In another case of caste-based violence among school students in Tamil Nadu, more than 20 caste Hindu students belonging to the Urali Gounder community attacked a Dalit student and his grandmother in Karur district on Saturday, August 26, for laughing inside a bus.

This is the third such attack in the state in 20 days.

  • ShakeThatYam@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It’s wild that even when a country is (mostly) racially homogeneous, humans will find the most minute differences (imagined or otherwise) to discriminate.

    • eestileib
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      1 year ago

      I was married into a TamBram family, and after a while you can just clock Iyers vs Iyengars (which is a hyperfine distinction if there ever was one). It’s based on names, differences in pronunciation, items of jewelry… Those are like the differences between a Londoner and somebody from Oxford.

      But a Bengali or a Gujurati? They look totally different, like the difference between Connor McGregor and Al Pacino.

      India is a BIG place, it has only ever been unified as an empire, never as a nation.

      • ShakeThatYam@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        At the same time, I think it’s a bit more fluid than that. You’ll definitely have individuals who can pass for different ethnic groups. I’m South Indian and I can often pass for North Indian (especially because my name is typically North Indian).

      • xuxebiko@kbin.socialOP
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        1 year ago

        “This is the city of Madras,
        The home of the curry and the dal
        Where Iyers speak only to Iyengars,
        And Iyengars speak only to God.” - Hungarian mathematician Paul Erdős

    • xuxebiko@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Indians discriminate within their own families between those who have fairer skin & darker skin tones. The experiences that Black people have in India are very different from those experienced by White people. You can find out by asking around in travel forums
      We are extremely racist, classist, and casteist, but are good at pretending not to be while living in developed countries.

      • bobman@unilem.org
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        1 year ago

        Wow. Like, none of them are white and all of them would be enslaved/executed if white supremacists got their way.

        Crazy how they can’t see that, lol.

    • bobman@unilem.org
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      1 year ago

      It’s part of human nature at this point.

      Very few people are able to rise above it.

      I can’t help but notice, the lesser nations are on the world scale, the more they hate each other over stupid shit.

      It’s like, instead of putting people down in India because they can’t compete with the US, they should be building them up. But they need to feel superior to someone, and white people are out of the question so they just shit on each other.

      It’s disgusting and parents and children are to blame.

      • ShakeThatYam@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        No, I intentionally used the word race instead of ethnicity. I’m well aware that India is diverse and has thousands of ethnic groups. I used race because many of these groups still share many phenotypical characteristics. In places like America there is more of a physical distinction between people of different races.

        So, it’s interesting to me that humans can find ways to discriminate even when they look similar (or at least more similar than some other countries). This is probably not even unique to India. I’m sure other racially homogeneous nations experience similar types of discrimination that isn’t obvious to outsiders.

          • ShakeThatYam@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            You’re being needlessly pedantic and you’re trying to convince me of something that I already accept: race is a social construct that doesn’t scientifically exist. I know that. However, when I want to talk about Indian people looking more similar to each other than American people it’s kind of hard to simply say that without using race. Under your system I can only refer to every individual ethnic group of India or those of Indian national origin. Neither is what I want to refer to.

            Also, since race is a social construct, you are incorrect that Indians must fall under the broader term Asian. They can be considered as Asian when appropriate to the discussion but they can fall under narrower or broader classifications when it is relevant to the discussion.

            • xuxebiko@kbin.socialOP
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              1 year ago

              While ‘race’ (as a social construct) is a way of classifying people into groups based on physical traits, ‘caste’ is a system of social stratification, where groups are assigned a way of life defined primarily by occupation.

              Caste has no distinguishable physical feature and members of the same ‘race’ group may be of several different caste groups. In Britain for example, Dalits have progressed economically and do not follow their traditional occupations of cleaning toilets and skinning dead animals, but they encounter caste-based discrimination in social interactions. Unlike race discrimination, caste discrimination is intra-racial and is practised among those of the same nationality, ethnic origin and/or cultural background.

              • ShakeThatYam@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Look up what phenotype means. I’ll help you, it’s the observable characteristics of an individual. The way a person looks can be part of the social construct that defines them as a race.

          • dogslayeggs@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Race actually is based on phenotypes. It’s in the definition of race. Race is also based on ethnic/cultural/religious differences, but physical characteristics absolutely are part of what people call race.

            Yes, there is no science backing the idea of race or humans being different based on race, but there is science backing the idea that humans distinguish other groups based on physical characteristics. That is the conversation we are having, not whether people actually are different based on where they grew up or what they look like. Just that humans will use looks to distinguish groups of people, along with other differences.