Extraordinary Indians: Bezwada Wilson's March for Dignity and Self-Respect

The activist leads the fight to end the centuries-old, caste-bound practice of manual scavenging. 

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The activist leads the fight to end the centuries-old, caste-bound practice of manual scavenging. 

In 1982, then just a teenager, Bezwada Wilson saw a woman manual scavenger at work in his village in Karnataka. His parents were both manual scavengers too, but the grim reality of the work had never hit him so explicitly. “I was completely shocked,” says the 59-year-old. “I knew I had to do something.”

A centuries-old, caste-bound, discriminatory practice in India, manual scavenging is the act of cleaning dry toilets, open drains, or sewers, by hand and rudimentary tools—a task historically assigned to Dalit communities, placed at the bottom of India’s social hierarchy. 

The Safai Karamchari Andolan (SKA), a movement Wilson founded in 1993, has since led the fight to end this dehumanising practice. Their protests, advocacy and data-driven work have influenced law and policy, forcing governments to act and society to take note. In 2016, Wilson, its national convenor, received a Ramon Magsaysay award for ‘his moral energy and prodigious skill in leading a grassroots movement’ and ‘reclaiming for Dalits the human dignity that is their natural birthright.’

Wilson’s recognition of his own identity as Dalit came at school where he was the subject of playground slurs. “That was the first time I realized that I was different,” he says. When the children laughed at him, Wilson cluelessly laughed along. “They said, you shouldn’t be laughing—we are making fun of you.”

For generations Wilson’s forebears and family members, who moved from Andhra Pradesh to Karnataka, had done this work. But his mother insisted that Wilson study. When he finished primary school in Kolar, there were no nearby Telugu-medium secondary schools so he decided to help his parents with work, but they were adamant. “My mother literally carried me to the school 28 km away,” he recalls.A bitter experience at an employment exchange followed afte...

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