Cultural Revolt in a Colonial
Society: The Non-Brahman Movement in
Western India
By- Gail Omvedt
The colonial period saw important social movements in
India. Among the strongest of these was non-Brahman movement in Maharashtra.
Its founder was a remarkable intellectual and social activist from the gardener
(Mali) caste, Jotirao Phule (1827-90). His writings laid the foundations of the
movement, and the Satyashodhak Samaj (“Truthseekers Society”) which he founded
in 1873, became its primary radical organization, lasting until the 1930s.
Shahu Maharaj, the Maratha maharaja of Kolhapur, who turned against
Brahmans because they considered him a shudra, and became radicalized from
this, was a major patron. The heyday of the movement took place between 1910 and
1930, when the Satyashodhak Samaj carried the message of anti-caste
anti-Brahmanism throughout Maharashtra; one of its offshoots was a strong
peasant movement.
In the 1920s a political party emerged, as did Dr.
B.R. Ambedkar’s Dalit movement, which drew sustenance also from support of the
non-Brahmans and patrons such as Shahu Maharaj. Young radicals such as
Keshavrao Jedhe and Dinkarrao Javalkar challenged Brahman cultural dominance in
Pune and intervened in the Brahman-dominated Communist movement in Mumbai.
By the 1930s, however, the movement died away as the
majority of its activists joined Congress. It has left a strong heritage, but
the failure to really link nationalism with a strong anti-caste movement has
left a heritage of continued and often unadmitted dominance of caste in Indian
society today.
This classic study on the non-Brahman movement in
western India is invaluable for scholars of sociology, caste movements, Dalit
studies and colonialism.
Gail Omvedt currently holds the Dr. B.R. Ambedkar
Chair of Social Change and Development at IGNOU.
ISBN 978-81-7304-927-9 2011 332p. Rs.895/
pounds 50
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Fax: 23265162
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To order your copy at www.manoharbooks.com
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