Based in Germany at present, Aroh Akunth is a Dalit trans-feminine writer-performer and student at the Centre for Modern Indian Studies at the University of G?ttingen. Speaking with Outlook, Aroh says that India constitutes around 17.7 percent of the world population, while the Dalits are about 17-20 percent of the Indian population according to varying estimates, which makes Dalits of India one of the world's largest populations living in segregation. However, the recognition of what this aspect means for international politics is slow and the reparations bleak.
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The politics of caste is entrenched in communities being forced to perform jobs that are considered ‘impure’ generation after generation as theorized and enforced by Hindu scriptures. Aroh’s work uses queerness to imagine possibilities for surviving caste. Acknowledging that the scope of Caste and Queerness is vast they say Dalit-Queer thinkers are just starting to scratch the surface as far as the potential of the framework is concerned, they hope the mainstream academic spaces in some time will begin to operate from a critical caste studies standpoint. Aroh also notes that, unlike the critical race theory, critical caste studies as an interdisciplinary field are still being developed. They also added that this late development is the possible result of where Caste is located geographically and because of how cruel the system has been, hence taking much more time to be addressed.
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"But there is hope that once critical caste studies take centre stage, especially in research dealing with South Asia(ns), diaspora or wherever casted relations exist- There will be better conditions for engagement, shifts in existing academic understanding, that will inspire positive social change elsewhere,” Aroh says.