As an Indian please allow me to provide some background on this.
1. There were a few ( maybe many, but even one is too many ) cases of dalits being discriminated in the refugee camps in Tamil Nadu. Almost in
all cases the incidents were found out and reported by Indian ( mostly hindu , castes varied ) journalists and widely reported in both regional ( tamil vernacular ) and National ( Hindi / English ) newspapers and TV programs. Almost immediately both the state administration as well as NGO's working there swung into action by widely publicizing the cases, building separate camps , making sure supplies reach these and provided police protection. < You may rightly ask whether the perpetrators should be punished and if separate relief camps isn't legitimising segregation. I will come to that later. ). The point is that the corrective mechanism build into Indian society and guaranteed by the Indian constitution viz free press, concerned citizens , judiciary and government will always rise up in these cases and take corrective action.[br />
2. From the article "The persecution of Dalit tsunami survivors has been mostly at the hands of other survivors, fishermen from the slightly higher Meenavar caste, the community in mainland India hit worst by the tsunami." This is not a case of all the upper caste hindus ganging up to screw dalits. It is a case of two locally interdependent lower castes competing for scarce resources. The fisher folk "Meenawar" caste ( jati to be accurate ) would probably be just a notch higher ( if it ever mattered ). In all cases the events were reported by hindu journalists of varied castes.The thousands of Indians who volunteered to do relief work here came from different parts of India ( as far away as Delhi & Punjab , 2000+ km ) belonged to all castes and would not even be able to tell the difference between these two jatis even if they wanted to. ( There are thousands of jatis ). The point is that these kind of incidents often happen in very rural and illiterate communities. Most attacks on Dalits are carried out by jatis which are probably slightly higher than them. It is often driven by competition for scarce resources. This is not something that is sanctioned by Hindu Dharma and any literate hindu would oppose this.
3. From the article "The Tamil Nadu government contends that the fishermen have been worst affected. And it is true that their community suffered by far the most deaths - about 10,000, while 100 Dalits are confirmed dead and another 500 missing."
The fact is that the fishermen jati lives near the ocean and was most affected ( dead, houses washed away ) while the dalits who live inland may not have been directly affected ( they would still be indirectly affected with the local economy in ruins ). The dalits who did not lose their homes probably went to the relief camps so that they could also get some of the relief material as well as compensatory payments made by the govt. This could have caused tensions between communities with the one more affected seeing the other taking their share. This is probably why the govt. tried to ameliorate the situation by having separate relief camps and not instituting punishments against the perpetrators ( who are themselves in total despair ).
4. There are lot of cases where christian missionaries refused to provide aid unless people converted or would pray to jesus with them. When a few days ago a report about catholic nuns refusing aid to a village that would not convert was posted here some people said that catholics don't do that. However in India both catholics and protestants are equally aggressive in harvesting souls and in competition with each other to convert Hindus. Some on this board said that the report was probably cooked up by hindu fundamentalists. Fact is that report, while covered by vernacular news sources and smaller Indian English media , was censored by the larger Indian English language newspapers. Most Indian English newspapers are run by Indian communists who love to bash hindus by portraying isolated cases of violence on dalits as something endemic in hindu society. However these same newspapers always censor anything done by christian missionaries or islamist terrorists.
However here is a similar report in todays Chicago Tribune written by an American journalist. I am sure some of you would give greater credibility to this than the previous report written by a brown person.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0501220303jan22,1,4612744.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-hed&ctrack=2&cset=trueQUOTE ::
Many children from Akkaraipettai ended up at the Believers Church orphanage, set up to care for children who lost one or both parents or for children whose parents could not handle their children after the tsunami. Biju, a Believers Church official, said church members recruited children by talking about the orphanage to people in relief camps and villages.
"We did not take the children," he said.
But the orphanage was set up without knowledge of the government, said Suriyakala, the district's social welfare officer.
Inside the orphanage, children seemed happy, playing volleyball, badminton and cricket. Several Hindu children said they were asked to recite Christian prayers six times a day.
"As soon as we get up, we pray," said Rajavalli, 13, a Hindu, adding that she had no problem with praying.
Members of the church also handed out Tamil-language Bibles, including refugees staying in a railway station. Several said they took the Bible only because it was offered.
But Mahalakshmi, 18, who had converted earlier from Hinduism to Christianity, said she was happy to get a Bible.
"I understand that to make people understand they have sinned, God has sent this tsunami," she said. "I get peace from reading the Bible and understanding this. Others who don't will continue to suffer."
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