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Adimulam, YSRCP legislator from Satyavedu SC constituency, feels cheated, humiliated

The ruling party MLA accuses Forest Minister Peddireddi Ramachandra Reddy of resorting to illegal sand mining in his constituency and throwing the blame on him; he also accuses the Minister and his son and Rajampeta MP Mithun Reddy of wielding their hegemony over Dalits and dictating terms to them at will

January 28, 2024 08:35 pm | Updated 08:36 pm IST - TIRUPATI

YSRCP Satyavedu legislator K. Adimulam.

YSRCP Satyavedu legislator K. Adimulam. | Photo Credit: File Photo

The ruling YSR Congress Party (YSRCP) legislator from Satyavedu (SC) constituency in Tirupati district, Koneti Adimulam, on January 28 (Sunday) alleged that Minister for Forests Peddireddi Ramachandra Reddy had resorted to illegal mining of sand in his constituency, but threw the blame on him.

Mr. Ramachandra Reddy and his son P. Mithun Reddy (Rajampeta MP) were wielding their hegemony over Dalits and dictating terms to them at will, Mr. Adimulam alleged while speaking to the media near Puttur.

“Chief Minister Jagan Mohan Reddy and Forest Minister Ramachandra Reddy cheated me by shifting me to the Tirupati (SC) Lok Sabha seat without considering my version. Can the Chief Minister do the same injustice to MLAs such as Roja, Karunakar Reddy and Chevireddi Bhaskar Reddy?”Koneti AdimulamYSRCP legislator

The MLA further alleged that both the Minister and Chief Minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy had cheated him by shifting him to the Tirupati (SC) Lok Sabha seat without considering his version.

The adverse report given to Mr. Jagan Mohan Reddy against me was prepared by the followers of Mr. Ramachandra Reddy, he charged. “All of them are involved in illegal sand mining in the Satyavedu constituency,” he alleged.

“I asked Mr. Jagan Mohan Reddy the reasons for my transfer to the Tirupati MP seat, but there was no answer. Nominating me as in-charge for Tirupati LS seat is against my interest, and it pains me so much,” Mr. Adimulam said.

“Can you (Mr. Jagan Mohan Reddy) do the same injustice to MLAs such as Roja, Karunakar Reddy and Chevireddi Bhaskar Reddy?” he asked.



Voices and Views

Buddhist Studies in Bodh Gaya, India: Buddhism on the Brain

27 February 2024

This fall, Carleton’s Global Engagement Program in India is returning to Bodh Gaya, a town in northern India. Rich in its history, the Buddha-way grew dominant for a while in India, and spread in all directions.

Since 1979, Carleton students and others have traveled to Bodh Gaya to spend a semester practicing Buddhist meditation with recognized masters, studying the faith with academic experts, and doing fieldwork on independent study projects rooted in what they’ve learned. The program, founded by Antioch College and taken over by Carleton in 2016, gives students the opportunity to walk in the literal footsteps of the Buddha.

Bodh Gaya refuge group

Buddhist studies came to Carleton in 1960 with a Yale-trained assistant professor of religion named Bardwell L. Smith, who was also an Episcopal minister. During his career, he brought senior Buddhist teachers to campus to give students a sense of how Buddhist teachings are embodied in real lives. 

In 1989, Roger Jackson, a scholar who specializes in Tibetan Buddhism who also practices the religion, became the religion department’s South Asian and Himalayan specialist, with Smith handling China and Japan. With Smith’s retirement in 1995 and Jackson’s in 2016, other scholars have taken over. Today, Asuka Sango, a specialist in Buddhism and its relation to medieval Japanese politics, teaches introductory Buddhism courses and covers Japanese religion in general. The department’s South Asian specialist is Kristin Bloomer.

In 1996, Jackson, his wife, Pamela, and a group of friends founded the Northfield Buddhist Meditation Center, which is still going in a second-floor space on Division Street. And when, in 1997, Carolyn Fure-Slocum ’82, a United Church of Christ minister, became the college’s chaplain, Buddhist meditation found another champion.

