Guru
Ravidass was probably the first one after Gautam
Buddha who dared to revolt against the inhuman
system of social exclusion and untouchability
practiced for ages in India. However, what made him
different was his method of revolt. He adopted
Bhakti as a mode of expression of his social revolt.
His Bhakti-based method was not only unique but also
a befitting reply to the subtle mechanisations
deployed by the Brahminical class to keep the
downtrodden out of the mainstream. Bhakti was used
to be considered a privilege reserved for the upper
castes, especially the priests. Whereas,
ex-untouchables were not allowed to practice Bhakti
because they were condemned as polluted. It is in
this context that that the adoption of Bhakti by
Guru Ravidass as a method of social protest assumes
special importance.
His Bhakti-based method of social
revolt was neither violent nor tied with any
conventional forms of prayers and petitions. In
fact, it was a revolt with difference for an
egalitarian social set up. It was both novel and
daring. It was novel, because Guru Ravidass put
emphasis on compassion for all and absolute faith in
God. The principle of compassion for all reflected
the egalitarian traits of his social philosophy and
struggle. His concept of the absolute faith in the
formless God showed the apathy of the elites of his
times towards the plights of the downtrodden for
whose emancipation he had to seek refuge in no one
else but God. His method was daring in the sense
that he chooses to imitate the Brahmins in order to
symbolize his revolt which was not only highly
objectionable but was equally deadly for an outcaste
of his times. He challenged the tyranny of Brahmins
and defied them by wearing Dhoti (cloth wrapped
around the waist), Janeue (sacred thread) and Tilak
(sacred red mark on forehead) that were forbidden
for the untouchables. Though he attired himself like
an upper caste, he did not hide his caste. He
continued with his hereditary occupation of
making/mending shoes. He, probably, tried to show
that while adopting the prohibited dress and symbols
of the upper castes, the lower castes could still
keep their identity intact. Thus Guru Ravidass
provided an alternative model for the emancipation
of the Dalits much (six centuries) before the
articulation of the concept of sanskritisation – a
model of Dalit social mobility based on an emulation
of the cultural world of upper castes.
What made the image of Guru Ravidass
a catalyst in the emergence of Dalit consciousness
was his being an outcaste and at the same time a
saint of very high repute. The process of
sanskritization facilitated the ambitious lower
castes to improve ‘its position in the local caste
hierarchy’ by pretending to look like the higher
castes that enjoy ‘great prestige’ in the
hierarchically organized Brahminical social order.
Since the caste is given and cannot be changed, the
lower castes were left with no option but to imitate
the culture of the upper castes. What made the
emancipation project of Guru Ravidass different from
that of the sanskritization was his emphasis on
acquiring social respect without crossing over the
caste boundaries? He did not want to pretend to
appear like an upper caste to ride the bandwagon of
social prestige. On the contrary, he exhibited his
protest against the social oppression by putting on
the prohibited dress and symbols of the upper
castes. By imitating the appearance of the upper
castes he did not want the lower castes to abandon
their caste to climb up the ladder of the caste
hierarchy as in the process of sanskritization. The
lower castes need not to be assimilated into the
fold of higher castes. They had to, rather, assert
for their human rights by challenging the caste
hierarchy while being firm in their very caste
group. He wanted to dismantle the norm of varnashram
dharma (fourfold division of Hindu society based on
graded rank system in caste hierarchy) by showing
that lower castes were not beyond the pale of
spiritual knowledge on the one hand and on the other
that Brahmins were in fact “…hollow figures pumped
up with false pride and hypocrisy”. In fact, he used
caste to cut the steel frame of caste based social
order – the only way of Dalit emancipation.
Guru Ravidass gave a new meaning to
Bhakti by projecting it as a method of social
protest against the centuries-old entrenched
structures of Brahminical domination. He rejected
all forms of religious rituals and sectarian
formalities. He also commented graphically on the
cursed and abject living conditions of millions of
fellow downtrodden. Some scholars were of the
opinion that though the devotional songs and hymns
of Ravidass reflected the sufferings of the
downtrodden, they lack the reformatory zeal and
bitter condemnation of Brahminism and caste system
that animated the poetry of Kabir and Tukaram.
