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This Article is From Aug 23, 2016

The New, Young Avatar of Gujarat’s Caste Politics VS Modi’s BJP

The New, Young Avatar of Gujarat’s Caste Politics VS Modi’s BJP
From left to right: Jignesh Melvani, Hardik Patel and Alpesh Thakore. (Photo: The Quint)

In December 2010, the Arab Spring set in motion a series of youth movements across the world led by ‘millennials', and the fire seems to have spread to India.

In July 2015, a 22-year-old Hardik Patel captured the public's attention when he led a protest of 5 lakh Patidars in Gujarat demanding reservations. In July 2016, the baton to rally for the ‘cause of the masses' was picked up by 35-year old Jignesh Mevani in response to the flogging of dalits in Una in July. In the backdrop, Alpesh Thakore (35) has been leading OBCs to protest against weak prohibition laws and other reservation demands.

The trio has become the new face of caste politics in India and has done considerable damage to ruling party BJP.

Jignesh Mevani, 35

Gai ki dum aap rakho, hame hamari zameen do,” was the resounding cry of 20,000 dalits in a protest rally on 31 July 2016. The protest was organised by the Una Dalit Atyachar Ladat Samiti (UDALS), convened by Jignesh Mevani, an Arts and Law graduate and an activist by profession. The protest ultimately led to the resignation of former Chief Minister, Anandi Ben, and a disturbance among the party's top ranks.

Their demand is simple: You keep the cow's tail; give us our land.

“When one reads Ambedkar and Marx in the context of atrocities, land reforms emerge as the key issues. In India, land determines the caste system,” explains Mevani in an interview with Livemint.

The leap the masses made from the Una incident to demanding what they are constitutionally allotted is what Mevani needs to be given due credit for. In other words, had the Gujarat Land Ceiling Act been implemented by the government, the dalits who were flogged in Una would not have been skinning a dead cow to make a living in the first place.

On 5 August, Mevani began a protest march attended by thousands from Ahmedabad to Una, with dalits taking an oath to not engage in any menial work. To take on a centuries-old social construct without any political or institutional backing is no small feat; that his protests actually moved Modi to break his silence with not one, but two statements condemning dalit oppression is an achievement in itself.

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