Today the chaplaincy has more Buddhism more often, specifically, Buddhist meditation every Thursday. There’s also Time to Meditate, 20- or 30-minute sessions of various meditation styles, led by associates. And Buddhist chapel services continue, once per term.

students practice meditation

The students who traveled to Bodh Gaya this fall are being exposed to a wide range of different Buddhisms in a comprehensive curriculum. Living together with instructors in the Burmese vihara, the guesthouse for Burmese pilgrims in Buddhism’s most important pilgrimage center, they commit themselves to observing Buddhist moral precepts, including no intoxicants, never telling a lie, and giving up phones and laptops.

But meditation is the touchstone. The 30 or so students rise early and meditate for an hour under the guidance of a senior practitioner. (In 11 weeks, they’re trained in vipassana with a Theravada teacher, then Zen and Tibetan meditation with respected teachers in those traditions.)

A full day of classes follows, then another hour of sitting at the end of the day. As C. Robert Pryor, the Antioch College professor who founded the program, puts it: “If you want to know what Buddhism is, you need to do what Buddhists do. It’s classic experiential education, but to that we added an interior part—serious meditation.”

For Arthur McKeown, associate professor of Asian studies at Carleton and the program’s current director, the experiential becomes transformational. “There’s the stress of being in India,” he says. “They’re learning how to meditate. They’re in the classroom. Those three factors create a feedback loop that transforms them. And once you can meditate in Bodh Gaya, which is a loud, intense, Indian city, you can meditate anywhere. The full range of life is there and then you’re immersed in it. You learn, okay, I need to let go of something, because the world around me is not going to change just for me.”

students work while sitting around table

Madeline Egan ’19 is studying to be a doctor of osteopathy. Already committed to spirituality and medicine when she entered Carleton, she majored in religion but also took pre-med courses and was a dedicated cross-country runner. Buddhism intrigued her and, per Roger Jackson’s suggestion, she applied to the India program. “It was right in my wheelhouse because experiential learning and religion were exactly what I wanted to do,” she says. “I loved India right away. I was in awe of how open the people were, how everything was just so full of life and so vibrant.”

Egan had also come to India with a sorrow—the then–recent death of her grandmother, whom she calls her best friend. Meditation meant she had to sit with the sorrow and make some difficult discoveries. “You’re sitting with things about yourself that maybe you don’t like or you haven’t created space for,” she says. “You can’t go on social media and pull in other identities or put a fake sense of self out there. And I had to confront what death and dying means to me.”

Egan says her biggest realization was “being able to see myself clearly, almost from a third-person perspective.”

students stand in black robes

All the Bodh Gaya students pursue a thesis project, for which they travel somewhere, usually in India or Southeast Asia, for field research. Egan went to Dharamsala, the Dalai Lama’s north Indian place of exile, to interview doctors and undergo treatment at the most important center of traditional Tibetan medicine in the world. Her topic: what is the role of meditation in Tibetan medicine?

What Egan learned not only capped off her Bodh Gaya experience, but in many ways summed up what Buddhism and meditation contribute to a liberal education of the mind and heart.

“The resounding answer I got from the doctors was: yes, we meditate! The heart and mind of the physicians have a direct impact on the patients they’re present with. I believe that the simple presence of another human can be healing or harmful. It’s hard, you know, to be gracious with ourselves and to open that space of acceptance for everything in our hearts and minds. But how can we even attempt to do that with someone else if we haven’t done it with ourselves?”



Indian MuslimOpinion

Dismantling Religious Barriers: The quest for scheduled caste status for Muslims in India

Indian Muslim
MuslimMirror
Posted byMuslimMirror

    By Khan Mohammad Obaida

    Allama Iqbal in his famous Nazm “Shikwa” wrote ‘Ek hi saf mein khade ho gaye Mahmood-o-Ayaz, Na koi banda raha aur na koi banda-nawaz’

    We are sure the Sultan prayed standing in the same row as his slave, but one wonders if Mahmud and his slave ever sat to have a meal on the same table.

