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Vice Chancellor of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) Santishree Dhulipudi Pandit said on Monday, 22 August, that the implementation of a uniform civil code would be the "greatest tribute" to gender justice.
Delivering a lecture at the Dr Ambedkar International Centre in Delhi, she said that uniformity of laws was aimed at making people progressive and broad-minded, adding that Ambedkar had always desired the implementation of a uniform civil code.
"Goa has a uniform civil code which was imposed by the Portuguese so there also Hindus, Christians and Buddhists and everybody has accepted it, so why is it that it is not being done," she said, as per news agency PTI.
She made these comments while speaking on the topic of 'Dr BR Ambedkar's Thoughts on Gender Justice: Decoding the Uniform Civil Code.'
"It is pertinent you cannot have a minority having all the rights when the majority does not, sometime you will have a backlash that you will not be able to handle," she further said while delivering her speech.
"The importance of Babasaheb has not been given his space till very recently and it is very important that such leaders should be made a part of even our school education. Babasaheb has become even more relevant today because of gender-based discrimination," Pandit added.
She further said that no God is a Brahmin and that "the highest is a Kshatriya."
"Anthropologically, scientifically, please look at the origins of our Gods. No God is a Brahmin. The highest is a Kshatriya. Lord Shiva must be a Scheduled Caste or a Scheduled Tribe. Because he sits in a cemetery with a snake… they have given him very little clothes also to wear. I don’t think Brahmins can sit in the cemetery," she said, as per The Indian Express.
"So if you see, clearly, the Gods anthropologically do not come from the upper caste. Including Lakshmi, Shakti, all the gods. Or if you take Jagannath, very much a tribal. So, why are we still continuing with this discrimination, which is very, very unhuman," Pandit added.
Pandit also spoke about the recent death of a nine-year-old Dalit boy in Rajasthan, who was beaten by his teacher for allegedly touching an "upper caste" water-pot.
(With inputs from PTI and The Indian Express.)
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