B R Ambedkar On Caste and Land Relations in India
B R Ambedkar On Caste and Land Relations in India
B R Ambedkar On Caste and Land Relations in India
Abstract: Ambedkar identified the land monopoly of caste Hindus in village society
as the material basis of the caste system. The land question for Dalits is concerned
with human dignity, with freedom from bondage and caste-based exploitation in
village society. Ambedkar was critical of mainstream land reforms discourse for
its disregard of the interests of the mass of landless Dalits, and its focus on the
creation of peasant proprietors, which, he argued, was counterproductive for the
agricultural development of India. Ambedkar advocated the annihilation of caste,
the liberation of peasants and workers through modernisation of the economy,
and the distribution of cultivable land to Dalits. Ambedkar’s was a modern
approach to the agrarian problem in that it called for a complete break with
existing and archaic institutional structures.
Ambedkar further asserted that the caste system was not only a division of labourers
but also a graded hierarchy of labourers ascribed even before birth. The caste system
operated through culture and religion in a largely agrarian and backward society,
working to disenfranchise the lower castes and classes. In this way, the caste system
prevented a free intermingling of social groups and classes (ibid.). This graded
hierarchy involved complete separateness of the concerns of different caste groups
and, in a larger sense, the separation of the poor and the oppressed from the ruling
classes and dominant castes.
In his Thoughts on Linguistic States (1955), Ambedkar defines the caste system as
displaying the following essential features:
(1) Castes are so distributed that in any given area there is one caste which is major and
there are others which are small and are subservient to the major caste owing to their
comparative smallness and their economic dependence upon the major caste which
owns most of the land in the village. (2) The caste system is marked not merely by
inequality but is affected by the system of graded inequality. All castes are not on a
par. They are one above the other. There is a kind of ascending scale of hatred and a
descending scale of contempt. (3) A caste has all the exclusiveness and pride which
a nation has. It is therefore not improper to speak of [the] collection of castes as a
collection of major and minor nations. (BAWS, Vol. 1, p. 167)
Three points emerge. First, the caste system is characterised by the existence, in every
region, of a major caste that is the dominant landholder and on which the people of
other castes are dependent. Secondly, the caste system embodies different kinds of
inequalities, going beyond the economic and extending to different forms of cultural
and social inequality. Thirdly, castes within the caste system possess an exclusive
and inward-looking quality that makes them resemble autonomous units, almost
like nations. The first point here, which relates to a dominant caste and aspects of
land monopoly, forms a recurrent theme in Ambedkar’s writings.
Secondly, land ownership was understood as an aspect of dignity. We take the case of
the demand for abolition of Maharwatan, a customary and hereditary land title
awarded by medieval regimes to Mahars in return for their services as village
servants. On August 3 and 4, 1928, Ambedkar presented a proposal in the Bombay
Legislative Assembly to amend the Bombay Hereditary Offices Act, 1874 (BAWS,
Vol. 2, p. 79). Ambedkar highlighted the problems of the holders of Maharwatan,
who could be called for service any time of the day and whose entire families were
treated as village servants by others in the village and by the Government. The
Mahars were compensated in kind by the village society at the time of the harvest.
Other hereditary village posts such as the Patils, Kulkarnis, and Mamlatdars were to
be kept in good humour; any attempt by a Mahar to advance himself or his family,
however, met with opposition from other castes and ultimately by a time-tested
strategy of social boycott. Thus, even in this case where Scheduled Castes had
operational control over land, they were unable to free themselves of dependence on
the village (BAWS, Vol. 2, p. 79). Thus, Maharwatan was understood by Ambedkar
as a “major aspect of Dalit exploitation” since it provided “false security” and
effectively forced Dalits to remain integrated in Hindu village society (Omvedt 1994,
p. 157).