    Islam does not advocate caste or any other form of stratification, said Prophet Mohammad (Peace on him) in his last khutba, where he said “All mankind is from Adam and Eve, an Arab has no superiority over a non-Arab nor a non-Arab has any superiority over an Arab; also a White has no superiority over a Black nor a Black has any superiority over a White except by piety and good action. Learn that every Muslims is a brother to every Muslims and that the Muslims constitute one brotherhood”.

    The Prophet Mohammad (peace on him) also declared; “There are the two things which can lead people to infidelity, one is weeping loudly on the dead body and another one is to consider others as low on the basis of their birth (caste)”.

    Qur’an chapter 49 sura Al-hujurat verse 13, plaints a picture that Caste is one of the most hateful things in the sight of God.

    However, Islam does not make any stratification but the followers of Islam i.e .Muslims follow such practices. Indian Muslims are stratified into three main castes. At the top of the pyramid are the Ashrafs (literally, the ‘nobles’, who trace their ancestry to inhabitants of the Arab peninsula or Central Asia or are converts from Hindu upper castes), Ajlafs (literally, the ‘commoners’, who are said to be converted from Hindu low castes) and Arzals (literally, the ‘despicable’, who are said to be Dalit converts).

    In short, Ashrafs are the Brahmin equivalent, Ajlafs are the Vaisya equivalent and Shudras, and Arzals are the Atishudras or Dalit equivalents of Islam. Between these, I do not solely blame Hinduism for stratification among Muslims; several other factors also have an influence on it.

    One manifestation of casteism among contemporary Muslims is evident in marriage practices. Many Muslims family are adhere to strict endogamy, where they prefer to marry within their own caste or sub-caste. This practice perpetuates the social division within Muslims communities and reinforces the notion of caste – based hierarchy.

    India Today published a report about Muzaffarpur, Bihar, where the road to the village was divided into two parts by building a wall. One side is dominated by upper-caste Shiekhs and the other by lower-caste Ansaris. Similarly, we can also see that the graveyards of Muslims are separate according to their caste. It is a matter of concern for us as Muslims that we kept Islam up to Masjid only.

    Who are Pasmanda Muslim’s?

    The term Pasmanda Muslim came into limelight when the Prime Minister, Narendra Modi used while addressing a rally in Hyderabad.
    ‘Pasmanda’, a Persian term meaning “those who have fallen behind” refers to Muslims belonging to the Shudra (backward) and anti-Shudra (Dalit) castes. It was adopted as an oppositional identity to that of the dominant Ashraf Muslims (forward castes) in 1998 by the Pasmanda Muslims Mahaz, a group which mainly worked in Bihar.

    Pasmandas encompass those who are socially, educationally and economically backward comprising of 85% of the total Indian Muslims population. Within the Muslim population in India, the Pasmandas are the group with the least political representation. The reports of the Sachar Committee and the Ranganath Mishra Committee have shown a number of injustices and forms of discrimination that the typical Muslim Ajlaf or Arzal must deal with on a daily basis. These include social segregation, untouchability, restricted or nonexistent access to education, and under representation. These communities include: Kunjre (Raeen), Julahe (Ansari), Dhunia (Mansuri), Kasai, (Qureishi), Fakir (Alvi), Hajjam (Salmani), Mehtar (Halalkhor), Gwala (Ghosi), Dhobi, (Hawari), Lohar-Badhai (Saifi), Manihar (Siddiqui), Darzi (Idrisi), Vangujjar, etc .

    THE CONSTITUTION (SCHEDULED CASTES) ORDER, 1950

    The 1950 Order, in its Paragraph 3, expressly sets out, “Notwithstanding anything contained in paragraph 2, no person who professes a religion different from the Hindu [the Sikh or the Buddhist] religion shall be deemed to be a member of a Scheduled Caste.”

