Dalit Women's Writing-EPW
Dalit Women’s Writing in Telugu
Challapalli Swaroopa Rani
It has taken a long
time for dalit women to overcome their oppression as women, as dalits and put
to creative use the gains of social and literary movements. There are of course
common issues that bind dalit men and women, like untouchability and caste
oppression. But women also suffer from patriarchal oppression. These concerns
are constantly foregrounded in dalit women's poetry in Telugu and is evident in
the form, content and the emotions that they express. However, dalit women's
poetry in Telugu still needs to develop beyond the confines of patriarchy.
The alphabet is now a weapon in
the hands of 'untouchables' - a weapon to attack the oppression perpetrated by
brahminism for centuries, Dalits denied learning and respect, have now crafted
self-respect from their humiliation, strengthening their castes and destroying
'sanatana' values and traditions' People who have been denied a basic humanity
and have been outcasts for centuries, have now stormed into literary avenues'
roaring. Today 'untouchable' voices rule Telugu literature. That is the fierce
wind of dalit poetry.
What is Dalit Poetry?
Before beginning a debate on
which poetry is dalit potery it is necessary first to look for some clarity on
who are dalits. There was recently a wide ranging debate on 'who are dalits'
among literary friends. Some people argued that along with the scheduled castes
and scheduled tribes and backward castes, minorities and women should also be
considered dalits. After some discussion, they came to the conclusion that only
'malas' and 'madigas' who belonged to the SC category should be considered
dalit. In general, there is considerable confusion as to who are dalits.
Notwithstanding the above debates, dalits could be defined as people who have
been subjected to untouchability and denied social, economic, political and
cultural rights. What is dalit poetry? Whose poetry is dalit poetry? These
questions have also generated considerable debate. Writing by dalits that is
based on dalit consciousness will reflect the painful lived experiences of
dalit people. The fact of being born a dalit alone is not enough to write dalit
poetry. Dalit consciousness is a critical factor in dalit writing, The question
of whether non-daiits can write dalit poetry has also come up from time to
time. Writing by upper castes that expresses dalit reality in terms similar to
that by dalit writers can be called sympathetic poetry. There is an unanimous
view that only those who suffer oppression can adequately represent that
oppression.
Historically, the poetry of
Siva Kavulu, bhakti poets, and verses by Vemana laid the foundation for dalit
poetry, Siva Kavulu strongly opposed the 'chaturvarna' theory, although this
was part of their religious rhetoric. Bhakti poets strongly disagreed with the
caste system and inequalities it threw up. They preached that all persons
irrespective of caste could reach god. Vemana through his poetry paved the way
for a trend that condemned caste and superstitions - thus becoming the first
time. revolutionary of modern times. Joshua who was not only born into an
untouchable caste, but also used a dalit as the central figure in poetry for
the first in his poem "Gabbilam" (the Bat) could be called the first
dalit poet, Joshua used his verse to tear apart the serpent-like grip that
caste had on dalits condemning them to a life of humiliation and deprivation.
At the same time, Joshua wrote, there were other dalit poets, Nakka
Chinnavenkayya, Jala Rangakavi, Kusuma Dharmanna, Nutakki Abraham - who
followed the trend set by Joshua and wrote condemning the caste system.
As in colonial times, in the
post-colonial period too, our poets have written nationalist poetry. This was
followed by new trends in progressive poetry in Telugu ranging from Abhyudaya Kavitvam,
Digamhara Kavitvam, revolutionary poetry, feminist poetry to dalit poetry, Joshua
wrote the poem 'Gabbilam' during the freedom struggle. After Joshua's time a
number of movements grew to strengthen dalit poetry. The sharpening of focus
and perspective in dalit writing which increasingly came to be seen as a tool
to dismantle brahminical traditions is a result of a multi-dimensional history.
