Victims of caste system in Punjab

Pehlon si asi Julahe, pher ban gaye Darzi/ Holi holi ho gaye Sayyad, aggon Rab di marzi!

I didn’t know that Mukhtaran Mai’s case was based on caste discrimination.

Castes in Punjab – The Express Tribune

To somehow conclude that Punjab — or any other part of the present Pakistan — has been free from caste divisions, prejudices, discriminations and politics is to affirm our national trend to deny historical and social reality. Our post-Partition Punjab politics has typically been the power politics between different biradris sharing a specific area. Any number of examples could be found that demonstrate how caste prejudice plays a crucial role in informing individual and group attitudes: from the famous saying adorning the backs of our trucks and buses — Asl se khata nahin/kam, asl se wafa nahin (A high-born can do no wrong/while a person of low origin cannot be loyal) — to a recent whispering campaign vilifying a federal minister in which he was alleged to be from a Nai family. Whether or not the allegation was true, one thing is certain: according to the campaigners, a person’s caste background is the actual determinant of his or her worth!

**A more gruesome and violent example is that of Mukhtaran Mai whose teenage brother (a Gujjar) made the mistake of crossing the caste boundary by befriending a woman of a high and dominant caste (Mastoi). As a punishment, he was sodomised by a gang of people who were later convicted for the crime by the Court. Mukhtaran herself, according to the minority judgment of the Supreme Court, was gang raped for her brother’s caste crime.
**

In order to understand the historical caste divisions in Punjab, I would like to refer to a book called Vichhore da Dagh (The burning wound of separation), by Shamsheer Singh Babra, published from Lahore in 2008. **Babra, who was a part of the forced migration of 1947, came from a village called Chhotian Glotian, a few miles from Daska, district Sialkot, and was studying in a college at the time of Partition — which he calls the partition of Punjab. He went on to complete his higher studies in India and the US before embarking on a long career as a social scientist with the World Bank. He wrote this fascinating book, which he calls the biography of his village, recollecting all the minute details of life in Chhotian Glotian as he left it in 1947.

On page 34 he writes:** “**People used to recognise each other on the basis of qaum. Qaum and zaat were one and the same thing. It was written in all official records and stamp papers. Qaum Jat, qaum Zamindar, qaum Tarkhan, qaum Khatri, qaum Teli, qaum Mirasi and so on. Religion was not mentioned. At the time of Partition, in 1947, the distribution of people from different religions [in the village] was as follows: Sikhs 52 per cent, Mussalmans 39 per cent, Christians 7 per cent and Hindus 2 per cent. Sikhs had five qaums: Jat, Ramgarhia, Khatri, Suniara and Mehra … **. Mussalmans had the most numerous qaums, as many as 13: Jat, Arain, Lohar, Ghumiar, Bar-wale, Mirasi, Teli, Nai, Mochi, Machhi, Syed and Kashmiri. Only two qaums from Hindus lived there: Suniara and Bahman … . Christians were all considered the same qaum. Christians and Hindus did not own any land”.

Further on, on page 54-5, Babra reveals something which explains why all sweepers in Punjab are Christians. He writes: “Sikhs and Mussalmans in the village (like upper caste Hindus) did not allow the Untouchables (Dalits) to enter their folds. These people lived separately in a thathhi outside the village. Their way of worship was Pagan-like, but they followed the Hindu social customs. After the British Raj was established in 1848, [Christian] missionaries spread in the whole of Punjab. Around 1875, all the Untouchables from the village converted to Christianity. However, their lifestyle and social status did not change. They remained second-class citizens as before …” .

“Untouchables were outside the system. Sikhism, Islam and Christianity negated the hierarchy based on caste and kept the doors open for everyone to acquire knowledge. However, society went on following the same old ways. Each caste married within its fold. Hardly any Sikh violated this rule. Caste system was much stronger among Mussalmans. All Sikhs went to the same gurdwara but Mussalmans would only go to pray in the mosque belonging to their own sect. As people started moving from villages to the free environment of cities, and got educated and well-off, some of them changed their castes. Nais would start calling themselves Jats, Lohars became Khatris. It happened the other way round too. Many Rajputs mingled into Jats; some Bahmans got involved in business and became Khatris. Away from home, anybody could make himself anything he liked — who would know! Especially in Canada, the US and England, people [from Punjab] use their changed surnames. There was a famous saying which went like this:

Pehlon si asi Julahe, pher ban gaye Darzi/ Holi holi ho gaye Sayyad, aggon Rab di marzi! (In the beginning we were Julaha, then became Darzi/Gradually we turned into Sayyad, whatever God wills happens!)”

Some Untouchables did convert to Islam and Sikhism despite resistance from powerful groups; however, they ended up being called ‘Musallis’ in the former and ‘Mazhabi Sikhs’ in the latter case and treated as Untouchables.

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

Caste system is a big issue in Punjab. With the passage of time its eroding (in urban areas) but it still raises its head when going for marriage proposals. In the rural areas the caste system is still alive, I remember hearing the words of jolaha, lohaar, mirasi, sheikh and sadozai etc during my childhood.

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

The history stated by writer about caste system in Punjab says that even zaat (caste) was more important than religion for identification purposes. There are still castes which are shared by all religions.

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

In Punjab, Islam spread due to the caste system prevalent there, but it still remained in one form or another. Like Nawaz Sharif can become what ever but he will still be called "Lohaar ka beta".

This intolerance can take different paths, castes, religions and sects. And we have already seen one partition due to that.

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

lols. You just reminded me my dada, he always calls Nawaz Sharif as Lohar :hehe: He also calls Zardari as Jat ( camel man in Sindhi), probably referring to his Baloch origin

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

One good thing is that especially in urban areas no one really cares about castes now. When I went to university I met Khattars, Tiwanas, Wains, Arains, Chaudharis and a host others. And I was :smack:. People still want to marry within their castes, which would also become irrelevant in due course of time.

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

we dont have any caste system here in maharashtrian muslims....:)

but we see hindu caste system.....

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

^ :k:

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

No distinction of KunjRe Qasai?

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

we dont ask for caste of fellow muslim...for us caste is term related to hindus...

qasais are known as qureshis but we do not consider them as belonging to different castes

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

seems that South is more tolerant than North. :D

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

we are true liberals :hbk:

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

thats true

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

You may be closer to the Deen than others who take pride in caste/creed/color/race. MashaAllah :k:

Have not heard of Mastoi caste/tribe before. Are they predominent in certain areas of each province? :hmmm:

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

I like caste classification, I don't like discrimination in the name of it :)

I am jatt, so I should be happy about it :)

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

They exist in both Sindh and Balochistan.. probably in Punjab in areas surrounding Sahiwal where Baloch tribes moved alongwith Chakar Khan Rind

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

You like it because in Sikhism they don't discrimination like Syed and Non-Syeds

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

We do, a jatt doesn't marry with chammar or Ramgarhiya, we have very discriminatory caste system, I like caste classification because it is matter of identity here, but discrimination is bad.

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

And we are true tribals :hbk: :smiley:

Re: Victims of caste system in Punjab

which is the elite caste in Sikhs which got status like Syeds?