pradesh). He
was the 14th and last child of Ramji Maloji Sakpal and Bhimabai
Murbadkar. His family was of Marathi background from the town of
Ambavade in the Ratnagiri district of modern-day Maharashtra. They
belonged to the Hindu Mahar caste, who were treated as untouchables and
subjected to intense socio-economic discrimination. Ambedkar's ancestors
had for long been in the employment of the army of the British East
India Company, and his father served in the Indian Army at the Mhow
cantonment, rising to the rank of Subedar. He had received a degree of
formal education in Marathi and English, and encouraged his children to
learn and work hard at school.
Belonging to the Kabir Panth,
Ramji Sakpal encouraged his children to read the Hindu classics,
especially the Mahabharata and the Ramayana. He used his position in the
army to lobby for his children to study at the government school, as
they faced resistance owing to their caste. Although able to attend
school, Ambedkar and other Untouchable children were segregated and
given no attention or assistance by the teachers. They were not allowed
to sit inside the class. Even if they needed to drink water somebody
from a higher caste would have to pour that water from a height as they
were not allowed to touch either the water or the vessel that contained
it. This task was usually performed for the young Ambedkar by the school
peon, and if he could not be found Ambedkar went without water. Ramji
Sakpal retired in 1894 and the family moved to Satara two years later.
Shortly after their move, Ambedkar's mother died. The children were
cared for by their paternal aunt, and lived in difficult circumstances.
Only three sons — Balaram, Anandrao and Bhimrao — and two daughters —
Manjula and Tulasa — of the Ambedkars would go on to survive them. Of
his brothers and sisters, only Ambedkar succeeded in passing his
examinations and graduating to a bigger school. His native village name
was "Ambavade" in Ratnagiri District so he changed his name from
"Sakpal" to "Ambedkar" with the recommendation and faith of Mahadev
Ambedkar, a Deshasta Brahmin teacher who believed in him.
Ramji
Sakpal remarried in 1898, and the family moved to Mumbai (then Bombay),
where Ambedkar became the first untouchable student at the Government
High School near Elphinstone Road. Although excelling in his studies,
Ambedkar was increasingly disturbed by the segregation and
discrimination that he faced. In 1907, he passed his matriculation
examination and entered the University of Bombay, becoming one of the
first persons of untouchable origin to enter a college in India. This
success provoked celebrations in his community, and after a public
ceremony he was presented with a biography of the Buddha by his teacher
Krishnaji Arjun Keluskar also known as Dada Keluskar, a Maratha caste
scholar. Ambedkar's marriage had been arranged the previous year as per
Hindu custom, to Ramabai, a nine-year old girl from Dapoli. In 1908, he
entered Elphinstone College and obtained a scholarship of twenty five
rupees a month from the Gayakwad ruler of Baroda, Sahyaji Rao III for
higher studies in the USA. By 1912, he obtained his degree in economics
and political science, and prepared to take up employment with the
Baroda state government. His wife gave birth to his first son, Yashwant,
in the same year. Ambedkar had just moved his young family and started
work, when he dashed back to Bombay to see his ailing father, who died
on February 2, 1913.
Pursuit of education
A
few months later, Ambedkar was selected by the Gayakwad ruler to travel
to the United States and enroll at Columbia University, with a
scholarship of $11.5 per month. Arriving in New York City, Ambedkar was
admitted to the graduate studies programme at the political science
department. After a brief stay at the dormitory, he moved to a housing
club run by Indian students and took up rooms with a Parsi friend, Naval
Bhathena. In 1916, he was awarded a Ph.D. for a thesis which he
eventually published in book form as The Evolution of Provincial Finance
in British India. His first published work, however, was a paper titled
Castes in India: Their Mechanism, Genesis and Development. Winning his
degree and doctorate, he travelled to London and enrolled at Gray's Inn
and the London School of Economics, studying law and preparing a
doctoral thesis in economics. The expiration of his scholarship the
following year forced him to temporarily abandon his studies and return
to India amidst World War I.
