Bhagwan
Das: A Profile
(23.04.1927
-18.11.2010)
Mr. Bhagwan Das was born in an Untouchable family
at Jutogh Cantonment, Simla (Himachel Pradesh), India on 23 April 1927. He
served in the Royal Indian Air Force during World War II and after
demobilisation served in different capacities in various departments of
Government of India at Saharanpur, Simla and Delhi. He did M.A. in History
(Punjab University) and LL.B from Delhi University. He did research on the
‘Indianisation of the Audit Department from 1840-1915’. He had been
contributing articles and short stories to various papers and journals
published in India.
His father Mr. Ram Ditta was fond of reading
newspapers and a great admirer of Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar. Inspired and
encouraged by his father, Mr. Das worked with Mr. T. R. Baidwan of Simla who
was the most prominent leader of the Untouchables in Simla Hills, and joined
the Scheduled Castes Federation at the tender age of 16. Since then he had been
actively associated with the Ambedkarin movement and had done a great deal to
promote the ideas of Babasaheb Ambedkar and to unite and uplift the downtrodden
not only of India but also of other countries of Asia. Mr. Das was associated
with many organisations of lawyers, Buddhists, Scheduled Castes and Minorities
in India. He was General Secretary, United Lawyers Association, Supreme Court,
New Delhi; General Secretary, Bouddh Upasak Sangh, New Delhi; Founder Chairman,
Ambedkar Mission Society which has branches in many parts of the world; Revived
Samata Sainik Dal (Vounteers for Equality) founded by Dr. Ambedkar in 1926-27;
Regional Secretary (North). Indian Buddhist Council; Founder, Society for the
Protection of Non-Smokers; Founder President of Society for Promoting Buddhist
Knowledge; edited Samata Sainik Sandesh (English) 1980-1990.He was also the
main person behind publication of “Bheem Patrika” an Urdu and the Hindi
magazine published from Jullundar (Punjab).
Mr. Das had been associated with the ‘Peace
Movement’ since the end of World War II, in which he served on the Eastern
Front with the R.A.F. under South East Asia Command. He was one of the founder
members of the World Conference on Religion and Peace (WCRP) (India) and had
participated in the Conferences held in Kyoto, Japan, 1970; Princeton USA
(1979); Seoul, Korea (1986); Nairobi. Kenya (1984) and Melbourne Australia
(1989). He was appointed Director, Asian Centre for Human Rights (Asian
Conference on Religion and Peace) in 1980 and continued to serve in this
capacity till 2004 monitoring the news of violation of human rights in Asian
countries and organising camps for training of human ‘ rights workers, speaking
and writing for the cause.
Mr. Das was invited to deliver a lecture on
‘Discrimination by the Peace University, Tokyo (1980) and also addressed
several meetings organised by the Burakuminsof Japan. Gave testimon before the
United Nations in regard to the plight o Untouchables in South Asia, in the
meeting of Sub-Committee on Human Rights held at Geneva, Switzerland in August,
1983. He visited England in 1975, 1983, 1988, 1990 and 1991 in connection with
lectures and seminars. He participated in the seminar held in ‘Hull University
in 1990 as a representative of the Ambedkar Centenary Celebration Committee, UK
and also a seminar on Human Rights in India held at London University, School
of Asian and Oriental Studies in February 1991.
He was invited to deliver Ambedkar Memorial
Lectures in Milind Mahavidyalya, Aurangahad (1970); Marathwada University (1983); Nagpur
University, PWS College, Nagpur; Ambedkar College, Chanderpur and Amrraoti University in 1990.
Mr. Das also visited Nepal (1980 and 1990);
Pakistan (1989); Thailand (1988); Singapore (1989) and Canada (1979) to study
the problems f deprived and disadvantaged members of society, women and
children. Delivered lectures in Wisconsin University (USA) 1979 and North-
field College (USA) on Caste in contemporary India. He was invited to give
lectures on Dr Ambedkar at the Institute of Oriental Studies, Moscow in June,
1990.
