Monday, 30 August 2021

Caste Integration or Racial Equality

 In a recent conversation with a friend, Racial Injustice and Systematic Racism in Canada and the Anglican Church of Canada came up.  We conversed about the cause, symptoms and perhaps the cure of this horrible sickness in the society and the ACC. We expressed the following two positions because of our heritage and background.

·    Caucasians were colonisers and have to repent and seek reconciliation with the Indigenous People of Canada and the New Canadians.

·   Caucasians have apologised for their actions. However, they can solve the problem by empowering and delegating decision making to the Indigenous Peoples and the Visible Minority.

 

The first position submits that the Caucasians should feel remorse and lead the way forward because of the sin of colonialism.  While this is noble, it is neo-colonialism because Caucasians still are in authority and are engaged for self-serving reasons.  Moreover, they are the decision-makers and can think, speak and decide for everyone.

The alternative suggests power-sharing and empowering others, so the discriminated lead the discussion and discern the solution. Although intellectually, this concept sounds good – practically, it is impossible to achieve until the difference between race and Caste is discussed, and Caste replaces race in societal and ecclesiastical discourse.

Racism is the scientifically false belief that groups of humans possess different behavioural traits corresponding to physical appearance and can be divided based on the superiority of one race over another. It may also mean prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against other people because they are of different races or ethnicities. Modern variants of racism are often based on social perceptions of biological differences between peoples. These views can take the form of social actions, practices or beliefs, or political systems in which different races are ranked as inherently superior or inferior to each other, based on presumed shared inheritable traits, abilities, or qualities. In terms of political systems (e.g., apartheid) that support the expression of prejudice or aversion in discriminatory practices or laws, racist ideology may include associated social aspects such as nativism, xenophobia, otherness, segregation, hierarchical ranking, and supremacism.

A caste is a form of social stratification characterised by endogamy, hereditary transmission of a style of life which often includes an occupation, ritual status in a hierarchy, and day-to-day social interaction and exclusion based on cultural notions of purity and pollution. Its paradigmatic ethnographic example is the division of India's Hindu society into rigid social groups, with roots in India's ancient history and persisting to the present time. However, the economic significance of the caste system in India has been declining as a result of urbanisation and affirmative action programs. A subject of many scholarships by sociologists and anthropologists, the Hindu caste system is sometimes used as an analogical basis for studying caste-like social divisions existing outside Hinduism and India.

From the above definitions, it can be argued that racism and the caste system are identical in nature and overlap. It can also be concluded that both systems are designed to oppress and discriminate against the other. There might be other similarities – nevertheless, the differences between the two are significant to this discussion. First, racism and race are directly related to and is dependent on the context and the socio-political-ethnic formation of the society. Caste is permanent and transfers from one context to the other. Second, an oppressed race in one culture can be the dominant race in another culture. For example, South Asians are oppressed in the global north but enjoy autonomy and respect in their countries of origin.

Furthermore, socio-political change in the context can exalt the oppressed in power. South Africa, for example, experienced power transfer and transformation of racial identity because of the will of the dominant culture. Second, lower Caste can never assume to be in power regardless of the authority, status or appointments, members of the Caste, may achieve and enjoy. Third, racial tensions can be discussed, eased and diminished – Caste cannot be replaced, shrunk and changed.

White privilege, or white skin privilege, is the societal privilege that benefits white people over non-white people in some societies, mainly if they are otherwise under the same social, political, or economic circumstances. With roots in European colonialism and imperialism and the Atlantic slave trade, white privilege has developed in circumstances that have broadly sought to protect white racial privileges, various national citizenships, and other rights or unique benefits. White privilege denotes both obvious and less obvious passive advantages that white people may not recognise, distinguishing it from overt bias or prejudice. These include cultural affirmations of one's worth, presumed more excellent social status, and freedom to move, buy, work, play, and speak freely. The effects can be seen in professional, educational, and personal contexts. However, the concept of white privilege also implies the right to assume the universality of one's own experiences, marking others as different or exceptional while perceiving oneself as usual.

It should be noted that Caucasians, in general, have conscientiously appealed to 'White Privilege' to denounce their past actions. However, the sad reality is that they have inadvertently used the privilege to chart future racial relations, lines of communication and establish parameters to either accept or reject the person, race or opinion and conviction.

Debate on Equal Marriage in the Anglican Church of Canada is submitted as the example of 'white privilege' carefully guarding the discussion and, under the guise and shroud of equality, rejecting all those who disagree with them. This rejection and refusal to acknowledge diverse positions have superseded race and ethnic background. The group in power has equally discriminated against and ridiculed Caucasian, Indigenous and Ethnic minorities in the Anglican Church of Canada.

Thus, it is not racial discrimination; otherwise, conservative, fundamentalist, and evangelical Caucasians would not have been cast aside. Instead, it is a modern iteration of the caste system that can and has divided the Caucasians on dogma while keeping them united in their dealings with the Indigenous and Ethnic Minorities.