Returning to work as military
secretary for Baroda state, Ambedkar was distressed by the sudden
reappearance of discrimination in his life, and left his job to work as a
private tutor and accountant, even starting his own consultancy
business that failed owing to his social status. With the help of an
English acquaintance, the former Bombay Governor Lord Sydenham, he won a
post as professor of political economy at the Sydenham College of
Commerce and Economics in Mumbai. He was able to return to England in
1920 with the support of the Maharaja of Kolhapur, his Parsi friend and
his own savings. By 1923 he completed a thesis on The Problem of the
Rupee. He was awarded a D.Sc. by the University of London, and on
finishing his law studies, he was simultaneously admitted to the British
Bar as a barrister. On his way back to India, Ambedkar spent three
months in Germany, where he conducted further studies in economics at
the University of Bonn. He was formally awarded a Ph.D. by Columbia
University on June 8, 1927.
Fight against untouchability
As
a leading Indian scholar, Ambedkar had been invited to testify before
the Southborough Committee, which was preparing the Government of India
Act 1919. At this hearing, Ambedkar argued for creating separate
electorates and reservations for Dalits and other religious communities.
In 1920, he began the publication of the weekly Mooknayak (Leader of
the Silent) in Bombay. Attaining popularity, Ambedkar used this journal
to criticize orthodox Hindu politicians and a perceived reluctance of
the Indian political community to fight caste discrimination. His speech
at a Depressed Classes Conference in Kolhapur impressed the local state
ruler Shahu IV, who shocked orthodox society by dining with Ambekdar .
Ambedkar established a successful legal practise, and also organised the
Bahishkrit Hitakarini Sabha to promote education and socio-economic
uplifting of the depressed classes. In 1926, he became a nominated
member of the Bombay Legislative Council. By 1927 Dr. Ambedkar decided
to launch active movements against untouchability. He began with public
movements and marches to open up and share public drinking water
resources, also he began a struggle for the right to enter Hindu
temples. He led a satyagraha in Mahad to fight for the right of the
untouchable community to draw water from the main water tank of the
town.
On January 1, 1927 Ambedkar organised a ceremony at the
Koregaon Victory Memorial,which commemorated the Indian soldiers who had
died in the Second Anglo-Maratha War, during the Battle of Koregaon.
Here he inscribed the names of the soldiers from the Mahar community on a
marble tablet. In 1927, he began his second journal, Bahiskrit Bharat
(Excluded India), later rechristened Janata (The People). He was
appointed to the Bombay Presidency Committee to work with the
all-European Simon Commission in 1928. This commission had sparked great
protests across India, and while its report was ignored by most
Indians, Ambedkar himself wrote a separate set of recommendations for
future constitutional reforms.
Poona Pact
By
now Ambedkar had become one of the most prominent untouchable political
figures of the time. He had grown increasingly critical of mainstream
Indian political parties for their perceived lack of emphasis for the
elimination of the caste system. Ambedkar criticized the Indian National
Congress and its leader Mohandas (Mahatma) Gandhi, whom he accused of
reducing the untouchable community to a figure of pathos. Ambedkar was
also dissatisfied with the failures of British rule, and advocated a
political identity for untouchables separate from both the Congress and
the British. At a Depressed Classes Conference on August 8, 1930
Ambedkar outlined his political vision, insisting that the safety of the
Depressed Classes hinged on their being independent of the Government
and the Congress both:
We must shape our course ourselves and by
ourselves... Political power cannot be a panacea for the ills of the
Depressed Classes. Their salvation lies in their social elevation. They
must cleanse their evil habits. They must improve their bad ways of
living.... They must be educated.... There is a great necessity to
disturb their pathetic contentment and to instill into them that divine
discontent which is the spring of all elevation.
In this speech,
Ambedkar criticized the Salt Satyagraha launched by Gandhi and the
Congress. Ambedkar's criticisms and political work had made him very
unpopular with orthodox Hindus, as well as with many Congress
politicians who had earlier condemned untouchability and worked against
discrimination across India. This was largely because these "liberal"
politicians usually stopped short of advocating full equality for
untouchables. Ambedkar's prominence and popular support amongst the
untouchable community had increased, and he was invited to attend the
Second Round Table Conference in London in 1931. Here he sparred
verbally with Gandhi on the question of awarding separate electorates to
untouchables. A fierce opponent of separate electorates on religious
and sectarian lines, Gandhi feared that separate electorates for
untouchables would divide Hindu society for future generations.
