Mallampalli, Chandra Dalit Christian Reservations: Colonial Moorings of a Live Debate. In: UNSPECIFIED UNSPECIFIED.
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Abstract
Since 1950, the Government of India has maintained its policy of denying affirmative- action benefits to Dalit converts to Christianity. Debates about Dalit Christian reser- vations are most often centered on contemporary political trends. Far less attention is paid to developments during the colonial period, when sharp differences between religious ‘communities’ were formulated as policy. As much as the colonial state at- tempted to grapple with ethnographic realities on the ground, it ultimately embraced an idealized notion of a ‘casteless Native Christian community’. Against massive data that revealed the persistence of caste among converts, this idea of casteless Christian- ity was readily appropriated by the postcolonial state, which has been all to eager to use it as the basis for denying affirmative action to Dalit Christians. Dalit Christians seeking a change to this policy must therefore grapple with the past, by refuting as- sumptions embedded in nineteenth-century missionary rhetoric and state policies.
Item Type: | Book Section |
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Divisions: | Prodi Pendidikan Keagamaan Katolik |
Depositing User: | Agus Tukan |
Date Deposited: | 04 Nov 2024 05:32 |
Last Modified: | 04 Nov 2024 05:32 |
URI: | http://repository.stpreinha.ac.id/id/eprint/97 |