The Anglican Church of Canada's governing Caucasians will refute this point by stating the Indigenous ministries at the National Level, various task forces to end racial and sexual discrimination and their commitment to having ethnically diverse volunteer and paid leadership in power corridors.

This claim should be examined through the evolution (devolution) of racial harmony in American and Canadian society. The Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s brought forth the constitutional changes in the United States of America. The election of Senator Barrack Obama as the President of the United States was a momentous occasion – but it failed to strengthen racial relationships and change the prevalent attitude towards African Americans. Law Enforcement Agencies harassed and killed Blacks regardless of provocation or just cause; ethnic minorities, regardless of their religion or country of origin, are perceived as an enemy of the state, and conspiracy theorists still question President Obama's birth certificate. Caucasian Americans are divided on indiscriminate violence and harassment of African Americans based on their political and religious persuasion.

Discussions, task forces, patronising of the other, and changes to the canons and constitution will undoubtedly make the group(s) in power feel good about themselves. However, it will never address the discrimination and marginalisation of the other. Human Rights Advocates have pointed out ways in which, particularly in the hiring process, biases, assumptions and preconceived notions are integrated into an interview process to tilt the balance in favour of a privileged candidate. It has also been documented that unsuccessful indigenous or ethnic candidates are patronised, and their confidence is shattered through careful destruction of their experiences and qualification.

In conclusion, Caste is permanent. In the Anglican Church of Canada, the caste system is embedded in the practice of Caucasians in Power. They are the superior race because of their doctrine, dogma, expression of faith and belief that everyone, regardless of his/her race, has to agree with them. There is no room to dissent or discuss, or compromise. Either one agrees despite his/her personal belief or is cast aside. The elite would like to be diverse but have deliberately decided the space and authority they will afford to the other. BIPOC should be a clone of a Caucasian candidate or mindset to be hired at the executive level; in other words, BIPOC will never be there because how can s/he be an elite. Regardless of self-adulation for being just, Caucasian Elites of the Anglican Church of Canada have caused irreparable damage to the other. It is because of their belief that they are not racist or discriminatory – the problem is that no one can meet their standards, expectations, or fully agree with them.

The way forward for the Anglican Church of Canada is to decide that they want to be an inclusive church or maintain the status quo. If the answer is 'Inclusive,' then the elite must address the 'Caste system' through self-introspection and honest and vulnerable evaluation of the structures to determine how they have nurtured and guarded it. Second, destroy the structure and invite lower caste members to join them in rebuilding the structure and the church. Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru and Mahatama Karamchand Mohandas Gandhi destroyed the caste structure in 1947. Their vision and courage resulted in the election of a Dalat woman to be a chief minister of Uttar Pradesh and all Caste coming together to rebuild India after centuries of division and colonialism.



By: Edmund Laldin.

It cannot be reproduced or used without the written consent of the author.

 

Sunday, 13 June 2021

Is there Islamophobia?

 

June 6, 2021, will always be remembered as the day of the Afzaal Family's senseless killing in London, Ontario, Canada.  The Afzaal's were standing on a sidewalk and were rundown by a twenty-year-old Caucasian man[1].  The driver admitted his guilt and gave racism and anti-Muslim sentiment and hatred as the reason for his barbaric action.

This incident shook Canadian society in general and every Canadian in particular.  Expressions of sympathy, anger, disbelief started to pour in from the Political Leaders, Religious Leaders and citizens of Canada. The incident became a topic of discussion in the global news agencies and political and social analysts, and critiques.

Imran Khan, Prime Minister of Pakistan, immediately labelled it as 'Islamophbia' and renewed his resolve to mobilise the Organisation of Islamic Countries to address these issues with the European and North American Countries.  Incidentally, he remains the only Islamic statesperson to equate the killings with Islamophobia.  Last year, Mr Khan justified the beheading of a French teacher by a young Muslim boy by stating that the teacher had shown cartoons of Prophet Mohammed to the class.  Furthermore, Mr Khan was openly critical of France's decision to protect free speech and liberal democracy by raising 'Islamophobia' and demanding to rescind free speech related to either Islam and or Prophet Muhammed.  Tehreek Labeek Pakistan (TLP), a fundamentalist and right-wing Islamic political party, protested violently on the streets of Pakistan, demanding the expulsion of the French Ambassador from Pakistan and severing ties with France.  Mr Khan's Government listed TLP as a terrorist organisation, assured them that his motives are the same as theirs and allowed TLP to contest a by-election in Karachi.

Pakistan's Left-Leaning Journalists and Intellectual condemned both the killing of Afzaal's, usage of 'Islamophobia', and their Government's duplicity and hypocrisy.  Their argument was rooted in Islamophobia, root causes of violence towards South Asians, Orientals and Arabic in the European and North American Countries. 