    This essentially means that barring Hindus, Sikhs and Buddhists, no person practicing any other religion can claim to be a ‘scheduled caste’ and consequently, the benefits thereof.

    Impoverished people are deprived of Scheduled Caste privileges because of this religious ban on Christians, and Muslims of Scheduled Caste origin and converts. The ban concerning Christians and Muslims is unconstitutional and violative of the rights to equality, discrimination and religious freedom.

    If all religions have equality in the Indian Constitution, why do some not qualify protection which has empowered the most marginalized persons in our country?
    Several, petition has been filed in the Supreme Court seeking a declaration that ‘religion’ should not be used as a criterion to grant Scheduled Caste status. The matter is still pending before supreme court.

    Article 341 of Indian constitution “The President may, with respect to any State [or Union territory], and where it is a State after consultation with the Governor thereof, by public notification, specify the castes, races or tribes or parts of or groups within castes, races or tribes which shall for the purposes of this Constitution be deemed to be Scheduled Castes in relation to that State [or Union territory, as the case may be]”
    Dalit Muslims, used to get status of Schedule caste from 1936 to 1950, it was a Congress government which withdraw the status from them in 1950 without any rational justification.

    There must be move from state as well as center government, to include some Muslim caste in a schedule caste as it had done previously in the case of Buddhist and Sikhs. As Muslims are socially, politically and economically backward, which is mentioned by Mandal commission, Ranganath Mishra commission, and Sachar committee.

    Politically Backwardness of Pasmanda Muslims

    Several Commission recommend that Pasmanda Muslims are political backward. As per one analysis, 7,500 elected representatives from the first to the fourteenth Lok Sabha, 400 were Muslims — of which 340 were from Ashraf (upper caste) community. Only 60 Muslims from the Pasmanda background have been elected in fourteen Lok Sabhas. As per 2011 Census, Muslims constitute about 14.2 per cent of India’s population. This means that Ashrafs would have a 2.1 per cent share in the country’s population. But their representation in the Lok Sabha was around 4.5 per cent. On the other hand, Pasmandas’ share in the population was around 11.4 per cent and still they had a mere 0.8 per cent representation in Parliament.

    As per 17th Lok Sabha, out of 545 members only 27 are Muslims. The representation of Muslims comprises in India are only 4.7% while there, population is 14.2% according to 2011 census.

    The attacks on Muslims by Hindu mobs, on the pretext of cow protection, have served to highlight the plight of the Pasmanda Muslims and distinguish them from the upper-caste Muslims. Mohammad Akhlaq in Dadri; the meat trader Quasim Qureshi in Hapur, Uttar Pradesh; and Tabrez Ansari in Jharkhand most of the victims of the attacks have been Pasmanda Muslims. Similarly, the victims of the pogroms against the Muslim community have also been Pasmanda Muslims. The communal violence of Muzaffarnagar in 2013: Though Muslims of all classes were attacked, it was the Pasmanda Muslims that became the prime victims as they were more vulnerable than the middle castes or the Ashraf Muslims.”

    Educationally Backwardness of Pasmanda Muslims

    The 2011 Census mentioned that the literacy rate among Muslims stood at 68.54 per cent — lower than that of other minority groups such as Christians, Jains, Sikhs, and Buddhists. Despite comprising 14 per cent of India’s population, only 4.6 per cent of Muslim students are enrolled in higher education institute.

    According to the Mandal Commission report, a policy of 27% reservation was started for the OBCs, but this hardly makes any substantial, qualitative difference in the lives of the Pasmamdas. Presently, there are over 40 Pasmanda communities in Bihar, Bengal, Jharkhand and Uttar Pradesh, for generation their condition has not improved.

    The Ranganath Misra Commission (NCRLM) made the following important recommendations:

    1. At least 15 percent of seats in all nonminority educational institutions should be earmarked by law for the minorities, as with 10 percent for the Muslims and the remaining 5 percent for the other minorities.