Ambedkar recognised that in a largely agrarian society, the main source of earning
was land, a resource that was not open to purchase by the Dalits. However, as has
been pointed out earlier, the obstacles to Dalits owning land were beyond economic
in nature. In Untouchables or the Children of India’s Ghetto, published
posthumously, Ambedkar commented on the obstacles in the way of landownership
for Mahars:
In an agricultural country, agriculture can be the main source of living. But this source of
earning a living is generally not open to the Untouchables. This is so for a variety of
reasons. In the first place purchase of land is beyond their means. Secondly, even if an
Untouchable has the money to purchase land he has no opportunity to do so. In most
parts, the Hindus would resent an Untouchable coming forward to purchase land and
thereby trying to become the equal of the Touchable class of Hindus. Such an act of
daring on the part of an Untouchable would not only be frowned upon but might
easily invite punishment. In some parts, they are disabled by law from purchasing
land. For instance, in the Province of Punjab there is a law called the Land Alienation
Act. This law specifies the communities which can purchase land and the
Untouchables are excluded from the list. The result is that in most part the
Untouchables are forced to be landless labourers. (BAWS, Vol. 5, p.23)
In his essay Which is Worse? Slavery or Untouchability? (1944), Ambedkar wrote that
even slavery might have had some advantages over untouchability, since the slave was
4
Ramachandran (1990), p. 7, citing Menon (1983).
Ambedkar believed that the overall agrarian power structure was against the welfare of
Dalits and would continue to be so if not understood and countered effectively. More
specifically, caste Hindus would never allow land to be held by Dalits lest Dalits, as a
class, became economically independent.
Secondly, Ambedkar pointed out that in almost all cases of violence against
Dalits, the police were hand in glove with the Hindus. He discussed the bleak
educational and public service records and prospects of the Scheduled Castes
caused by the discriminatory attitude of the government. He went on to say that,
along with education and services, the economic emancipation of the Scheduled
Castes was the most important means to improve their social status. And to
improve the conditions of the Scheduled Castes, the government must provide
them land. He said:
Unless and until doors are open to them where they can find gainful occupation,
their economic emancipation is not going to take place. They are going to remain
slaves, if not slaves, serfs of the land-owning classes in the villages. There can be no
doubt on that point at all. Now, Sir, out of these gainful occupations I personally feel
no doubt that the most important thing on which Government ought to concentrate is
the giving of land to the Scheduled Castes. They must be settled on land so that
they might obtain independent means of livelihood, cease to be afraid of anybody,
walk with their heads erect and live fearlessly and courageously. (BAWS, Vol. 15,
p. 913)
In his response to the report, Ambedkar also outlined the nature of land holding in
India. He asserted that land was not simply a matter of economics but also of social
status and hence, “a person holding land has a higher status than a person not
holding land” (BAWS, Vol. 15, p. 913). Land ownership in the agrarian system in
India was as much about dignity as it was about social and economic freedom.
During the debate on the annual budget, in the Bombay Legislative Council debates
on February 24, 1927, Ambedkar contrasted the levy of land revenue on every
farmer, big, small, rich, or poor, with the principles of income tax. He argued that
an individual who had earned no income was not asked to pay income tax;
however, the same principle was not applied to land revenue (BAWS, Vol. 2, p. 3).
Land revenue and the way it was administered in different parts of the country in the
colonial period exemplified the iniquitous nature of taxation systems in India. In
some cases, such as zamindari, land revenue was fixed permanently, while in others
it was revised periodically. Ambedkar also underlined a more fundamental source
of inequity, that is, that land revenue was fixed on a unit of land irrespective of how
much income it generated to the holder in a given year (BAWS, Vol. 6, pp. 230–1).
Land revenue administration
. . . taxes the poor peasant with only one acre to cultivate and the landlord owing hundreds
of acres at a uniform rate without realising that as the total incomes of the two must be
vastly different this uniformity of taxation must produce a glaring inequity of treatment
as between the rich and the poor. (BAWS, Vol. 6, p. 231, emphasis in original)
In a speech during the third session of the Kolaba District Peasants’ Conference on
December 16, 1934, Ambedkar began by pointing out that the term shetkari (farmer)
was a misnomer, since it included everyone from the landlord to the landless
agricultural labourer. He also highlighted the injustice meted out to tenants-at-will
by the Khoti landlords (BAWS, Vol. 17, Part 3, pp. 91–3). Ambedkar returned to this
theme of differentiation within the peasantry during the debates of the Constituent
Assembly. On September 3, 1949, in a response to queries about the welfare of
farmers, Ambedkar emphasised that the term “agriculturalist” had no meaning since
it included big landlords as well as small cultivators (BAWS, Vol. 13, p. 933).
