Contending that Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians were not so distinct from other Dalit groups, a study commissioned by the National Commission for Minorities has strongly recommended giving Scheduled Caste status to the two groups and extending to them the benefit of reservations.
'There can be no doubt whatsoever that Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians are socially known and treated as distinct groups within their own religious communities and are invariably regarded as 'socially inferior' communities by their co-religionists,' the report said.
Universally practiced forms of discrimination and exclusion include social and cultural segregation, expressed in various forms of refusal to have any social interaction; endogamy, expressed through the universal prohibitions on Dalit-non-Dalit marriages and through severe social sanctions on both Dalits and non-Dalits, who break this taboo.
The study said social segregation also extended to the sphere of worship and religious rituals, with separate churches and priests being almost the norm among Dalit Christians and not uncommon among Dalit Muslims.
'In short, in most social contexts, Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians are Dalits first and Muslims and Christians only second,' it said.
Forms common to both Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians include various modes of subordination in churches and mosques, as well as insistence on separate burial grounds.
Occupational segregation and economic exploitation are also very common and usually related practices, though somewhat less widespread than segregation or marriage bans.
Untouchability is sometimes practiced, but is not widespread, and its' forms vary greatly, the report says.
The study also endorsed the Sachar committee report that Dalit Muslims were the worst off as compared to Dalit Christians and their counterparts in other communities like Hindus, Buddhists and Sikhs.
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