Harijans
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
Harijans [children of God], in India, individuals who are at the bottom of or outside the Hindu caste system. They were traditionally sweepers, washers of clothes, leatherworkers, and those whose occupation it was to kill animals. The term is also sometimes applied to the hill tribes of India, who are considered unclean by some because they eat beef. Originally called untouchables or pariahs, they were given the name Harijans by the Indian political and religious leader Mahatma Gandhi , who worked for many years to improve their lives. Many now refer to themselves as Dalits [Marathi,=broken] to indicate their oppressed position outside Hindu society; legally the Indian government groups them as "scheduled castes."
Until the Indian constitution of 1949, Harijans, who constitute 15% to 20% of India's population, were subject to discrimination and social restrictions because of their "polluting" effect on those with whom they came into contact. Under the constitution, the Harijans were recognized as scheduled castes and tribes entitled to educational and vocational opportunities, as well as representation in parliament; however, widespread discrimination still exists.
Some Harijan leaders have become powerful in Indian politics. Jagjivan Ram, one of the first of his caste to receive a formal education, held several cabinet posts under Indira Gandhi and was a leader of the Janata coalition that unseated her in 1977. K. R. Narayanan was a government minister and served as India's president (1997-2002). Others have obtained a strong voice in state politics, particularly in Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh. Militant untouchables formed the Dalit Panthers in Mumbai, while many have sought to escape the stigma of their birth by conversion to Buddhism, Christianity, or Islam.
Bibliography: See B. R. Ambedkar, The Untouchables (1948); J. M. Mahar, The Untouchables in Contemporary India (1972); D. Hiro, The Untouchables of India (1982).
Author not available, HARIJANS.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
In fear of the Jats. (Punjab, India)
The Economist (US); 2/2/1991; 542 words;
... These people, whom Mahatma Gandhi called Harijans, children of God , are considered so ... failed to show the proper subservience. Harijans were prominent among the nearly 3,800 ... man be high and another low? Jats and Harijans pray together at Sikh temples and all ...
|
|
Love Letter From God
Hinduism Today; 6/30/1997; 1202 words;
... accompanied the Vedic scholar to the forsaken tenements where the harijans, the untouchables, lived. There his grandfather, a strong believer ... resides in everyone as the Gita says, he reasoned, and the harijans were worthy of listening to its holy words, then why were they ...
|
|
Lamb, Ramdas. Rapt in the Name: the Ramnamis, Ramnam, and Untouchable Religion in Central India.(Book Review)
Asian Folklore Studies; 4/1/2004; Michael, S.M.; 1138 words;
... are called by various names, such as Harijans, Exterior Castes, Depressed Classes ... devotion. The religious practice of the Harijans consists of reading and reciting the ... of Ram (Ramnam). It may look as if the Harijans have borrowed this worship pattern from ...
|
|
12 shot dead by private army in village land war
Evening Standard - London; 2/11/1999; 302 words;
... dead early today in the eastern Indian state of Bihar by suspected members of an upper- caste private army. Police said the harijans were "mowed down" in Narayanpur village, in the crime-ridden district of Jehanabad. The private militia, formed by landlords ...
|
|
A grown-up election. (parliamentary election in India)
Newsweek; 5/20/1996; Mazumdar, Sudip; 840 words;
MOHANDAS GANDHI CALLED them the harijans--children of God. And as he walked rural India more than half a century ago, Gandhi promised the poorest and most downtrodden of ...
|
|
Birth versus merit. (how India and Malaysia have introduced legislation establishing hiring quotas for underrepresented classes)
Canada and the World Backgrounder; 4/1/1996; 376 words;
Mahatma Gandhi struggled to reform the caste system in India renaming untouchables harijans--beloved of God. His work led to a provision in the Indian Constitution reserving 23% of government jobs and university places ...
|
|
Teaching of Dalit literature in higher education.