When
the British agreed with Ambedkar and announced the awarding of separate
electorates, Gandhi began a fast-unto-death while imprisoned in the
Yeravada Central Jail of Pune in 1932. Exhorting orthodox Hindu society
to eliminate discrimination and untouchability, Gandhi asked for the
political and social unity of Hindus. Gandhi's fast provoked great
public support across India, and orthodox Hindu leaders, Congress
politicians and activists such as Madan Mohan Malaviya and Pawlankar
Baloo organized joint meetings with Ambedkar and his supporters at
Yeravada. Fearing a communal reprisal and killings of untouchables in
the event of Gandhi's death, Ambedkar agreed under massive coercion from
the supporters of Gandhi to drop the demand for separate electorates,
and settled for a reservation of seats, which although in the end
achieved more representation for the untouchables, resulted in the loss
of separate electorates that was promised through the British Communal
Award prior to Ambedkars meeting with Gandhi which would end his fast.
Ambedkar was later to criticise this fast of Gandhi's as a gimmick to
deny political rights to the untouchables and increase the coercion he
had faced to give up the demand for separate electorates.
Political career
In
1935, Ambedkar was appointed principal of the Government Law College, a
position he held for two years. Settling in Bombay, Ambedkar oversaw
the construction of a large house, and stocked his personal library with
more than 50,000 books. His wife Ramabai died after a long illness in
the same year. It had been her long-standing wish to go on a pilgrimage
to Pandharpur, but Ambedkar had refused to let her go, telling her that
he would create a new Pandharpur for her instead of Hinduism's
Pandharpur which treated them as untouchables. His own views and
attitudes had hardened against orthodox Hindus, despite a significant
increase in momentum across India for the fight against untouchability.
and he began criticizing them even as he was criticized himself by large
numbers of Hindu activists. Speaking at the Yeola Conversion Conference
on October 13 near Nasik, Ambedkar announced his intention to convert
to a different religion and exhorted his followers to leave Hinduism. He
would repeat his message at numerous public meetings across India.
In
1936, Ambedkar founded the Independent Labour Party, which won 15 seats
in the 1937 elections to the Central Legislative Assembly. He published
his book The Annihilation of Caste in the same year, based on the
thesis he had written in New York. Attaining immense popular success,
Ambedkar's work strongly criticized Hindu religious leaders and the
caste system in general. He protested the Congress decision to call the
untouchable community Harijans (Children of God), a name coined by
Gandhi. Ambedkar served on the Defence Advisory Committee and the
Viceroy's Executive Council as minister for labour.
Between 1941
and 1945, he published a large number of highly controversial books and
pamphlets, including Thoughts on Pakistan, in which he criticized the
Muslim League's demand for a separate Muslim state of Pakistan. With
What Congress and Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables, Ambedkar
intensified his attacks on Gandhi and the Congress, charging them with
hypocrisy. In his work Who Were the Shudras?, Ambedkar attempted to
explain the formation of the Shudras i.e. the lowest caste in hierarchy
of Hindu caste system. He also emphasised how Shudras are separate from
Untouchables. Ambedkar oversaw the transformation of his political party
into the All India Scheduled Castes Federation, although it performed
poorly in the elections held in 1946 for the Constituent Assembly of
India. In writing a sequel to Who Were the Shudras? in 1948, Ambedkar
lambasted Hinduism in the The Untouchables: A Thesis on the Origins of
Untouchability:
The Hindu Civilisation.... is a diabolical
contrivance to suppress and enslave humanity. Its proper name would be
infamy. What else can be said of a civilisation which has produced a
mass of people... who are treated as an entity beyond human intercourse
and whose mere touch is enough to cause pollution?
Ambedkar was
also critical of Islam and its practices in South Asia. While justifying
the Partition of India, he condemned the practice of child marriage in
Muslim society, as well as the mistreatment of women. He said,
No words can adequately express the great and many evils of polygamy and
concubinage, and especially as a source of misery to a Muslim woman.
