Subcontinent  |  The Himalayas  |  Monsoon  |  Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa  |   Caste System
The Untouchables  |  Hinduism  |   Siddhartha Gautama  |   Buddhism  |   Indian History  |   The Moguls
 The British in India   |   Gandhi  |   Partition  |    India Since Independence  |   One Billion People
Pakistan and Bangladesh   |   Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan  |  Cool Links

The Untouchables

      The untouchables were the outcastes, or people beyond the caste system. Their jobs or habits involved "polluting activities" including:

  • Any job that involved ending a life, such as fishing.
  • Killing or disposing of dead cattle or working with their hides.
  • Any contact with human emissions such as sweat, urine, or feces. This included occupational groups such as sweepers and washermen.
  • People who ate meat. This category included most of the primitive Indian hill tribes.

      Untouchables were often forbidden to enter temples, schools and wells where higher castes drew water. In some parts of southern India, even the sight of untouchables was thought to be polluting. The untouchables forced to sleep during the day and work at night. Many untouchables left their rigid social structure by converting to Islam, Buddhism, or Christianity.

      The Caste System has been illegal in India for more than fifty years, but it continues to shape people's lives. The Indian government has provided the Harijan a term now popularly used in place of untouchable, with specific employment privileges, and granted them special representation in the Indian parliament. Despite such measures, the Harijan continue to have fewer educational and employment opportunities than Indians from higher castes.

Subcontinent  |  The Himalayas  |  Monsoon  |  Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa  |   Caste System
The Untouchables  |  Hinduism  |   Siddhartha Gautama  |   Buddhism  |   Indian History  |   The Moguls
 The British in India   |   Gandhi  |   Partition  |    India Since Independence  |   One Billion People
Pakistan and Bangladesh   |   Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bhutan  |  Cool Links

    The Caste System
    Hinduism

To cite this page:
Dowling, Mike., "The Electronic Passport to the Untouchables," available from http://www.mrdowling.com/612-untouchables.html; Internet; updated Saturday, January 20, 2001.