Ambedkar believed that post-Independence discourse on land reforms had nothing for
the people of the Scheduled Castes (BAWS, Vol. 1, p. 408). In his response to The Report
of Commissioner for Scheduled Castes and Tribes for 1953, presented on September 6,
1954, Ambedkar discussed ways in which land could be given to the Scheduled Castes.
The first issue related to the availability of cultivable land in the country. Here he took
the case of Uttar Pradesh, where the average size of landholdings was small, and every
inch of cultivable land was occupied. The government had the power to take away
land from those who owned it and give it to the Scheduled Castes, but to give Dalits
land in circumstances where land itself was scarce was to deceive them. An
alternative way was government-financed purchase of land by the Scheduled
Castes. Now, since the land legislation as passed by the Indian government
recognised the peasant as the proprietor of the land, it was difficult to ensure a
ceiling limit on landholdings or give land to the Scheduled Castes. Since land also
signified social power, no Hindu would allow a Scheduled Caste person to get hold
of land through purchase. In an extraordinary speech, Ambedkar warned of “most
evil” consequences if the government did not solve the land problem:
The fire is burning outside; it may easily come in and the Scheduled Castes may carry
the banner and you and your Constitution will go under. Nothing will remain.
(BAWS, Vol. 15, p. 914)
Despite his sympathy for the peasantry, Ambedkar did not agree with the mainstream
view on land reforms. Indeed, he stood against the entire idea of creating peasant
proprietorship in agriculture. Further, he was deeply concerned with the interests of
the landless, mostly Dalits, who were often left out in the discussions around land
reform.
During the debate on the Constitution (First Amendment) Bill that took place on May
10, 1951, Ambedkar strongly defended the insertion of Articles 31A and 31B, and the
Ninth Schedule in the Constitution. These amendments protected the right of the
state to implement land reforms and also make special provisions for the social and
educational advancement of the backward classes. In the course of his speech, he
elaborated upon his views on land reform policies as formulated in India at the
time. He argued that since a majority of Indian farmers did not have the necessary
resources, such as capital, livestock, seeds, and irrigation, it was a bad idea to “create
peasant proprietors in this country” (BAWS, Vol. 15, pp. 354–5). He expressed his
deep suspicion about the future of the agricultural and food economies in the
country. Additionally, he argued that the current land reform laws only focused on
the abolition of intermediaries, which, although a noble goal in itself, did not
address the problems of about fifty million landless workers.
Annihilation of Caste
In a chapter titled “A Plea to the Foreigner: Let Not Tyranny Have Freedom to Enslave”
from What Congress and Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables (1945), Ambedkar
argued against the prevalent understanding of concepts such as nation, society, and
country. Ambedkar distinguished between the “constitutional form of government”
and “self-government.” A government based on adult suffrage, in Ambedkar’s
opinion, did not necessarily ensure what Ambedkar called “self-government”
(BAWS, Vol. 9, pp. 202–3). This is because, sociologically, a nation is constituted by,
broadly speaking, two classes – the “governing class” and “servile classes.” In India,
Ambedkar identified the governing class to be led by Brahmins in alliance with the
Banias. The governing class in a society is able to capture power despite universal
suffrage because of its historical and ideological dominance over the servile classes.
Ambedkar argued that the governing classes in India were concerned only with
their own selfish interests and that they held the servile classes in deep contempt.
Ambedkar believed that, after the withdrawal of the British, the governing classes
would not even work towards basic “social amelioration,” leave alone the
destruction of Brahmanism, the thought system on which their power was based
(BAWS, Vol. 9, p. 212).
Ambedkar’s life-long struggle was against the governing classes, thus conceptualised,
who, he believed, would use the freedom movement and self-rule to establish their own
regime. The oppressed classes and castes were kept unfree through confinement in
conditions of bondage and indignity, and alienation from education, representation
in bureaucracy, and social interaction.
A recurrent theme in later writings is the relationship between social reform and
political self-government in India. In the article titled Ranade, Gandhi and Jinnah
(1943), Ambedkar said that he regarded “. . . social Reform [as] more fundamental
Ambedkar’s view was that political self-government had little meaning without social
reform (BAWS, Vol. 1, p. 42) and social reform meant the abolition of the caste system.