Alongside the inspiration given by the various Ambedkarite anti-caste
movements, incidents of upper caste violence against dalits like those at
Karamchedu, Chunduru, and Padirikuppam led to the direct use of dalit poetry as
a weapon against oppression. While dalit poetry in Andhra has its roots in the
dalit movements in the state, it has also drawn inspiration from the Dalit
Panther Movement in Maharashtra, spreading out in the process. To date there
are about 30 dalit poetry anthologies in Telugu (among them Chikkanavutunne Pata,
Nisani, Bahuvachanam, Valivada, Padunekkina Pata. Gunde Dappu,etc, are important).
The dalit literary movement in
Telugu is not merely confined to literary activity. It has exposed the
humiliating realities that dalits confront every day in different arenas. In
the recent case of the death sentence on Chalapathi and Vijayavardhan Rao, dalit poets clearly identified
the caste character of the legal machinery and the state, The dalit literary
movement played a significant rote in obtaining a stay on the execution of
Chalapathi and Vijayavardhan Rao. The writings on this case by various dalit
intellectuals, journalists, and poets have been published in a volume
titled Chalapathi Vijayavardhanam published by Ekalavya Publications.
Although these are only initial steps, the involvement of dalit women poets in
the Chalapathi Vijayavardhan case needs to be taken note of. While dalit poets
have been writing on all aspects of the caste system, it is only as dalit women
began to write, that the genre of dalit poetry became complete. The first two
poems by dalit woman were published in an anthology brought out by Central University students called Gunde Dappu. After that poetry anthologies like Padunekkina
Pata, Chalapathi Vijayavardhanam, Meme, carried poems by dalit
women. Prior to that, poetry from the dalit woman's perspective was very rare.
Madduri Nagesh Babu's 'Devuni Pellam', Satish Chander's 'Arachethi Randralu',
Vemula Yellayya's 'Etti Thalli', Durga Prasad's 'Devadasi' and Yendluri
Sudhakar's 'Aido Vachakam' - are some significant poems. These poets wrote
about and condemned the physical, and mental torture and atrocities that their
women were subjected to in different walks of life. Upper caste women poets
have written very little about dalit women. However, two poems in the
collection Neeli Meghalu, one by Varalakshmi 'Ame' and another by Volga 'Akale Migilii' (Only Hunger Remains) speak of the
appropriation of labor and about working class women. However, the poems do
not at any point address caste or the caste-specific experiences of those
women.
The poetry by dalit women
written from the dalit women's perspective and based on their experiences as
dalit women is far more powerful and has a far greater impact than the poetry
of dalit male poets or upper caste women poets. Dalit women's issues have less
in common with dalit men1 s issues than with those of the upper
caste women. If there is any soul in this country who subjected to all kinds of
oppression and exploitation, it is the dalit woman. On one side she is
oppressed by the caste system, on the other side she is subjected to gender
oppression and class exploitation. She is a dalit among dalits. It is
from this angle that we need to understand dalit feminist poetry and
its specificity.
As in all kinds of history, in
literary history too, the story of dalit and women's writing has
languished in the dark depths of casteism. Although literacy levels are
very low among dalits, every dalit 'wada' is an abode of literature,
because art and literature are born of the labouring class. The reality
of dalit lives, the splendor of their life's work, their troubles,
their tears, all take the form of stories, or songs or poetry. This is a
truth that cannot be hidden. However, a large part of the written and
oral literature written and sung by dalits for centuries has been
stamped out by time.
Molla, who wrote the Ramayanam in Telugu in the
13th century could be called the first dalit woman poet. She belonged
to the potter's caste Kummari. In her time, men opposed women writing
poetry or entering the royal courts. Under those social conditions,
Molla earned a place for herself in history, not just as a low caste woman
who opposed patriarchy, but as one who earned fame through her
poetry, Molla's Ramayanam is considered the first condensed Ramayanam in Telugu. Although Molla
was a dalit poet, her poetry does not address the issue of caste in
any significant way. Similarly, it cannot be argued that she wrote from
a feminist perspective as we understand it today. However, the women
characters in her poetry are shown to have dignity and courage.
In the modern age, a woman poet
who has written verse in the ancient tradition is Kolakaluri Swaroopa
Rani, She has been conferred the title of 'Kaviyitri Tilaka'. Gangavataram,
Sivatandavam, Chandragrahunam, Probodham are some of her important writings.
