Women, Caste and Reform | Chapter 8 | History 8th |
Chapter 8 – Women, Caste and Reform
Let’s Recall
Q1. What social ideas did the following people support?
Rammohun
Roy, Dayanand Sarasvati, Veerasalingam Pantulu, Jyoti Rao Phule, Pandita
Ramabai, Periyar, Mumtaz Ali
Ans.
Rammohun Rao: Spread of Western education, Reforming
Hinduism, Greater freedom and equality for women, Upliftment of widows, Campaigned
against the practice of sati, Critical of caste inequalities.
Dayanand
Sarasvati:
Reforming Hinduism, Supported widow remarriage.
Pandita
Ramabai: Critical of the treatment of upper-caste
Hindu women and widows.
Periyar: Campaigned against caste and social
inequalities, Critical of Hindu scriptures.
Mumtaz
Ali: Promoting women’s
education.
Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar: Supported widow remarriage, Education for girls.
Q2.
State whether true and false.
(a) When
the British captured Bengal they framed many new laws to regulate the rules
regarding marriage, adoption, the inheritance of property, etc.
(b) Social
reformers had to discard the ancient texts in order to argue for reform in
social practices.
(c)
Reformers got full support from all sections of the people of the country.
(d) The
Child Marriage Restraint Act was passed in1829.
Ans.
Let’s Discuss
Q3.
How did the knowledge of ancient texts help
the reformers promote new laws? How did the knowledge of ancient texts help the
reformers promote new laws?
Ans.
The reformers believed that changes were necessary in
society, and unjust practices needed to be done away with. They thought that
the best way to ensure such changes was by persuading people to give up old
practices and adopt a new way of life. Whenever they wished to challenge a
practice that seemed harmful, they tried to find a verse or a sentence in the
ancient sacred texts that supported their point of view. They then suggested
that the practice as it existed was against early tradition. For example,
Rammohun Roy used ancient texts to show that the practice of sati or widow
burning had no sanction. Similarly, Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar used ancient
texts to suggest that widows could remarry.
Q4.
What were the different reasons people had
for not sending girls to school?
Q5.
Why were Christian missionaries attacked by
many people in the country? Would some people have supported them too? If so,
for what reasons?
Q6.
In the British period, what new
opportunities opened up for people who came from castes that were regarded as
“low”?
Q7.
How did Jyoti Rao and the reformers justify their criticism of caste inequality
in society?
Ans.
The reformers questioned the Brahmanical texts that
supported the caste system and the inferiority of the so-called “low” castes
and the superiority of the so-called “high castes”. They challenged the Brahmanical
claims to power and authority.
Jyoti
Rao Phule claimed that the lower castes were the true children of the land
known as India. According to him, the Brahmins who traced their genealogy back
to the Aryans were outsiders. The upper castes had therefore no right to their
land and power. Like Birsa Munda who envisioned a golden age free from diksus
and all other forms of evil, Jyoti Rao Phule too believed in a golden age free
from the Aryans and their ideas of caste. He also extended his criticism of the
caste system and linked it with all other forms of inequalities and injustices
prevalent not only in Indian society but also in Western society. A case in
point is his linking of the miseries of the black slaves in America with those
of the lower castes in India.
Q8.
Why did Phule dedicate his book Gulamgiri
to the American movement to free slaves?
Ans.
Jyoti Rao Phule was concerned with all forms of
inequalities and injustices existing in society, whether it was the plight of
the upper-caste women, the miseries of the labourer, or the humiliation of the
low castes. By dedicating his book Gulamgiri to the American movement to free
slaves, he linked the conditions of the black slaves in America with those of
the lower castes in India. This comparison also contains an expression of hope
that one day, as the end of slavery in America, there would be an end to all
sorts of caste discriminations in Indian society.
Q9.
What did Ambedkar want to achieve through
the temple entry movement?
Ans.
Lower castes were usually not allowed anywhere near
temple gateways. During the temple entry movement initiated by Ambedkar in
1927, the lower caste people not only entered the temple premises but also used
water from the temple tank, thereby causing great outrage among the Brahmin
priests. Through this movement, Ambedkar wished to make everyone see the power
of caste prejudice in society. He wanted to prove that being of a low caste did
not mean that one was not a human being, so the sense of outrage was
unwarranted. He wanted to show that like the upper castes, the lower castes too
had every right to equality. The ultimate aim of such movements was to reform
Hindu society; to reorganize it on two main principles, equality, and absence
of casteism.
Q10.
Why were Jyoti Rao Phule and Ramaswamy
Naicker critical of the national movement? Did their criticism help the
national struggle in any way?
Ans.
Both Jyoti Rao Phule and Ramaswamy Naicker were critical
of the national movement as they could barely see any difference between the
preachers of anti-colonialism and the colonial masters. Both, according to
them, were outsiders and had used power for subjugating and oppressing the
indigenous people. Phule believed that though the upper-caste leaders were then
asking people all over the country to unite for fighting the British, once the
Britishers had left, they would continue with their oppressive caste policies,
thereby causing divisions amongst the very people they were trying to unite. He
believed that they only wished for unity to serve their purposes, and once the
purposes had been served, the divisions would creep in again.
Their
criticism did lead to rethinking and some self-criticism among the upper-caste
nationalist leaders. This in turn helped strengthen the national struggle, as
free from prejudices of caste, religion, and gender, the leaders could unite and
concentrate their attention upon the single aim of overthrowing the colonial
administration.
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