Saturday, July 17, 2010

[ZESTCaste] Doco highlights hidden caste discrimination

 

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=10659444

Doco highlights hidden caste discrimination
By Bernadette Rae 1:39 PM Saturday Jul 17, 2010

Mandrika Rupa. Photo / Martin Sykes.The world has long turned a blind
eye to the planet's most monumental abuse of individual human rights
perpetrated in India by its caste system. Murders, rapes and arson are
frequently committed there with no fear of punishment because the
crimes are only against Dalits, or "Untouchables".

The world also rarely stops to question the fact that in the largest
of all "democracies", 75 per cent of top government positions are
filled by Brahmins, the caste at the apex of India's strictly
hierarchical social order.

Casteism was made illegal in India's constitution, in 1949. But in
practice it remains firmly and often violently entrenched. Now it is
being exported to the West.

Even in egalitarian New Zealand, the discriminatory practices of
ancient India are flourishing and there are people here whose lives
are blighted daily by the Dalit/Untouchable label.

"The Indian community is my community, I am part of it, I live in it -
and I see it," says Mandrika Rupa, film-maker turned political and
social commentator.

Her latest work, Hidden Apartheid: A Report on Caste Discrimination,
is a 70-minute documentary, five years in the making and featuring
research done in the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand
as well as her native India.

It will have its first showing tomorrow at the Institute of
Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London, before an audience of interviewees
in the film, groups such as Castewatch UK and other anti-caste
advocates, human rights organisations and politicians who have been
working on England's Single Equality Bill.

Those fighting casteism in Britain hope that the bill will eventually
include caste as a category alongside gender, race, sex and
disability.

Rupa, a former social worker both in New Zealand and Britain, has seen
casteism at work in shops, places of worship, institutions of all
kinds and in politics, eating places and universities in the west.

"Arranged marriages which are epitomised by caste identity are still
the norm," she says. "Just look at the advertisements for marriage
partners."

She recently observed two women in an Indian emporium in Auckland
being asked their caste and then being treated off-handedly and
offered only inferior goods by the shop assistant. Rupa intervened.

"Or an Indian woman working in a bank might be promoted to supervisor,
on merit, only to find other workers who consider themselves of
superior cast refusing to operate under her," she says.

Recently on a film set in New Zealand, an Indian actress brought her
own "girl servant" and was physically abusing her. The New Zealand
crew witnessing this were traumatised and did not know how to
intervene.

The film documents ongoing caste conflicts throughout the West and
highlights the struggle of those fighting it. Although caste-based
discrimination is being challenged in Britain through legislation,
there are no such moves in New Zealand, Australia or the United
States.

The documentary also examines in lucid detail how caste originated in
Indian society, how it became entrenched in social practices and how
its practice has spread to all large Indian communities in the West,
while remaining invisible to those outside those communities.

It highlights how the Manu Smriti, the legal text of ancient India
written by Brahmin scholars thousands of years ago, is still viewed as
God's own word, and quoted to justify Brahmin superiority and
ownership. It discusses the impact of karma, a concept used to explain
a poor situation in life as the result of misdeeds in a previous
existence.

"According to Manu all women are 'Untouchables'," says Rupa. "So the
traditional laws of India control women as well as poor people and
these vicious social codes are having a resurgence today, under the
name of culture, even though they are often illegal."

After its London debut, Hidden Apartheid, directed and produced by
Rupa with New Zealand company Attar Films, will be shown on the
international film festival circuit and at a private showing in New
York, before being released for commercial distribution.

There are no immediate plans for its screening in New Zealand but more
information and a trailer can be found at
www.hiddenapartheid-themovie.com.

By Bernadette Rae

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