Sunday, 19 April 2009

A Letter of Thanks - CasteWatch UK

In my recent posts concerning the caste system and its impact on British Asians, CasteWatch UK who actively promote to remove caste discrimination from British Asian society thanked Paki Tin for airing an issue that is often shrouded in secrecy. From a British Asian perspective, the effects of the caste system are very much still ingrained within our communities. To totally remove it would be difficult. To understand what caste is in the context of modern society however is far more realistic and we should all take note of who we are and what we stand for - when the 18 year old lad in the club sips his drink and proclaims his superior caste we can be sure that the caste system is abused and misunderstood. Let us all seek answers...


Dear Paki-Tin,

I am extremely thankful to you for taking interest in our cause. I have gone through your blog and it is fantastic, thought provoking and is full of information that must be presented to every young Asian mind in the UK. I have to thank you for supporting us. We need people who oppose Caste discrimination in the UK and are willing to take part in a massive social reform and education of young Brit Asians to develop their identities in line with British Values and not based on obsolete and discriminatory bigotry.

It is fascinating to see the view points of people when they speak about racism. The same people make a complete and very fast u-turn the moment you present them with caste issues and go into denial mode. As someone, who has personal experience of both, caste discrimination is considerably more painful, particularly in British situation. Hindus and others who are still trying to maintain the caste divides have to be re-educated in human rights and British Values. I am going to forward the link to your blog to the rest of our members.


Regards,


Davinder Prasad
General Secretary
CasteWatchUK

2 comments:

  1. I'm not sure exactly how the Caste system works. I'm Gujarati by origin but caste is something I've never come across in any of the Gujaratis I know. My Pakistani friends on the other hand, can be quite obsessive about their caste (they're Muslim). I'd appreciate it if you could explain to me how it works.

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  2. Hi Shafiq, the caste system has been around for hundreds of years and played a huge role within Hinduism. In Sikhism, the caste system was outlawed but is still practised widely.

    For the Muslim community I know that Ashrafs and Ajlafs are examples of caste as well as the influence of the Hindu religion amongst the Islamic community. Then there are the divides between Sunni and Shia Muslims etc and other more obscure groups such as the Kharijis and Wahhabis. I can only talk from my own experience and cannot go into a lot of detail but it seemingly exists.

    The notions of caste however hold less water in a UK context - class kills caste.

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