In ' Chandragrahnam', Swaroopa Rani has used the moon to symbolyse
the Indian woman, Rahu the husband and Aryabhatta the modernist.
The moon asks Aryabhatta to shield her from the eclipse of male
chauvinism: In the poem 'Deepanni', she writes satirically on
the suffering that oppressed castes have been subjected to discrimination for
generations.
An examination of dalit
feminist poetry unravels for us a concern with caste oppression,
gender oppression and class exploitation. Contemporary dalit
feminist poetry is written by Challapalli Swaroopa Rani, Madduri
Vijayasri, Darisi Sasinirmala, G. Vijayalakshmi, Rani, Karri
Vijayakumari, Seeta Mahalakshmi, Nakka Vijaya Bharathi and M, Gauri,
There is some similarity between the writings of these poets and
the women poets in Maharashtra who have been part of the Dalit
Panthers Movement like Hira Banisode, Jyoti Lanjewar and Kumud Pawde,
as well as the writings of Black women.
The dalit woman faces three
kinds of oppression in her everyday life, Writing about the twin
evils of casteism and male chauvinism that condemn her life, a
dalit woman poet writes:
When has my life been truly
mine
In the home male arrogance
sets my check stinging
while in the street caste arrogance
splits the other cheek open
In the home male arrogance
sets my check stinging
while in the street caste arrogance
splits the other cheek open
(Challapalli Swaroopa
Rani, 'Mankenapuvvu')
In the poem 'Dalituralu', the
poet speaks about the manner in which every one from the upper caste
person to her own husband, dominate her in one way or another,
denying her of any individuality.
I am dragged
here and there
under someone's buttocks
a seating plank
some one or other
drags me along
by a nose rope
to make me dance
here and there
under someone's buttocks
a seating plank
some one or other
drags me along
by a nose rope
to make me dance
(Darisi Sasi Nirmala,
'Dalituralu')
Dented an education for
centuries dalit women struggle to gain an education and get jobs,
only to find themselves obstructed by caste at every step; in hostels, in
schools, in offices. The upper caste 'manuvadi' culture subjects them
to physical and mental torture and does not allow them to take any
cultural initiative.
Chasing the far away distant
hope
of an education
Reaching the shore of the hostel
Shrinking from the hungry look of
the warden
I long to gather my body into
a fist and fling it into the distance
of an education
Reaching the shore of the hostel
Shrinking from the hungry look of
the warden
I long to gather my body into
a fist and fling it into the distance
(Challapalli Swaroopa
Rani, 'Mankenapuvvu')
The poet here, in an effort to
protect herself from insult, seeks 'deharahityam'.
Atrocities and rapes are not
new to dalit women. From Soonpanaka of the Ramayanam to Sajjalagudem
Mahadevamma, there has been a tradition of insult imposed on
dalit women,
Only the other day I lost my
ears and nose
to Sri Rama's will
It was yesterday that my
grief was described as baseless
Today I spin suspended
a centuries old
doubt and a crisis
between 'punnama naraka' and 'pativratyam'
to Sri Rama's will
It was yesterday that my
grief was described as baseless
Today I spin suspended
a centuries old
doubt and a crisis
between 'punnama naraka' and 'pativratyam'
(Vijayasri, 'Alisamma
Shapam)
In some areas, girls born into
dalit castes are dedicated to the gods as devadasis, busavis, jogins.
This uncivilised tradition that condemns women to a lifetime
of prostitution is still prevalent in this country. It is unknown
anywhere else in the world. We are all familiar with the agony
of Sajjalagudem Mahadevamma, a basavi. Dalit poets are now asking
which chapters in this country's history will contain the
histories of these women.
My fame is that I
was recognised as a whore
even as a new born babe
my story that should bring
the head of this civilisation
low into the depths of hell
In which chapter of the volumes
of famous history of your country
do you intend to write it?
was recognised as a whore
even as a new born babe
my story that should bring
the head of this civilisation
low into the depths of hell
In which chapter of the volumes
of famous history of your country
do you intend to write it?
