PART III
Roots of the Problem
C HAPTER 8
PARALLEL CASES
I. Slavery in Rome. II. Villeinage in England. III. Jews and Servility. IV. Negroes and slavery.
Social inequality is not confined to Hindus only. It prevailed in other countries also and was responsible for dividing society into higher and lower, free and unfree, respectable and despised. It would be interesting to compare the condition and status of the untouchables in India with the condition and status of the unfree and the despised classes in other countries ancient and modern. For an intelligent understanding of the differences and similarities it is essential to have some idea of the history of such parallel cases before any comparison can be instituted. It is not possible to give a survey of all such classes in all parts of the world. Nor is it necessary. A few typical cases can only be taken as illustrations.
In studying the relationship between the Hindus and the Untouchables three questions at once come to one’s mind. Why has untouchability not vanished? Why does the Hindu regard lawlessness against the Untouchables as legitimate and lawful? Why does the Hindu feel no qualms of conscience in his dealings with the Untouchables?
I
Classes which like the Untouchables were lowly and despised have at one time existed in other societies also. For instance, they existed in once ancient Rome. The population of ancient Rome fell into five classes:
(1) Patricians, (2) Plebians, (3) Clients, (4) Slaves and (5) Freemen.
The Patricians were the ruling class. They were the civics in every sense. The rest were all servile in status. The Plebs and the Clients were