    2. 15 percent of the share will be earmarked for minorities, with a break-up of 10 percent for Muslims in all government schemes like the Rural Employment Generation Program, the Prime Ministers Rozgar Yojna, Grameen Rozgar Yojna, etc.

    3. 15 percent of posts in all cadres and grades under the Central and State Governments should be earmarked for minorities, with a break-up of 10 percent for Muslims.

    The Commission through an amendment, was entrusted with an additional term of reference with regards to the Scheduled Caste status, and the Commission made the following recommendation: “we recommend that Para 3 of the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order 1950 – which originally restricted the Scheduled Caste net to the Hindus and later opened it to Sikhs and Buddhists, thus still excluding from its purview the Muslims, Christians, and Parsis, etc., be wholly deleted by appropriate action so as to completely de-link the Scheduled Caste status from religion and make the Scheduled Castes net fully religion-neutral like that of the Scheduled Tribes.

    The Sachar committee also held in his report that Indian Muslims are socially, economically and political backward.

    The presence of Muslims found to be only 3% in the IAS, in the IFS 1.8% and in IPS 4%. Not only in legislative, executive but Judiciary has been also the point of concern for Muslims .

    The dropout rates among Muslims are highest in India which comprises 23.1 percent while the national average is 18.96 percent. There is a nexus between economic and education, the study found that an average amount required to be spent on elementary education on per student is 2600, while Muslim spend less than 500 rupees.

    The condition of Muslims in the government offices is poorer than that of SCs/ST. Most of the Muslims are leading small business without any support. Ranganath Mishra report said only 12 % of Muslims are account holders in the Scheduled commercial Banks (SCBs) while, there population is 14.2%. while in comparison of other communities they are 8% ahead of their population.

    The Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950 is discriminatory and violative of Articles 14 (equality before law) and Article 15 (prohibition of discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, etc) Article 16 (Discrimination in employment), Article 25 (violation of freedom of religion) of the Indian Constitution as it discriminates against Scheduled Caste converts to religions other than Hinduism, Sikhism, and Buddhism.

    However, in the politics the debate over Pasmanda Muslims is now became center core where Prime Minister mentioned the problem of education and backwardness of Muslims in every rally just for vote in upcoming election but take no action to give them their rights. Hence, lower caste Muslims condition deteriorated since independence as a result of which they are deprived of their fundamental rights. The government must amend the order 1950 of the constitution (scheduled caste) and restore their fundamental rights which existed till 1950.

    The government has appointed a Justice Balakrishna Committee for reconsideration of whether any new caste can be added to SC other than Hindus (including Buddhists and Sikhs). If the committee recommends the inclusion of any community in SC status, the first one to be Muslim, as there are the most deprived classes today in India.
    Christianity and Islam are only 2,000 years and 600 years old respectively in India. …But caste is in practice for more than 3,000 years and no ethnic community is freed from this obnoxious reality. Religions – whether it is Christianity, or Islam, or Sikhism or Buddhism – don’t have the essence to eliminate caste or untouchability which is the base for gaining this SC status.

    CONCLUSION

    The Abrahamic religion (Islam) does not advocate casteism or any other form of stratification; the best example can be seen when Allah ordered the angles and jinns to bow down in front of Adam; all the angles obeyed him; it was the Iblis who said that I am created by fire and he is created from clay (I am superior to him). The nature of fire is to go up, and the nature of clay is to go down. This was the argument of Satan. Allah didn’t like his caste-based argument and banished him from paradise. The general practices are far from reality in the context of India.

    Moving towards legal argument, there are arguments in favor of extending SC status to Muslims and other deprived communities. considering the socio-economic conditions of many Muslims in India, particularly in certain regions. Muslims like any other community, can face social and economic disadvantages, and providing them with affirmative action measures can help address these inequalities.
    The Ranganatha Mishra Committee and Sachar Committee found in their report that Muslims are socially, educationally, and politically backward. The exploitation and denial of their rights started since independence, which exists to date.