(Challapalli Swaroopa
Rani, 'Nishidda
Charitha')
Charitha')
In the same way, caste dogs her
steps even if she is a working woman. When dalits hear the accusation
that they have got jobs only through reservation, not through merit as
is the case with the upper castes, and when there is a constant
whisper about their caste background, they are driven to the point
of pouring oil into their own ears, in the way that the upper castes
used to do to them earlier as punishment for listening to
the chanting of the Vedas, This is the case with dalit men as well.
In the name of love and
marriage countless Sunitas are getting sacrificed to upper caste men.
Good enough to fulfil lust
but not good enough for a family
I feel like hiding my face in a stream
but not good enough for a family
I feel like hiding my face in a stream
(Challapalli Swaroopa
Rani, 'Mankena
Puvvu')
Puvvu')
Suicide becomes her protest
-
For generations I have
borne this leprous caste ridden male world
in the basket of tender affection
on my head.
This merciless time
forces me to bear the
cross of humiliation
in my virgin womb.
borne this leprous caste ridden male world
in the basket of tender affection
on my head.
This merciless time
forces me to bear the
cross of humiliation
in my virgin womb.
(Challapalli Swaroopa
Rani, 'Prema Vaida')
She does not want to waste her
love on this male world that does not understand that even a dalit
woman has a heart, a dreams of love. She instead postpones her love
to a more broadminded time.
Hindu Puranas speak of Krishna as
a romantic soul, the only lover to 16,000 'gopikas', Flinging this
Hindu thinking back, a poet writes:
You who so skilfully
stole the gopikas garments
can you steal this heart
so carefully hidden
behind deerskins?
stole the gopikas garments
can you steal this heart
so carefully hidden
behind deerskins?
(M Gowri, Pandina
Chetulu')
We see very often dalit men
marrying upper caste women. However, instances of upper caste men
marrying dalit women are rare. In cases where they do marry,
the husband's ill-treatment of his wife who is 'culturally backward',
is illustrated in the poem 'Panchayati',
So now you know I am a 'Madiga' maid
because I cannot sing Rama
kirtanas?
.....
it seems a buffalo is better than me
he swears at my-low caste in Sanskrit
.....
it seems a buffalo is better than me
he swears at my-low caste in Sanskrit
(Vijayasri,
'Panchayati')
A large number of nurses who
work in hospitals are dalit women. From the doctor to the patient, everyone
treats her like a low caste woman, refusing to recognise the service she
renders. There is a poem that speaks of this.
What heed to talk of
low caste nurses?
Eyes lit with love
day and night they
dress ulcerous wounds.
Instead of Florence Nightingale awards
they crawl over her
nursing heart
like cancerous cells.
low caste nurses?
Eyes lit with love
day and night they
dress ulcerous wounds.
Instead of Florence Nightingale awards
they crawl over her
nursing heart
like cancerous cells.
(Swaroopa Rani)
Employers refuse to treat women
working in the fields and the home as human beings, addressing them with
disrespect and humiliating them. Beautiful names cannot be part of her
language. The dalit woman who calls people 'Ammagaru', 'Ayyagaru'. has only one
name 'Ose'.
Dalit women poets have
confronted atrocities and rapes of dalit working class women in fields and
homes. They recognise the fact that these women are subjected to such inhuman
behaviour only because they are dalit women. The upper caste capitalist class
wants to appropriate not just a dalit woman's love but her sexuality as well.
As this poem says;
When Koti Reddy pulled your
sari in the corn field
the humiliation
when your husband seeking your
torn sari said you were
overfed
the shrinking of your heart
sari in the corn field
the humiliation
when your husband seeking your
torn sari said you were
overfed
the shrinking of your heart
(Vijay Kumari, 'Gavini
Daati Ra')
Domestic workers face all kinds
of violence and deceit at the hands of their employers.
From the moment I opened
my eyes
I cried for 'dora' and 'dorasani'
not mother or father.
Caste is my colour
dire poverty my garment
When he said come
to my bed and
get a new skirt for the festival
I believed him.
my eyes
I cried for 'dora' and 'dorasani'
not mother or father.