Take the caste system. Everybody infers that Islam must be free from
slavery and caste.[While slavery existed], much of its support was
derived from Islam and Islamic countries. While the prescriptions by the
Prophet regarding the just and humane treatment of slaves contained in
the Koran are praiseworthy, there is nothing whatever in Islam that
lends support to the abolition of this curse. But if slavery has gone,
caste among Musalmans [Muslims] has remained.
He wrote that
Muslim society is "even more full of social evils than Hindu Society is"
and criticized Muslims for sugarcoating their sectarian caste system
with euphemisms like "brotherhood". He also criticized the
discrimination against the Arzal classes among Muslims who were regarded
as "degraded", as well as the oppression of women in Muslim society
through the oppressive purdah system. He alleged that while Purdah was
also practiced by Hindus, only among Muslims was it sanctioned by
religion. He criticized their fanaticism regarding Islam on the grounds
that their literalist interpretations of Islamic doctrine made their
society very rigid and impermeable to change. He further wrote that
Indian Muslims have failed to reform their society unlike Muslims in
other countries like Turkey.
In a "communal malaise", both groups [Hindus and Muslims] ignore the urgent claims of social justice.
While
he was extremely critical of Muhammad Ali Jinnah and the communally
divisive strategies of the Muslim League, he argued that Hindus and
Muslims should segregate and the State of Pakistan be formed, as ethnic
nationalism within the same country would only lead to more violence. He
cited precedents in historical events such as the dissolution of the
Ottoman Empire and Czechoslovakia to bolster his views regarding the
Hindu-Muslim communal divide.
However, he questioned whether the
need for Pakistan was sufficient and suggested that it might be possible
to resolve Hindu-Muslim differences in a less drastic way. He wrote
that Pakistan must "justify its existence" accordingly. Since other
countries such as Canada have also had communal issues with the French
and English and have lived together, it might not be impossible for
Hindus and Muslims to live together.
He warned that the actual
implementation of a two-state solution would be extremely problematic
with massive population transfers and border disputes. This claim was
prophetic, looking forward to the violent Partition of India after
Independence.
Architect of India's constitution
Despite
his increasing unpopularity, controversial views, and intense criticism
of Gandhi and the Congress, Ambedkar was by reputation an exemplary
jurist and scholar. Upon India's independence on August 15, 1947, the
new Congress-led government invited Ambedkar to serve as the nation's
first law minister, which he accepted. On August 29, Ambedkar was
appointed chairman of the Constitution Drafting Committee, charged by
the Assembly to write free India's new Constitution. Ambedkar won great
praise from his colleagues and contemporary observers for his drafting
work. In this task Ambedkar's study of sangha practice among early
Buddhists and his extensive reading in Buddhist scriptures was to come
to his aid. Sangha practice incorporated voting by ballot, rules of
debate and precedence and the use of agendas, committees and proposals
to conduct business. Sangha practice itself was modelled on the
oligarchic system of governance followed by tribal republics of ancient
India such as the Shakyas and the Lichchavis. Thus, although Ambedkar
used Western models to give his Constitution shape, its spirit was
Indian and, indeed, tribal.
The text prepared by Ambedkar
provided constitutional guarantees and protections for a wide range of
civil liberties for individual citizens, including freedom of religion,
the abolition of untouchability and the outlawing of all forms of
discrimination. Ambedkar argued for extensive economic and social rights
for women, and also won the Assembly's support for introducing a system
of reservations of jobs in the civil services, schools and colleges for
members of scheduled castes and scheduled tribes, a system akin to
affirmative action. India's lawmakers hoped to eradicate the
socio-economic inequalities and lack of opportunities for India's
depressed classes through this measure, which had been originally
envisioned as temporary on a need basis. The Constitution was adopted on
November 26, 1949 by the Constituent Assembly. Speaking after the
completion of his work, Ambedkar said:
I feel that the
Constitution is workable; it is flexible and it is strong enough to hold
the country together both in peace time and in war time. Indeed, if I
may say so, if things go wrong under the new Constitution the reason
will not be that we had a bad Constitution. What we will have to say is
that Man was vile.