This cynicism towards village society stemmed from his modern beliefs. As pointed
out earlier, Ambedkar laid out his characterisation of Indian agriculture and its
problems in one of his early papers, namely, Small Holdings in India and their
Remedies (1918). In the same paper, his solution was quite straightforward: “strange
though it may seem, industrialisation of India is the soundest remedy for the
agricultural problems of India” (BAWS, Vol. 1, p. 477). Later, in a debate on the
budget in the Bombay Legislative Assembly on February 21, 1939, Ambedkar argued
that agriculture could never be relied upon to enhance the standard of life of the
people in India and anyone who was insistent upon destroying whatever little
industry or urbanisation there existed was indeed an enemy of the people (BAWS,
Vol. 3, p. 33). He, in fact, emphasised the need for urbanisation in these words:
I say this with full deliberation — that the salvation of this province and, if I may say so,
the salvation of the whole of India lies in greater urbanisation: in reviving our towns, in
In a situation where the large mass of the population was completely dependent on
smallholdings and a few controlled a mammoth share of total cultivable land,
Ambedkar suggested industrialisation as a way to reduce the social and cultural
premium on land.
Ambedkar’s resolution of the land problem in India, as mentioned, had three further
components. At the most ambitious, programmatic level, he proposed the
nationalisation of land and collectivisation of agriculture, which was to be a state-
run industry. Secondly, he proposed separate settlements for Dalits that would give
independence to them from Hindu village society. Thirdly, he demanded that
government wasteland, forest, and pasture be distributed to landless Dalits.
5
With the arrival of the British, a new process of educating the natives began that did not discriminate between
castes. Colonial modernity appeared as an opportunity for the oppressed social groups within Indian society such
as peasants, tribes and Dalits. The outlook and reactions towards colonial modernity during the nineteenth century
can be divided under two broad categories: elite and subaltern. The elite espoused the ideology of national
revolution whereas the oppressed social groups stood behind the project of social revolution (Omvedt 1971). It
is to be noted here that Jotiba Phule was also the first advocate of mass education in India. In his
representation to the Hunter Commission (1882) on education dated October 19, 1882, he demanded that
primary education be made compulsory for all.
6
See his Annihilation of Caste in BAWS, Vol. 1, pp. 23–98.
In this scheme, the state was made responsible for the supply of the requirements of
the collective farm. In a striking statement on the reorganisation of agriculture,
Ambedkar said:
I am of (the) opinion that peasant proprietorship in this country is going to bring
about complete ruination of the country. What we want is – although I am not a
Communist – the Russian system of collective farming. That is the only way by which
we can solve our agricultural problem. (BAWS, Vol. 15, p. 960)
In an interview with the novelist and writer Mulk Raj Anand in May 1950, Ambedkar
argued that the abolition of private property was possible if the “outcastes” (in which he
included Dalits, Adivasis, and Muslims), who far outnumbered the caste Hindus,
fought along with socialists against it. When asked about whether “state capitalism”
would harm liberty, he pointed out that liberty in contemporary society was mostly
the liberty of the landlord to increase rents and the capitalist to not pay wages. He
went on to call capitalism the “dictatorship of the private employer” (BAWS, Vol.
17, part 1, p. 381).
In a news report published in theTimes of India on April 23, 1946, Ambedkar is reported
to have made a public statement demanding separate villages for the Scheduled Castes.
