We Are Conscious of Caste, but Do We Live Our Lives through It? A Case Study of Gendered Caste Marginality
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
3. Framing the Context and Analysis of Literature
3.1. Caste
3.2. Gender
4. Historical Background of Bhat Sikhs
4.1. Caste Prejudice and Marginalising Status
4.2. Intersectional Issues
4.3. Issues of Representation
5. Results and Discussion
5.1. Caste Prejudice/Gendered Marginality: Interviewees’ Responses
I feel there’s a lot of misconceptions about… Bhat girls.. that they are hindered and held back in comparison to other groups, which is not true. I feel …we have opportunities that other people have, other girls and even boys… it’s whether or not you want to go for those opportunities. Personally as a women I don’t feel we’re confined …I feel if I’m happy to do something I will always get the support from my family
Society was different 20/30 years ago…getting a degree/masters would have held my mum back from marriage and having kids, I feel that there was a stronger emphasis on getting married, settling down, having kids
When we were growing up [in the 1980s], the differences were marked between the Bhat girls and the Jat girls, … …Jat girls wore English clothes… Bhat girls wouldn’t do that. We were seen as less modern.. the epitome of traditionality. There is definitely a stigma attached to being a part of the Bhat community
Ninety-five percent caste doesn’t matter but five percent still look down at you, even today.Participant 2
Going to Sikhi camps.. years back, I feel I acknowledged that difference between Jat and the Bhat community … …I have definitely been asked, ‘What’s your surname?” Some people were quite surprised when I say I’m not Jat …. people who believe in the caste system are the ones that ask. I personally wouldn’t ask anyone… “What are you?”.Participant 4
It’s when I called her to a Gurdwara program and she asked me… “What family are you from?...which Gurdwara do you go to?”. and when I told her, she said… “I thought you were … Jat” She stopped talking to me after that. You think in this day and age people wouldn’t think like that … Sikh is Sikh, Hindu is Hindu, Muslim is Muslim, to me caste doesn’t mean anything.
A Jat lady at a party…didn’t realise I was from the Bhat community, when I told her.. she said “Oh you’re very different from the others!” I think she thought that all Bhat women are supposed to be low class.Participant 2
I don’t believe in the caste system personally but traditionally if you go up the generations they are very much aware…. I don’t see a difference.Participant 4
The first thing somebody used to ask when we were growing up [during the 1980s] was, “What caste are you?”.Participant 3
5.2. Changing Attitudes towards Caste: Interviewees’ Responses
I feel now, there isn’t a big distinction between how people see difference, between the Bhat community and say the Jat community, so growing up I haven’t really seen a massive difference…I have just seen them as a whole community
Before I got married we lived in an area where there was a mix of families, some Jat, some Bhat. We were close to a lot of Jat families and we were always going round to each other’s houses. My Dad was very religious. He would always help lots of people [from different Sikh communities]…they would always ask his advice about things… I still keep in touch with most of our old neighbours as we see them at Gurdwara events.
The defining factor within the caste system is the difference in norms … we’re into the new era where equality is expressed easily, and comes up in conversation a lot more… Sikhism has taught us that caste doesn’t matter… or what name you have. Everyone’s equal …the root of Sikhism is being anti-casteist…we’re given surnames Kaur and Singh to erase the caste thinking within Sikh society… But… It all depends on what ideology you buy into… for me I don’t believe in the caste system… and I have never been asked ‘what’s your surname?’.
5.3. Changes in Cultural Practices: Marriage, Work and Education: Interviewees’ Responses
We allowed our daughters to study in school until 15/16 years old but studying in colleges and universities was not allowed. After school we got our girls married. How we were, we wanted our daughters to be the same
It was important to educate our daughters, we have to change with the times, everything the boy does the girl does too
Education is very important, the things that we didn’t get… we want to make sure that we give to our children
My mum always used to say to us, “Whatever you want to do [going to university, working, wearing make-up] viah deh baad kari [do it after you’re married]!
Back then it was important for girls to get married …when they are settled they will have a good life… daughters needed to learn things like run a house, cooking…sewing…knitting… cleaning, look after their elders. Thee je vasjandieh, teh izzat takijandieh [if your daughter is settled at her in-laws’ house then your honour is saved] That was the main point back then].
Arranged marriages nowadays are …more like a cupid match making thing... I feel now there isn’t so much emphasis on getting married at a young age …the emphasis is get your education first, get a nice job… know yourself as a person then get married…
It’s not ‘just’ about the umbrella of caste… my parents have provided the foundation for me to stand on my own two feet to be independent… now your choice comes first… a contrast to say 10 or 20 years ago… wider community expectations are not so important anymore.
5.4. Symbolic Significance of Their Traditional Clothing: Interviewees’ Responses
I think it was like a barrier to prevent us from forgetting our culture…we were proud of our identity……
I don’t feel… uncomfortable wearing a salwar kameez……my salwar kameez represents my culture and it’s something I have embraced more as I’ve gotten older.
Because you’re from that [Bhat] caste is that why you have to wear those type of clothes?
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Kaur, P. We Are Conscious of Caste, but Do We Live Our Lives through It? A Case Study of Gendered Caste Marginality. Religions 2024, 15, 972. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080972
Kaur P. We Are Conscious of Caste, but Do We Live Our Lives through It? A Case Study of Gendered Caste Marginality. Religions. 2024; 15(8):972. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080972
Chicago/Turabian StyleKaur, Parvinder. 2024. "We Are Conscious of Caste, but Do We Live Our Lives through It? A Case Study of Gendered Caste Marginality" Religions 15, no. 8: 972. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080972
APA StyleKaur, P. (2024). We Are Conscious of Caste, but Do We Live Our Lives through It? A Case Study of Gendered Caste Marginality. Religions, 15(8), 972. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080972