Mr. Das practiced law in the Supreme Court of
India. With a view to improve the professional competence of and helping
upcoming advocates belonging to Untouchable and indigenous groups he founded
Ambedkar Mission Lawyers Association and Legal Aid Society in 1989. He was
General Secretary of ‘Professions for People’, an organisation founded in Delhi
to elevate professional standards.
Mr. Das was invited to preside at the Dalit and
Buddhist Writers Conference held at Akola in 1989 and was closely associated
with various organisations of Dalit Writers.
Mr. Das had written more than five hundred
articles, papers for seminars, short stories for various newspapers and
journals. His papers on ‘Revival of Buddhism’; ‘Some problems of minorities in
India’; ‘Reservation in Public Services’ have been published in Social Action
brought out by Indian Social Institute, New Delhi and Delhi University Buddhist
Department. He wrote many papers on Reservation and Representative Bureaucracy,
Discrimination against the Dalits in Public Services and Minorities etc.
He was a member for the ‘Committee for evolving
new strategies for the development of Scheduled Castes and Tribes - VIII Plan’
set up by the Government of India and also a member of Ambedkar Centenary
Committee of the Government of India. Mr. Das had written many books in Urdu,
English and Hindi on Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar; Untouchables; Scavengers and
Sweepers; Human Rightsl Discrimination
etc. Prominent among them are Thus Spoke Ambedkar (Vol I to IV Ed) a pioneer
work; Ambedkar on Gandhi and Gandhism (Ed); Ambedkar Ek Parichey Ek Sandesh
(Hindi); Main Bhangi hoon(Hindi), the story of an Indian sweeper told in the
first- person (this book has been translated into Punjabi, Kannada and Marathi
and German); Valmiki aur Bhangi Jatian (Hindi); Valmiki (Hindi); Dhobi (Hindi),
Revival of Buddhism in India and Role of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar; Dr. Ambedkae Ek
Parichay Ek Sandesh; Dr. Ambedkar aur
Bhangi Jatiya and Bharat me Bauddh Dhamm ka punrjagran tatha samasyayen. He
translated into Urdu former President of the USA Lyndon Johnson’s book ‘My.
Hope for America’; Dr Ambedkar’s ‘Ranade, Gandhi and Jinnah’in to Urdu; besides
editing Bhadant Anand Kaushalyayan’s ‘Gita ki Buddhivadi Samiksha.’
Other books in hand but left incomplete were
Reservation and Representative Bureaucracy in India; Untouchables in the Indian
Army (Mahar, Mazhbi, Chuhra, Pariahs, Mangs, Dhanuks, Dusadhs, Chamars, Kolis, Bheels);
Mandal Commission and the Future of Backward Classes; Twenty-Two Oaths of
Buddhism and Conversion; Balmiki; Ravidassis
and Balmikis of Northern India; Buddhism and Marxism and Ambedkar as a Religious Leader.
Mr. Das had toured almost the whole of India to study
the problems of Hindu-Muslim riots, religious conflicts, atrocities committed
on the Untouchables and tribal people, with the group ‘Threat to Diversity’,
‘Swaraj Mukti Morcha and as Chairman, Samata Sainik Dal. He was also the
founder President of Dalit Solidarity People, an organisation aiming at uniting
Hindu Dalits, Dalit Christians, Sikh Dalits, Muslim Dalits and Burakumons of
Japan and Korea. Like Marx his slogan was “Dalits of the World Unite.”
Mr Bhagwan Das hasd been a storehouse of insight
and information, his residence at Delhi had been a mandatory stopover for many
renowned scholars like Eleanor Zelliot, Mark Juergensmeyer,Owen lynch, Marc
Gallanter, RK Kshirsagar, Sukhadeo Thorat down to younger scholars like Vijay
Prashad,Nicolas Jaoul and Maren Bellwinkel-Schempp.
We were expecting much more from Mr. Bhagwan Das
but he suddenly departed from us on 18.11.2010. It has been a great loss to the
followers of Baba Saheb. I think to work on his foot prints for carrying
forward the Ambedkarite movement will be a true tribute to him.
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S.R.Darapuri I.P.S.(Retd)