Ambedkar resigned from the cabinet in 1951
following the stalling in parliament of his draft of the Hindu Code
Bill, which sought to expound gender equality in the laws of
inheritance, marriage and the economy. Although supported by Prime
Minister Nehru, the cabinet and many other Congress leaders, it received
criticism from a large number of members of parliament. Ambedkar
independently contested an election in 1952 to the lower house of
parliament, the Lok Sabha but was defeated. He was appointed to the
upper house of parliament, the Rajya Sabha in March 1952 and would
remain a member until his death.
Conversion to Buddhism
In
the 1950s, Ambedkar turned his attention to Buddhism and travelled to
Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) to attend a convention of Buddhist scholars and
monks. While dedicating a new Buddhist vihara near Pune, Ambedkar
announced that he was writing a book on Buddhism, and that as soon as it
was finished, he planned to make a formal conversion to Buddhism.
Ambedkar twice visited Burma in 1954; the second time in order to attend
the third conference of the World Fellowship of Buddhists in Rangoon.
In 1955, he founded the Bharatiya Bauddha Mahasabha, or the Buddhist
Society of India. He completed his final work, The Buddha and His
Dhamma, in 1956. It was published posthumously.
Ambedkar
organised a formal public ceremony for himself and his supporters in
Nagpur on October 14, 1956. Accepting the Three Refuges and Five
Precepts from a Buddhist monk in the traditional manner, Ambedkar
completed his own conversion. He then proceeded to convert an estimated
500,000 of his supporters who were gathered around him. Taking the 22
Vows, Ambedkar and his supporters explicitly condemned and rejected
Hinduism and Hindu philosophy. He then traveled to Kathmandu in Nepal to
attend the Fourth World Buddhist Conference. He completed his final
manuscript, The Buddha or Karl Marx on December 2, 1956.
Death
Since
1948, Ambedkar had been suffering from diabetes. He was bed-ridden from
June to October in 1954 owing to clinical depression and failing
eyesight. He had been increasingly embittered by political issues, which
took a toll on his health. His health worsened as he furiously worked
through 1955. Just three days after completing his final manuscript The
Buddha and His Dhamma, it is said that Ambedkar died in his sleep on
December 6, 1956 at his home in Delhi.
A Buddhist-style cremation
was organised for him at Chowpatty beach on December 7, attended by
hundreds of thousands of supporters, activists and admirers.
Ambedkar
was survived by his second wife Savita Ambedkar, born as a caste
Brahmin and converted to Buddhism with him. His wife's name before
marriage was Sharda Kabir. Savita Ambedkar died as a Buddhist in 2002.
Ambedkar's grandson, Prakash Yaswant Ambedkar leads the Bharipa Bahujan
Mahasangha and has served in both houses of the Indian Parliament.
A
number of unfinished typescripts and handwritten drafts were found
among Ambedkar's notes and papers and gradually made available. Among
these were Waiting for a Visa, which probably dates from 1935-36 and is
an autobiographical work, and the Untouchables, or the Children of
India's Ghetto, which refers to the census of 1951.
A memorial
for Ambedkar was established in his Delhi house at 26 Alipur Road. His
birthdate is celebrated as a public holiday known as Ambedkar Jayanti.
He was posthumously awarded India's highest civilian honour, the Bharat
Ratna in 1990. Many public institutions are named in his honour, such as
the Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Open University in Hyderabad, Andhra
Pradesh, B. R. Ambedkar Bihar University, Muzaffarpur, the other being
Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar International Airport in Nagpur, which was
otherwise known as Sonegaon Airport. A large official portrait of
Ambedkar is on display in the Indian Parliament building.
On the
anniversary of his birth (14th April) and death (6th December) and on
Dhamma Chakra Pravartan Din, 14th Oct at Nagpur, at least half a million
people gather to pay homage to him at his memorial in Mumbai. Hundreds
of bookshops are set up, and books are sold for millions of rupees. His
message to his followers was " Educate!!!, Organize!!!, Agitate!!!"
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