Caste is my colour
dire poverty my garment
When he said come
to my bed and
get a new skirt for the festival
I believed him.
(Vijayalakshmi, 'Pani
Pilla')
This poem speaks of the ways in
which employers offer small attractions to young unsuspecting girls and then
rape them.
Dalit women have confronted
both oppression by upper caste men, as well as the deep seated male arrogance
within their own castes. The dalit man, while he suffers from caste oppression,
is not willing to let go of the dominance that this system has given him
for being a man, Dalit women have spoken about how dalit men are subordinated
to the upper castes and in turn subordinate their women. The following lines
speak of the ways in which the man satisfies his ego by laying with women's
lives;
Why blame any other?
my dalit himself
ties me across as a
clothesline.
my dalit himself
ties me across as a
clothesline.
(Sasi Nirmala,
'Dalituralu')
Men, while abusing one another,
use obscene words about each other's women: Alisamma, curses them:
You animals
Do not shame
your mothers
for having borne you.
At least now
pluck out your tails and fangs
cast them out
and turn into human beings.
That is my curse.
Do not shame
your mothers
for having borne you.
At least now
pluck out your tails and fangs
cast them out
and turn into human beings.
That is my curse.
(Vijayasri, 'Alisamma
Shapam')
Although the land in this
country bears grain after being watered by the sweat of dalils, for dalits it
is a daily struggle to get enough foodgrains to eat.
Mother, without your touch
there is neither air not light
on this earth
Unless your hands delve into the
slush to catch jewel bright fish
the country's hunger
will remain unfed.
there is neither air not light
on this earth
Unless your hands delve into the
slush to catch jewel bright fish
the country's hunger
will remain unfed.
(Swaroopa Rani)
This poem describes the
indispensability of the dalit woman's labour. The poem' Vegu Chukka' says that
although the dal it woman' s touch is necessary for a house to become clean,
she herself is always unclean, untouchable.
Although each corner
of the house sparkles
from her touch
To her fellow humans
she is untouchable
of the house sparkles
from her touch
To her fellow humans
she is untouchable
(Challapalli Swaroopa
Rani, 'Vegu Chukka')
Generally speaking, poetry
invests life in inanimate objects. Dalit poets, by divesting woman, a live
being, of life, foreground the irony that is central to a dalit woman's life.
The media and the government
have a caste character in India. All forms of media are put to the service of
the upper castes. The daily violence on dalit women and murders of these women
are never allowed to enter the media. Not just that, murders are often covered
up by using 'suicide' or 'natural causes' to describe the deaths. And caste
plays a key role in this cover-up. These apsects too have been reflected on in
dalit women's poetry.
I know
This corpse is mine
that lies soaking in the rain
felled by the blow of caste lust.
While not even be smelt
by the news
The police lathi and the courts eye
have no business with my
stripped naked skin
This corpse is mine
that lies soaking in the rain
felled by the blow of caste lust.
While not even be smelt
by the news
The police lathi and the courts eye
have no business with my
stripped naked skin
(Sasi Nirmala,
'Muttugudda Kapputunna')
Similarly, the visibility that movements led
by upper caste women enjoy, is not available to dalit women's struggles.
You peacocks of high caste
preening your plumes
in the Narmada Valley
your call echoes and rouses
each corner of the world
but my sister's struggle
to dam the swollen streams of arrack
choking them
their hoarse voices
will lie buried in
Telugu earth
preening your plumes
in the Narmada Valley
your call echoes and rouses
each corner of the world
but my sister's struggle
to dam the swollen streams of arrack
choking them
their hoarse voices
will lie buried in
Telugu earth
(Sasi Nirmala,
'Muttugudda Kapputunna')
Any oppression will continue as
long as there are people who bear it silently. The moment tolerance dies, even
a blade of grass becomes a thorn that pricks. The dalit woman today is
preoccupied with cutting open the ulcer of caste and dressing the wound.