Language Forum; 1/1/2007; Palaka, Pravakar; 6369 words;
... liberate us. Only ..on pen and paper ... .. Going on Harijans ... Harijans ... Which ... . Saala ... . Harijan's what and where ... they say something ... and do something. Always Harijans ... . Harijans ... . Harijans ... . If rise ... . Saala ...
|
|
deep democracy, horizontal exchange and the praxis of poop
Cultural Studies Review; 9/1/2005; Podlashuc, Leopold Nicolai; 3397 words;
The politics of shit-as Gandhi showed in his own efforts to liberate the lowest castes, whom he called Harijans, from the task of hauling upper-caste ordure-presents a node at which concerns of the human body, dignity and technology meet ...
|
|
Democratic India Has a Big Majority to Accommodate
International Herald Tribune; 1/26/1999; Sunanda K. Datta-Ray; 704 words;
... minority in its own country, Muslims and Harijans are pampered. Not only can the subcontinent ... Indians must be content with one. As for Harijans, positive discrimination in education ... It forfeited the votes of Muslims and Harijans, without going far enough to gain commensurate ...
|
|
Calendar 1975-2005
India Today; 12/26/2005; 48398 words;
... Vimi are fond of each other. That is old news and everybody who follows the tabloids ... for Mother Four hours after receiving the news that she had been selected for the Rs 15 ... of the city brought the Oslo-datelined news, the city bent over backwards to pay its ...
|
|
Letter: Let Gandhi cash aid untouchables
The Independent - London; 10/28/1996; K P Shah; 186 words;
... He was very much devoted to see that harijans (untouchables) were accepted as equal ... But this system is so deep-rooted that harijans, though they follow the Hindu religion ... allowed to enter Hindu temples. But those harijans who choose to be converted to Islam or ...
|
|
An apology would be a token because slavery still goes on
Birmingham Mail; 3/30/2007; Maureen Messent; 839 words;
... Caribbean. But what has the international community achieved in helping the tiny bonded labourers in India, the daljits and harijans of the untouchable caste, whose little children work chained to work benches as they embroider saris for the wealthy? What ...
|
|
An apology would be a token because slavery still goes on.(News)
Birmingham Mail (England); 3/30/2007; 881 words;
... Caribbean. But what has the international community achieved in helping the tiny bonded labourers in India, the daljits and harijans of the untouchable caste, whose little children work chained to work benches as they embroider saris for the wealthy? What ...
|
|
11 dead in clash of Indian castes
Chicago Sun-Times; 9/18/1989; 77 words;
... reported. They said those deaths raised to 20 the number of people killed in two days of violence between the Brahmins and Harijans. Police said the clashes broke out when a Harijan leader made speeches that Brahmins viewed as provocative. The leader, John ...
|
|
Exploring the background of Untouchables
India Abroad; 8/28/1998; 457 words;
... Especially in the light of considerable awareness among the Harijans or Dalits as they are often referred to in today's sociopolitical ... this group has been given. Mahatma Gandhi called its members "Harijans," the children of God, whereas in independent India they came ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
Pariah beats: Dalits in India are using traditional music to subvert the caste system.(Sounds of dissent: India)
New Internationalist; 8/1/2003; Silverman, Julian; 1643 words;
|
Can political instability be eliminated in India?
USA Today (Magazine); 9/1/1997; Indurthy, Rathnam; 2618 words;
|
To whom shall we give Access to Our Water Holes?(Islam and international relations)
Cross Currents; 1/1/2002; Esack, Farid; 8732 words;
|
MAHATMA GANDHI.
Business Asia; 2/15/1999; Leathem, Rebecca; 2663 words;
|
Pietists and contextualists: the Indian solution.
The Christian Century; 1/20/1993; Stackhouse, Max L.; 2134 words;
|
Gandhi: Behind the Mask of Divinity.(Book Review)
Reviewer's Bookwatch; 10/1/2004; William, Xavier; 821 words;
|
Anthrax of the gastrointestinal tract. (Perspective).
Emerging Infectious Diseases; 7/1/2002; Sirisanthana, Thira Brown, Arthur E.; 2512 words;
|
Where atheists walk on coals. (Vijayawada, India's Atheist Center)
Commonweal; 6/2/1995; Worth, Robert; 1340 words;
|
The caste system.
New Internationalist; 7/1/2005; 277 words;
|
Untouchable Freedom: A Social History of a Dalit Community. (Reviews).
Journal of Social History; 3/22/2002; Kolenda, Pauline; 1028 words;
|
|
|