Kanshiram: Harbinger of change in modern Dalit history in India

On the occasion of Dalit history month, we take a look at the firebrand Dalit leader who led the fight for political agency and representation in Northern India

offline
On the occasion of Dalit history month, we take a look at the firebrand Dalit leader who led the fight for political agency and representation in Northern India

It is rare to see Dalit leaders given honorifics such as Manyavar, Saheb and Bahujan Nayak, but Kanshiram was a unique leader of his times, under whose vision the Dalit community could carve out a niche for itself in the national political arena.

In the contemporary political stage in India today, many tend to miss the nuances that Kanshiram brought to the fore, specifically, in bringing together the subaltern communities as a strong political force in his time. He was a rare political entrepreneur, who was much ahead of his times. He founded the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) by imagining a vote bank comprising all the backward communities, including the other backward classes (OBC), the scheduled castes (SCs), the scheduled tribes (STs) and other minorities, collectively referred to as the ‘bahujan samaj’. He was also responsible for coming up with the idea of ‘Manuvadi’, or the follower of Manu Samhita, as the ‘other’ or the opponent against whom he would battle. Kanshiram’s main aim through the BSP was to bring about social transformation through Dalit empowerment.However, despite contesting against V.P. Singh in Allahabad in 1987 for the first time, it was only in 1991 that he managed to enter the Lok Sabha, when he contested from Ettawah in Uttar Pradesh.

Kanshiram, considered the messiah of Dalits after Ambedkar, was born on 15 March 1934 in a Dalit Chamar family in the Pirthipur Bunga village, Khawaspur, in the Ropar district of Punjab. He grew up with a love for sports, especially kabaddi and wrestling. Kanshiram studied at the government primary school in Malkapur, which was 2 kilometres from his village. Here he experienced the discrimination that Dalit children faced, such as having different pots for drinking water. Kanshiram was then moved to Islamiya School and the DAV Public School, where he completed his education. He graduated in 1956 with a BSc degree from the government college in Ropar. Kan...

Read more!