There is a slight difference
between the situation of dalit women and other women. Women in general suffer
from gender oppression. Dalit women, in contrast, suffer more from caste
oppression. Till today, both the feminist movement and feminist literature have
represented the issues of upper caste women. Feminists have struggled for
economic and sexual freedom for women. Dalit women poets feel strongly that
dalit women's issues have not been adequately represented in the mainstream,
Condemned for centuries to a life of bondage, basic needs and questions of
survival are still central issues for dalit women.
Mother!
From the Soorpanaka of yore
through Chilakurti Muthemma
to Sajjalagudem Mahadevamma
of your lineage of humiliation
swept along a torrent of tears
of your existence
of your being a "nityasumangali'
from birth you are encountering
hunger through the years
has one even one of them
ever spoken
From the Soorpanaka of yore
through Chilakurti Muthemma
to Sajjalagudem Mahadevamma
of your lineage of humiliation
swept along a torrent of tears
of your existence
of your being a "nityasumangali'
from birth you are encountering
hunger through the years
has one even one of them
ever spoken
(Challapalli Swaroopa
Rani, 'Mayamma')
Further dalit women have
questioned and rejected caste in terms in which upper caste women are even
today unable to do. Even women who suffer patriarchy humiliate dalit women,
because they belong to low caste.
Why speak of the other?
Another woman wants to buy me
She wants me as the gold lace
to her upper caste new sari.
She wants me as the crimson
on her lips.
Another woman wants to buy me
She wants me as the gold lace
to her upper caste new sari.
She wants me as the crimson
on her lips.
(Sasi Nirmala, 'Dalituralu')
The unwillingness of upper
caste women to express solidarity with dalit women who have been
humiliated or tortured by upper caste men.
Do you remember
your words when
your husband plucked me
like a chicken?
Do you know how often
I was cheapened
at your hands
in your house
your words when
your husband plucked me
like a chicken?
Do you know how often
I was cheapened
at your hands
in your house
(Sasi Nirmala,
'Dalituralu')
The same Manudharma that gave
upper caste the authority to dominate over lower castes, also gave men the
right to oppress women. There are instances when dalit men, in the course of
their condemnation of caste have also humiliated upper caste women. This is
proof of the fact that male chauvinism is common to men, irrespective of caste.
Similarly when people from different cultural backgrounds marry each other,
adjustments and understanding especially with regard to each other's cultural
practices is necessary. In this effort, the need for one person's customs to be
ridiculed' by the other does not arise, Between wife and husband there must be
the openness and freedom for each to follow their own customs and lifestyle.
Nagesh Babu'spoem 'Vidi Akasam', which looks at woman-man relations across
caste camp up for intense debate,
However, women and dalits have
been sacrificed at the altar of Manudharma. The contradiction between the two
is a non-antagonistic contradiction not an antagonistic one. Women and dalits
need to collectively struggle against a common enemy - a struggle that would
replace Manudharma with Manava dharma.
While dalit feminist poetry in
other languages had developed faster and earlier in time, there are reasons for
the slow development of dalit feminist writing in Telugu.H has taken this long
for dalit women to surmount their oppression and put to creative use the gains
of social and literary movements. Watching their men participate in struggles
and write about their oppression dalit women have also learnt to give voice to
their troubles. There are of course common issues that bind dalit men and women
together, like untouchability and caste oppression. This does not detract from
the patriarchal oppression of dalit women. These twin concerns are constantly
foregrounded in dalit women's poetry, as is evident from the form, content and
emotion in the latter which is markedly different from the poetry of dalit men.
Dalit feminist poetry still needs to spread out in many directions. So far the
articulation of caste has been much stronger and more powerful than the
articulation of patriarchy. Finally, dalit women's writing has yet to move from
poetry to short stories and novels.
[All translations of
poems into English are by Vasanth Kannabiran]
[Courtesy: Economic and Political Weekly, April 25, 1998]
*My sincere thanks to Vasanth Kannabiran for translations, Kalpana Kannabiran and Meera Velayudhan for providing an opportunity to present this paper in IAWS conference at Maharaja Sayajirao University Baroda during 1997
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