I made the trip to school for the mid-day lunch. Seeing me sitting on one of the front benches, the seventh grade teacher says, 바카라The back benches are where your people sit바카라. Taking me by the hand, she leads me there. I had sat in front as I am short and the disease of scoliosis바카라a very painful, disabling curvature of the spine바카라made it difficult for me to view the blackboard clearly. That incident sparked several questions in my mind: who 바카라your people바카라 were, if it signified dark-skinned people like me, and whether it should govern my choice of friends. I invited the teacher to my house바카라if one can hardly call that a 바카라house바카라. Her response was one of extreme embarrassment and discomfort, as if she would be marked out for entering the colony house of a scheduled caste. Her words and attitude made me think. Thus did a seventh-grader, her mind besieged by these perplexities, start climbing the steps of progress over 18 years ago.
The Bluestone Rising Scholar prize, to be awarded at Brandeis University near Boston, was officially announced on August 27, 2019 by Vinod Mishra of the Indian Institute of Dalit Studies in Delhi. I was on a long journey home from college. Four days before that, I was invited to take part in the Ambedkar international conference at The New School in New York. Alas, it included no travel allowance. Yet the selection makes me happy, for it comes after I have been sending papers for seminars to be held in foreign universities for the past three years. Yes, two of them were accepted, but a similar lack of travel allowance meant I could not attend. I didn바카라t expect the Ambedkar Conference to be like that. I send emails to the New School University, coordinators of the conference, even Dr Mishra. There is no reply. On the way back from college on the 27th, I receive a mail saying, 바카라I need to contact you; please send your number바카라. When I call Dr Mishra, I expect him to reaffirm the lack of travel allowance, but he asks me if I have a passport. Yes, I do. 바카라I am very proud to say that Bluestone has announced their 바카라Rising Scholar바카라 for this year and that the winner is from Kerala,바카라 he says. As it transpires, I am the awardee. It is the motivation I need halfway along a road filled with isolation, frustration and academic pressure. In September, I go to Chennai for the visa interview. I receive it in Ernakulam on October 5.
The long, 16-hour flight from Doha to Logan Airport, Boston, increased my endemic back pain. During the check-in, Vivek바카라s and my luggage is opened and checked; the reason is a problem with our 바카라body language바카라. Later, when we give them the award letter, the behaviour softens and best wishes are conveyed. The colour of our pelt often colours ways of seeing us and perceiving our 바카라body language바카라. The Brandeis University campus is magnificently picturesque. We are shown to our rooms. After dinner at the cafeteria, I am given the next day바카라s award programme schedule.
At the award function in the evening, I am the centre of the world for the first time in my life. On the podium, with the Bluestone prize in my hands, I recall the words of my teacher all those years ago. I receive the award from Sukhadeo Thorat. In my speech, I speak about the Dalit woman바카라s plight, and of homeless women and families in Kerala. I say that my childhood experiences and caste have determined the course of my life.
Does the public know that 79 per cent of Dalits and adivasis in Kerala live in horribly cramped colonies? I was born in one, and survived to tell the tale in a global forum. Can they imagine what life was like there? For that one needs to have a deeper understanding of the land-power relationship in Kerala. That would reveal how Dalits/adivasis and other backward classes are excluded from mainstream society. I lived in the Perunna Naalpaathi colony in Chengassery until the age of ten and later in a nearby hut. During childhood, we crossed the rail overbridge to go to school in Ashatiamma. The pain of a constricted, deprived life was underscored by the discombobulating shriek of trains. Till the eighth standard, our school had no electricity; only the prospect of mid-day meals made us go there. Meals we had to eat on the back benches, amongst 바카라our people바카라.