{"id":184823,"date":"2023-09-07T07:26:01","date_gmt":"2023-09-07T07:26:01","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/indiansapidnews.com\/?p=184823"},"modified":"2023-09-07T07:26:01","modified_gmt":"2023-09-07T07:26:01","slug":"caste-wont-disappear-from-india","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/indiansapidnews.com\/india\/caste-wont-disappear-from-india\/","title":{"rendered":"‘Caste Won’t Disappear From India’"},"content":{"rendered":"

‘In India those who want change cannot bring about change, and those who can bring about change do not want change.’<\/strong><\/p>\n

No other economist in India is perhaps more qualified to talk about the direct relation between the Indian economy and caste oppression than Dr M Kunhaman<\/strong>.<\/p>\n

His autobiography Ethiru<\/em> describes how it was to grow up as a Dalit in poverty, how it was to be insulted, humiliated and rejected by society in school, college and later on at work.<\/p>\n

The book was awarded the Kerala Sahitya Akademi award last year, but he refused to accept the award.<\/p>\n

When he passed out of Calicut University with first rank in economics, he became the second Dalit student to do so after K R Narayanan, who later became India’s first Dalit President.<\/p>\n

After working as a professor of economics at Kerala University for 27 years, Dr Kunhaman taught economics for a few years at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences.<\/p>\n

He is described as a strong voice of the subalterns, a well-known academician, a unique thinker and an economist.<\/p>\n

“There are a few persons in India who can bring about any change in India because they are powerful and unquestioned. They are Narendra Modi, Mamata Bannerjee, Stalin, and Pinarayi Vijayan. But they won’t bring about such a change because their order of priority is different,” Dr Kunhaman tells Rediff.com<\/strong><\/em>‘s Shobha Warrier<\/strong> in the concluding segment of a two-part interview:<\/p>\n