Though there is a difference in tone between the
poetry of Kabir and Ravidass, both convey the same
message. The poetry of Guru Ravidass is known to be
full of humility and devotion. But at the same time
it is equally imbibed with reformatory zeal and
concern for the downtrodden. Instead of bluntly
snubbing the arrogance of higher castes, he
undertook to raise the dignity of his own caste and
profession, so that the higher castes could come to
realize the shallowness of their self-imposed
superiority. He advocated self-help for eliminating
sufferings of the Dalits. His vision for self-help
is clearly reflected in one of the legends about his
refusal to make use of a Paras (a mythical stone
that turns iron into gold) to get rich. He lent
purity and respect to kirat (manual work), which
also found special mention in the teachings of Guru
Nanak Dev, the founder of Sikh faith. In fact, Guru
Ravidass’s life and poetry provided a vision to the
downtrodden to struggle for their human rights and
civic liberties.
The Bhakti approach of Guru Ravidass
was a non-violent struggle for the emancipation and
empowerment of the Shudras. Though he combined
humility with Bhakti, his concept of formless God
reflected an altogether different picture. Guru
Ravidass’s God was not humble at all in the typical
sense of the term. He was graceful. He was not
indifferent to the downtrodden. His God was rather
bold who was not afraid of anyone. He elevated and
purified the so-called untouchables. Aaisee lal tujh
binu kaunu karai. Gareeb niwaaju guseea meraa
maathai chhatar dharai… neecho uooch karai meraa
govind kaahoo te na darai. Guru Ravidass further
said Meri jaati kut bandhlaa dhor dhouwanta nithi
baanaarasi aas paasaa. Ab bipar pardhan tihi karih
danduouti tere naam sarnaaie Ravidass daasaa. It is
in this context that his non-violent struggle based
on Bhakti assumed special importance for the
emancipation of the Dalits. He did not only adopt
non–violence in his struggle against the social
oppression, but also motivated the oppressors to
abandon the path of violence.
Guru Ravidass envisioned an egalitarian model of
state for ensuring human rights and civil liberties
for all alike. He called his ideal state as
Begumpura (free from sorrows). In his ideal state no
one would be discriminated against on the basis of
caste and religion and everyone would be free from
the burden of taxes and worries of food. His ideal
state would be free from the graded system of caste
hierarchy. There would be no segregated colonies for
the downtrodden and they would be free to move
around without caste prejudice. In other words, in
Begumpura the evil of untouchability would cease to
exist. Though Begumpura was an ideal state as
visualized by Ravidass, it was not a mere figment of
his mind. In fact, its articulation was based on
in-depth understanding of the socio-economic and
political conditions prevailing during his lifetime.
He lived during the period when Shudras were doubly
oppressed by their political masters along with the
members of higher castes; and by the Brahmins, the
custodians of Hindu religion.
He had no hope from any quarter
regarding the improvement of the conditions of the
downtrodden. In one of his hymns he thus articulated
Dardu dekh sab ko hasai, aaisee dasaa hamaaree. Ast
dasaa sidi kar talai, sab kirpa tumhari. In fact,
his entire poetry echoed a loud protest against
slavery on the one hand and boundless love and
devotion to the formless God on the other. He
believed that God created all human beings and
resided in all of them. If the same God pervaded the
entire humanity, then it is foolish to divide the
society on the basis of caste. He thus condemned the
division of mankind on the basis of caste. He said
Jo ham shehri so meet hamara. It is in this context
that the egalitarian social philosophy of Ravidass
expressed in the mode of poetry became the manifesto
of the Dalit consciousness in Punjab.
The establishment of a large number
of Ravidass Deras by the Dalits in Punjab and in
other parts of India over the last few years is a
case in point. Guru Ravidass became very popular
among the Punjabi Dalit diasporas as well, who have
also constructed Ravidass shrines in order to assert
their separate caste identity. The number of
Ravidass Deras has been multiplying very fast. It
has taken the form of a sort of a socio-cultural
movement for the emancipation of the Dalits. It has
generated a sense of confidence in them and provided
them an opportunity to exhibit their hitherto
eclipsed Dalit identity. The secret of the success
of this movement lies in the strategy to combine Dr
Ambedkar’s socio-cultural revolution with Bhakti
approach of Guru Ravidass Dass. Ravidass Deras
thrive on the elements of social protest expressed
in the poetry of Guru Ravidass and the writings of
Dr. Ambedkar. These Deras, in fact, have been
functioning as missions to sensitive the Dalits and
to facilitate their empowerment. In order to look
different from the shrines of Hindu and Sikh
religions, and to distinctly project their separate
religious identity, Ravidass Deras have formulated
their own religious symbols, ceremonies, prayers,
rituals and messages of social protest against the
oppressive structures of caste domination in the
agrarian society of Punjab
Ronki Ram (Dr.)
Reader
& Chairperson
DEPARTMENT OF
POLitical SCIENCE
PANJAB UNIVERSITY, CHANDIGARH, India
Published on www.upkaar.com on 25th,
September,2011
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