    The Order 1950 of the Indian Constitution is unconstitutional, and it must be amended in light of the fact that it includes Muslims, Christians, Parsis, etc. in a scheduled caste.

    While the Indian Constitution upholds equality for all religions, the application of this principle can be complex. Some marginalized communities, like the Pasmanda Muslims, face historical and social disadvantages that hinder their access to the benefits of protection. Caste-based discrimination within the Muslim community exacerbates their vulnerability. To ensure true empowerment, it is imperative to address these internal disparities and ensure that constitutional protections extend to all, irrespective of their religious or caste identity.

    The caste system should be recognised as a general social characteristic of the Indian society as a whole, without questioning the philosophy and teachings of any particular religion recognise it or not.

    ***

    Khan Mohammad Obaida is perusing law from Aligarh Muslim University.

     


    Karnataka

    Hindutva activists barge inside nurse’s home in Kalaburgi alleging conversion, booked

    An FIR has named nine members of Hindu Jagrithi Sene in Kalaburagi in Karnataka after a government nurse filed a police complaint alleging intimidation and casteist abuse.
    Silhouette of a woman
    Silhouette of a womanImage for representation only
    Written by:
    Published on: 

    Nine members of the Hindu Jagrithi Sene, a Hindu Right-Wing group, have been booked in Kalaburagi district of Karnataka after a woman employed as a government nurse complained of casteist abuse and physical intimidation after barging into her home. Hindu Jagrithi Sene members alleged that the nurse was involved in religious conversion and had filed a police complaint against her.

    The FIR has named Shankar Choka, President of Hindu Jagrithi Sene, Basavaraj Talawar, Vishnu, Sigi Gundu, Mallikarjun Jamadar, Veeresh Gangani, Vinod Sigi, Kalyani, Vijaykumar along with others who are yet to be identified. The have been booked under various sections of the Indian Penal Code including 506(criminal intimidation), 143 (unlawful assembly), 147 (rioting), 148 (Rioting, armed with deadly weapon), 341 (wrongful restraint), 354 (assaults or uses criminal force to any woman), 448 (house-trespass) and 504 (Intentional insult with intent to provoke) apart from provisions of the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act.

    A police complaint by Ashwini Tukaram, who hails from Madiga community (Scheduled Caste) and works as Auxiliary Nurse and Midwife (ANM) nurse, said on February 22, at 8pm, a group of 10-15 individuals associated with the Hindu Jagrithi Sene stormed into her residential quarters. The nurse, along with others, was engaged in prayer when the activists forcefully entered the premises. The members of the group then verbally abused Ashwini over her caste identity, the complaint said

    Ashwini filed a complaint with the Ratkal police station in Kalagi taluk. The police registered an FIR on February 23 under the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act. According to the FIR, the activists not only hurled casteist slurs but also questioned Ashwini's religious practices, demanding to know why, as a Madiga, she was worshipping a Christian God instead of Goddess Amba Bhavani. 

    The members of Sene allegedly threatened Ashwini with dire consequences if she reported the incident to the authorities, saying she would lose her job and that her personal safety would be compromised, the complaint said.  “The police came to the residence in about 15 minutes, scolded the activists and sent them home and let us continue praying,” the FIR said.

    The Hindu Jagrithi Sene alleged that Ashwini and another nurse were involved in converting Hindus to Christianity in exchange for money and had filed a  complaint against the nurses for alleged conversion activities but the police are yet to register a case. 

    Hindu Jagrithi Sene, along with the Sri Rama Sene, announced a 'Ratkal Chalo' campaign on Wednesday, February 28 against the police for their alleged inaction regarding the complaint filed by the activists against the nurses. They allege that a fake atrocities case was registered against them and that the nurses were trying to convert Hindus into Christians and preaching Christianity in the hospital. 

    The Ratkal police told TNM that they are investigating both complaints but have not made any arrests thus far. They confirmed visiting the hospital quarters late at night on February 22.



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