He argued that, in the prevailing village system, the members of the Scheduled Castes
were treated as slaves because of the economic dependence on the village. He went on
to make an important point in support of the separate settlements, saying that since the
village is a social unit and not an economic one, such separate villages for Scheduled
Castes would surely survive. The produce from the separate villages would be
bought by everyone, which was not the case in the prevailing system where the
main Hindu village was the only buyer of the products of the Scheduled Castes and
a social and economic boycott by the caste Hindus could cause starvation for the
people of the Scheduled Castes (ibid., Part 1, p. 351). In a meeting of the All India
Working Committee of the Scheduled Castes Federation (SCF) held on August 21,
1955, a resolution was passed urging the Planning Commission to “reserve all
The document titled States and Minorities was submitted by the Scheduled Caste
Federation to the Sub-Committee on Fundamental Rights of the Constituent
Assembly. The document reflected the demand, made by Ambedkar and the SCF,
for agrarian reforms that focused on problems of the Scheduled Castes. The
document had a number of important suggestions, for instance, separate electorates
for the Scheduled Castes and establishment of a Settlement Commissioner to create
separate settlements for Scheduled Castes. Ambedkar argued that all government
land and other reclaimed land be given to the Settlement Commissioner for this
purpose. However, the SCF fared very badly in the elections held in 1945–46 and its
performance adversely affected its bargaining power (Zelliot 2013; Bandyopadhyay
2000). Perhaps for this reason, the Constituent Assembly accepted a few demands
regarding affirmative action, but not the demands regarding land distribution,
separate electorates, and separate settlements for Dalits.
The case in point was the Punjab Land Alienation Act, 1900, which prevented people of
the Scheduled Castes from buying land because they were not classified as an
“agriculturalist” caste. In Punjab, he said, there were other customary laws such as
shamilat, which allowed only hereditary landholding castes or zamindars to use
land held in common by the village. The working kaminas could not get a share of
the common land, nor could they build pucca houses on land on which they lived
lest some zamindar throw them out. During the discussions on the Constitution
(Fourth Amendment) Bill, 1954, on March 19, 1955, Ambedkar revealed the deep
The redistribution of cultivable wasteland, government land, forest land, and pasture
for Dalits, in this scheme, would achieve two inter-related outcomes: the landholding
would provide a source of livelihood and reasonable income to the Dalits in village
society, and the ownership of land would eventually lead to the economic
independence of Dalits from village society. Ambedkar also hoped that the vast
extent of such wasteland could be used to start separate settlements for people of the
Scheduled Castes.
The demand for public or common land to be distributed to Dalits was also related to
Ambedkar’s project of nation-building, which was distinct from that of the Congress
Party. The Dalits, according to Ambedkar, were, along with Hindus and Muslims,
party to the construction of the Indian nation. The real needs of nation-building and
modern constitutional morality demanded that minorities be given rights and
constitutional guarantees. In Ambedkar’s writings, therefore, the demand for the
distribution of government wasteland, pasture (gairan) or forest land to Dalits was
transformed from being a demand for medieval “grants” or a demand to “uplift”
Dalit society; the demand derived from the altogether modern vocabulary of
constitutional and political rights (Omvedt 1994, p. 132).7
7
Grazing land in Marathi. Gairan movement in the Marathwada region was initiated by Ambedkar himself in
1953.
According to Zelliot (2013), two demands made by Ambedkar between 1942 and 1956
stand out. The first demand was actually made as early as in 1926, but was restated
more forcefully in the 1940s, especially in States and Minorities (1947). It concerned
separate villages for the Scheduled Castes (pp. 186–7). The second demand was
access to public land, initially in the Nashik-Ahmadnagar area and later, and more
powerfully, in Marathwada.
Until the early 1950s, many Marathwada Dalits cultivated government wasteland.
After the Congress government came to power, however, the land was taken away
from the Dalit farmers before the crop was harvested (this event occurred in 1952 or
1953). In response to this injustice, a satyagraha was organised in Aurangabad
district in the Marathwada region. The protest was triggered by a speech by
Ambedkar at a meeting of the Scheduled Caste Federation (SCF) on August 9, 1953.
In the speech, he asked the people of the Scheduled Castes to be strong and not rely
on requests, applications, and other constitutional means alone. If the Government
8
See for details, Kumar (2018).
One of the most direct statements by Ambedkar on the issue of land for Scheduled
Castes was made on March 18, 1956 in a public meeting organised by the SCF at the
Ramlila Maidan, Agra, Uttar Pradesh. In this meeting, attended by over 200,000
people, Ambedkar asked his followers to occupy government wasteland. In the
event of someone objecting to their occupation, he asked them to respond thus: “We
will not leave the land, though we are willing to pay the appropriate revenue to the
government” (Rasal 2011, p. 25). Ambedkar also promised the gathering that, once
his health improved, he himself would lead the movement of the Scheduled Castes
to claim government wasteland (ibid.). In this way, it is clear that in the early 1950s,
Ambedkar supported militant struggle as a means for the resolution of the land
question for Dalits in India.
