India’s Caste Census Debate: The Legacy of a British Plot to Undermine Hindus
- The modern caste system in India was largely constructed by British colonial rulers to divide Hindu society and aid missionary conversions.
- British census policies, especially those led by Risley, racialized caste using pseudoscience like nose measurements and social taboos.
- Terms like “Dalit,” “untouchable,” and rigid caste identities were artificially created and institutionalized through colonial classification systems.
- Ancient Indian society was based on flexible, profession-linked jaat identities, not birth-based, hierarchical castes as seen today.
- Despite being debunked by scholars and leaders like Dr. Ambedkar, these colonial caste frameworks still influence India’s census, education, and politics.
Manoj Jwala
Journalist, writer, and researcher-educator actively engaged in public awakening through ongoing investigation and publication on the global and colonial religious-political-intellectual conspiracies against the Indian nation, Dharma, and Dharmic society.
Published Books:
Mahatma Ki Beti aur Siyasat – A novel exploring the political condition and direction of India.
Safed Aatank: Hume Se Maino Tak – A counter-narrative book exposing the myth of "saffron terror."
SecularTITIS: Gujarat Se Dilli Tak – A satirical novel dissecting the farce of Indian secularism.
The Story of the Gurukul Experiment – A critique of Macaulay’s English education system.
Modern Apparatus of the Deva-Asura War – A study on Western intellectual subversion against India.
Forthcoming Books:
Bharat Punarutthaan: Ek Daivīya Abhiyan – On India’s civilizational resurgence.
Majhab Hi Sikhata Hai Vair Karna – A critical exploration of doctrinal hatred.
Dharma Under Siege by Religion and Majhab – On the targeting of Dharma.
British Visha-Kanya and the Ramkalis of Sindhu Shores – A serial narrative on the tragedy of Partition, Hindu persecution, and the rationale for the CAA law.
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