4.66 AVERAGE


Scathing, brilliant and thoroughly readable, Ambedkar’s writing is well-reasoned and brutally efficient in excoriating not only the system of caste but also the religious principles upholding and maintaining it and the people most interested in clinging to it. Gandhi comes off sounding like an inarticulate and childish politician in his response and Ambedkar’s disdain for his pathetic argumentation had me hooting and hollering as I read. Important for not just Indians, but also any westerner who sees the East as some refuge or escape from the inequalities or spiritual bankruptcies of the west. Western civilization did not invent exploitation, class inequality and religious oppression, and the faster everyone realizes that, the easier it will be to critique institutions of power worldwide. Could not recommend this book highly enough.

A must read!

This should be mandatory in history classes.
dark informative slow-paced

Very very insightful read. Arundhati roy did i think a fantastic job for setting the stage and context from which this text/ piece emerged without mincing words. She so beautifully detailed with brutality her descriptions of the dangerous views held by Gandhi and the continued stink of the caste system that follows us to this day. Just everything political I'd read from her so far has been so !!! i don't even know how to describe it but her brain is very sexy

This insidious inhuman system that has been playing right before my eyes but the extent of which I had been blind to previously until a about a few years ago because of the inherent and invisible privilege of being born a tamil brahmin. I am trying to read more dalit literature and voices as I go because I've recently identified that as a humongous blind spot when i talk about my personal ethics. And I believe negligence and stasis is a dangerous act in itself.

As Roy points out herself, the one thing sickening about this manifesto is the language used against the tribal population of India. The way Ambedkar describes them as savages, who need to be integrated forcefully into "regular" society and have their culture and homes erased, clashed so thoroughly with the reason and passion with which he spoke about the dalit community. It just felt so sickening especially since i'm fresh off of having done my entire thesis on the colonisation of the Jarawa tribe in the Andamans both by the British Raj and then now the Indian government itself to this day with police brutality to boot and knowing no signs of change.

Sighs deeply. Anyway. That's a whole different conversation. I'm glad I read this annotated version because I got so much more out of it and it left lots of ideas to turn over and marinate in my brain.
challenging informative reflective medium-paced
informative reflective medium-paced

"As a Mahatma he may be trying to spiritualize Politics.  Whether he has succeeded in it or not politics have certainly commercialized him."

Came for the annihilation of caste, stayed for the annihilation of Gandhi.

But jokes aside I think this is a really good read.
challenging emotional informative reflective medium-paced

Wow, Ghandi sucks.
informative fast-paced

"Indeed, to expect a Brahmin to be a revolutionary in matters of social reform is as idle as to expect the British Parliament, as was said by Leslie Stephen, to pass an Act requiring all blue-eyed babies to be murdered."
If you want to enter into a terrain in which you allow yourself to be stripped of your caste privileges, this is your space. <3