Gail Omvedt (1994) observes that the Dalit land movement was one of the
consequences of the joint struggle waged under the banner of the Samyukta
Maharashtra Samiti (united Maharashtra committee), and in particular by the
Republican Party of India (RPI) and Communist Party of India (CPI). The Samiti
demanded a linguistic State that included the Marathi-speaking regions of Bombay
province. Dadasaheb Gaikwad (RPI) and Nana Patil (CPI), two pioneers of the
movement in Marathwada for establishing the rights of Dalits and Adivasis over
public land, came from the Samiti and shaped a united left front as envisaged by
Ambedkar (Omvedt 1994, p. 257–8). In 1959, after Ambedkar’s death, another land
satyagraha was organised in Nashik and Ahmadnagar districts. There were 300,000
participants in a land satyagraha organised in Delhi around October 1964 (Zelliot
2013, pp. 200–1). The struggle in Marathwada continued in different forms through
the 2000s.
In the gairan movement of the 1950s and 1960s, the largely Dalit participants raised a
slogan that went beyond “land to the tiller”: “kasel tyachi jamin, nasel tyache kaay?”
(“Land to the tiller, but what about landless labour?”). The answer was to take over and
occupy common, waste, and forest land by Dalits across the region.10
9
This also refutes the assertion made by Zelliot (2013) that Ambedkar himself was not directly involved in the
earliest land satyagraha organised in 1953 (p. 200).
10
I have dealt with the evolution of the gairan movement, which was inspired by Ambedkar’s thinking on land, in
detail elsewhere (Kumar 2018).
To overcome oppression at the hands of the caste Hindus, Ambedkar had a plan for
the future that involved redistributing cultivable wasteland available in the country
among the Scheduled Castes. This plan also included the creation of separate
villages for the people of Scheduled Castes. Ambedkar did not trust land reform that
solidified peasant proprietorship in land. He suggested the nationalisation of land
and collectivisation of agriculture under the auspices of the state. Only such a
policy, together with industrialisation and modernisation, he said, could break the
ties of dependence and oppression between the people of the Scheduled Castes and
caste Hindus.
Two important and more general points bear emphasis. First, freedom was possible
only when the corporate unfreedom of Dalits in rural society was brought to an end
by, among other things, breaking the land monopoly of caste Hindus. In this sense,
the solution to the land question involved more than just providing land and
establishing land ownership for every peasant (or, for that matter, landless worker).
It had to involve the freedom of the people of the Scheduled Castes from corporate
bondage, and the achievement of collective economic liberation from the exploiting
castes. Embedded in the land question, thus, was the demand for social and
economic freedom.
Secondly, the Dalit land movement understands land holding as a means to achieve
dignity and freedom in village social life. The caste system prevented Dalit land
ownership. Even in the case of Maharwatan, the grant of land was actually an
expression of feudal bondage in which Dalits were tied to servitude, that is, to
certain menial tasks assigned to the most oppressed and exploited sections of rural
GLOSSARY
gairan (Marathi): grazing land or pasture. It is often understood to be a common or
public resource in the villages of Maharashtra.
kamina: manual worker, worker to whom tasks considered menial were assigned.
Kaminas were mostly Dalit landless agricultural workers. Kaminas, earlier by
custom and later even by law, were not allowed to hold or buy land in the village.
In this way, they were dependent on zamindars.
khoti: a land tenure system established by the British Raj in the coastal Konkan region
of Maharashtra. The exploitative nature of the system and the hereditary landlords
who also acted as revenue collectors, called Khots, sparked protest among tenants
and landless workers in the region in the 1930s.
patil : hereditary office of village chief, generally occupied by a member of the Maratha
caste.
vethbegari: custom of unpaid, forced labour generally imposed on the lower castes,
particularly Dalits, in military, civil and private spheres of work.
watan: hereditary land title gifted to various social groups, generally belonging to
middle and upper castes, by feudal regimes in recognition of specific services. In the
state of Maharashtra, these included Patil, Kulkarni, Deshmukh, Deshpande.