Islamophobia loosely defined is the fear of, hatred of, or prejudice against the religion of Islam and Muslims in general, especially when seen as a geopolitical force or the source of terrorism. The meaning of the term continues to be debated, and some view it as problematic.  Some scholars view Islamophobia and racism as partially overlapping phenomena, while others dispute the relationship, primarily because religion is not a race. The causes and characteristics of Islamophobia are also subjects of debate. An increase in Islamophobia resulted from September 9, 2001, the rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, and other terror attacks in Europe and the United States by Islamic extremists.  The term has proven problematic and is viewed by some as an obstacle to constructive criticism of Islam. Its detractors fear that it can be applied to any critique of Islamic practices and beliefs, suggesting terms such as 'anti-Muslim' instead.

Dr Ishtiaq Ahmed is an Emeritus Professor of Political Science at the University of Stockholm. Dr Ahmed refuses to interpret or label the actions of the French Government or random killings as Islamophobia because of religious freedom and other liberties afforded to Muslims in Europe and North America.  According to him, countries have protected their culture (France) and punished perpetrators against Muslims according to their penal system.  He believes it would have been Islamophobia if the caricatures of Jesus Christ and the criticism of Christianity were a crime and Islam's criticism was allowed and encouraged.  In support of Dr Ahmed, European countries and Canada opened doors to the Syrian refugees while the middle eastern countries shut their doors on the Syrian refugees.  Canadian Intellectuals of Pakistani origin such as Mr Gora, Barrister Bhusani, Mr Farooqi's narrative is the same as Dr Ahmed's.   

Ms Arzoo Kazmi, a Pakistani Journalist, opines that the Pakistani Government, notably Mr Khan, should address their indifference towards the violent treatment of religious and ethnic minorities in Pakistan.  In the recent past, Ms Kazmi cites the Government's silence on the kidnapping and forcible marriages of hundreds of young Hindu girls in Sindh.  She also references a Christian couple burnt alive in a kiln, a Christian couple incarcerated for seven years on baseless blasphemy charges, and converting a Church into a Mosque by Muslim nurses and demanding the Christian nurses convert to Islam. Regarding violence to other Muslim sects, Ms Kazmi highlights targeted killings of Shiite (belonging to Hazara and other ethnic groups), the disappearance of thousands of Baloch men and the desecration of Shiite and Ahmadi's cemeteries.  On an international and global scale, Pakistan has not raised any concerns or have advocated the genocide and inhumane Chinese Government's treatment of the Urgher's Muslims or have spoken to Saudi Arabia's rulers about the killings of Houthi's in Yemen.

Ms Kazmi and other like-minded journalists and Dr Ahmed and other intellectuals posit that the Western world ubiquitous person sees these images and hear 'Death to Kafir (Infidel)' and the hypocrisy of the Islamic rulers.  These images and message fuel the negative images of Muslims and emboldens rogue and deranged persons to kill innocent Muslims. Moreover, while they condemn these incidents as isolated and barbaric, they point out religious and cultural freedom enshrined in the constitution and protected through the Charter of Rights of Freedom.  Thus, this is not Islamophobia. Instead, it should be deemed Muslimphobia.

Muslimphobia is an exclusive term as it represents crimes and attitudes towards Muslim Canadians.  This phobia should be understood and interpreted through the broadest possible lens and juxtapositioning with other crimes of hate.  Since September 2001, hate and racist crimes and incidents have increased in Canada.  These crimes have been against Chinese Canadians, the Jewish community and the Canadians from South Asia.  In the recent past, after discovering Coronavirus, Chinese Canadians in particular and citizens of the far eastern countries were discriminated against, harassed and were the victim of violent attacks.  Likewise, several groups have attacked Jewish cemeteries, persons and businesses belonging to them.  Canadians of South Asian and Arab origin, since September 9, 2001, have been targeted, insulted, harassed and subjected to inhuman treatment.  Religion(s) can be a reason, but the main reason is the hatred, racism and phobia of every ethnic minority in Canada. 

This discussion can be concluded through the following points:

·         Islamophobia is a misleading term as it does not represent a race.

·         Canadians of South Asian Origin, regardless of religious persuasion, have faced racism and violent crimes.

·         Islamic world (Pakistan in particular) should protect the rights of their minorities and afford them the same protection as it demands from the Western world.

·         Extremists and White Supremacists have divided the Canadian population and society into safe Caucasian (Europeans) Canadians and dangerous Canadians (every other ethnic group).

·         Canadians should confront explicit and implicit racism and hatred through educational programs and scrutiny of organisational policies and practices.

 

A positive step to combat racism and engender goodwill among citizens can be the Government agencies, non-governmental agencies, and religious institutions that can facilitate dialogue and interaction among various ethnic communities to foster relationships.



[1] Deliberately, I am not taking this man’s name because he does not deserve to be remembered by his name.  He should always be remembered as a callous, hateful, racist and cruel person – who killed four innocent people because of their ethnicity.