It’s the culture. Stupid! Where Prof. Kancha Ilaiah falls short.

Aghora
5 min readOct 7, 2017

Kiran Boggavarapu

To get a new perceptive, sometimes, it is necessary to think outside the frame and perhaps even get out of the country, if necessary.

I used to have an African American student in my research lab in the USA. During her senior year, she decided to quit the lab and the university, as she had found out that she got pregnant. I was little disappointed. Not only that she was on the verge of finishing her research project but if she continues one more semester she could have been graduating as well. She threw away all that. What a pity.

I wanted to know why. Not looking like I am prying on her personal issues, I asked her, Mary (name changed) why did you get pregnant? Look at your situation. You are unmarried and pregnant with a man who has no intention of either marrying you or supporting your baby. You have no real job and it is extremely hard to be a single parent. On the top of all this, you may not even be able to finish your college, which is vital to get a good job. Knowing all this and being an educated woman, why did you do it! Why did you choose this path!

Her answer still rings in my ears. She said it’s the attitude! It is the value system. It’s the culture. No big deal. Her mother was single when she was conceived. A couple of her aunts had been in a similar situation, so do some of her friends and neighbors. So, it does not come to her as a surprise. She does not perceive what I recognize! Her values are very different from mine.

This is not an isolated story. Statistically, a staggering 67% of the Black women who gave birth were unmarried! More than 50% of black men and women are never married. Although blacks make up of only 14.5% of the population, they constitute around 21% of the total prison population — with drugs positions, robber and murder as main offenses. Similar disparaging statistics are available in other human development indicators like education, health care, poverty etc as well. Black community falls behind the national average on almost every developmental metric.

Despite billions of dollars pumped into the education, health care and child support, the failure of the black community to rise up to the national standards is discouraging.

It is easy and perhaps comes without any effort; to attribute the backwardness of the black community to the historical injustices happened to them; like slavery, racism, segregation etc. However, asserting that these discriminations alone can explain everything that is wrong in today’s black community is an intellectual dishonesty and plainly wrong. It does not mean that there is no racism or oppression. On the contrary, systemic racism is real, operational and must be dealt with at both the government and societal level. It’s a continuous struggle.

No, these failures have much deeper roots. They are personal failings, lack of proper value system, break-down of the family structure, peer pressure and the political parties that exploit these communities and blinded intellectuals who recite endlessly recycling of clichéd ideas and explanations offer no real solutions.

Now consider another oppressed community. They were prosecuted for thousands of years, driven out of their homeland. With no place of their own; they had spread around the world. Wherever they go hatred followed them. Millions were killed in a genocidal attempt as late as in the 1940s. Yes, you guessed it right; I am talking about the Jewish people.

Despite these difficulties, Jewish community thrived in every society. Jews make up less than three percent of the USA population but they have made up more than twenty percent of the Forbes 400 list of the world richest people. Not only in wealth but in science as well they were very successful; 30% percent of Noble Prize winners were Jewish. Significant numbers of Jews are professionals such as doctors, engineers, scientists and entrepreneurs, and entertainers. Why are they so successful? Among several factors that contributed, everyone agrees that Jewish community puts heavy emphasis on personal responsibility, education and hard work. In other words, it is the culture.

It’s true that one cannot compare slavery to religious prosecution, and racism to anti-Semitism. But suffering is suffering and oppression is oppression. How the communities cope with these atrocities matter and offer clues to the solutions.

Not convinced. Consider another group of rather privileged people. These are White and Protestants. In other words, they do not suffer from the same debilitating factors such as racism and religious prosecution that marred the other communities. Despite these otherwise privileged white underclass, often labeled as hillbillies, white-trash or red necks, spread throughout the united states, suffer from the similar backwardness as that of African Americans. In addition and because they are privileged (read nonminority) they have minimal governmental support. Mostly they are left to live on their own. Majority of them are marginalized, poor, and under-educated. Many come from broken families as well. Once again, the culture plays a huge role in understanding their current status.

This is not to say that one culture is somehow superior to the others. It is not about the religion either. No. It is to recognize that certain universal values and cultural traits are vital for the upward mobility of the individual, family and the community.

Empowered by this understanding several sociologists, political thinkers, and social activists are changing the way the government and NGO tackle social ills such as poverty, drug problems and inequality in a way that makes a real difference.

It is easy to see some parallels between these communities in the USA and the backward castes, upper castes and poor upper castes in India. Of course, each culture is different and each community faces a unique set of challenges. However, as noted earlier, human beings across the globe have more in common than otherwise.

In this regard, the writings of Prof. Ilaiah and ilk not only fall short and out-right divisive. It’s not that they have not recognized the importance of culture; they do. But they use that understanding to pitch one community against another. Rarely, and if at all, emphasize on the personal responsibility and accountability. Their stunning lack of global perceptive on human development makes their writings even more myopic.

They have not yet come to terms with the idea that the world is moving away from agriculture and even manufacturing economy to the knowledge-based one. In this post-modern world, the government role is changing from job-provider to opportunity facilitator. Private entrepreneurs and innovators mainly drive the economy. This is change inevitable and unstoppable. At this crucial turning point the universal traits; education, hard work, and personal accountability, become even more significant. Blaming this caste or that caste for their success does not mask the personal failings. Instead, provide an opportunity for divisive politics to take deeper roots. It does mean that we should not address the exploitation and oppression of the underprivileged. We must address. No question about it. Not with hate and divisive ideas but with emphasis on equal opportunity, treatment and collective progress in mind.

Divisions come easy. To stay and progress together takes effort form all.

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Aghora

Ekum Sat There is only one truth. This is the sum and total of Eastern thought, Santana Dharma.