城市达利特人的社会空间隔离体验及其反种姓想象——对印度德里Balmiki社区的研究

Maya Suzuki
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摘要

在过去的三十年里,印度经历了快速的经济发展和社会文化转型。问题是,少数民族如何确保其生计,正在为此制定何种战略。他们对未来有什么样的设想?在这篇文章中,我将关注印度北部的达利特社区。对德里城市的巴尔米基斯(被称为清洁工种姓)这一弱势群体进行的实地调查,被用作案例研究。Balmikis向城市地区的迁移率很高,这是由于他们自殖民时代以来一直在市政卫生部门和铁道部工作的历史背景。这个社区的名字Balmiki源于对传说中的圣人和罗摩衍那作曲家Bhagwan Valmik的崇拜。大约在20世纪二三十年代,它作为一个带有积极含义的名字在印度北部的清洁工种姓中生根发芽。由于这一历史发展,它经常被指责诋毁与印度教价值观不同的达利特人,并阻碍达利特的团结。然而,如果你听听巴尔米基人的说法,他们并不一定认为自己是“印度教徒”。例如,在我的研究过程中,关于宗教的问题经常得到这样的回答:“我们被迫成为印度教徒”。相反,紧接在后面的“我们是巴尔米基斯”这句话则被重述了一遍。本文试图从巴尔米基人的信仰和自我认同的模糊性出发,考察他们的反种姓想象。然后,它提出了一个问题,即这种想象是如何与日常经历和集体草根运动交织在一起的。
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Socio-spatially Segregated Experience of Urban Dalits and their Anti-caste Imagination: A Study of the Balmiki Community in Delhi, India
Over the last three decades, India has experienced rapid economic development and social and cultural transformation. Questions arise as to how minorities secure their livelihood and what strategies are being devised for the same. And, what vision of the future do they have in mind? In this article, I will focus on the Dalit community in North India. Fieldwork conducted on one such disadvantaged group, the urban Balmikis (known as the sweeper caste) in Delhi, is drawn upon to examine as a case study. Balmikis have a high rate of migration to urban areas, which is due to their historical background of being employed in the sanitation sector of municipalities and the Ministry of Railways since the colonial times. The name of the community, Balmiki, is derived from worshipping “Bhagwan Valmik,” a legendary saint and composer of Ramayana. It began to take root as a name with positive connotations among the sweeper caste in North India around the 1920s and 1930s. Because of this historical development, it is often accused of discrediting Dalits who dissent from Hindu values and for hindering Dalit solidarity. However, if one listens to the claims of the Balmikis, they do not necessarily consider themselves "Hindus”. For example, during my research, a frequent response to questions about religion was the statement, "We are forced to be Hindus”. In contrast, the words that immediately follow, "We are Balmikis," are restated. By focusing on the beliefs and ambiguity of self-identity of the Balmikis, this article attempts to examine their anti-caste imagination. It then poses the question as to how that imagination is intertwined with everyday experiences and collective grassroots movements.
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