The Unconquered People: The Liberation of an Oppressed Caste

by John O'Brien

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This book explores the history and ethnography of the Chandala of classical literature, now known as Punjabi Christians. Mapping their history of conquest and religiously-endorsed degradation, it discusses their subversive counter-narrative through genealogies, wedding songs, litanies and epic poetry; with its defiant proclamation of identity. Rites of passage disclose an unreconstructed patriarchalism, where ritualized sexual joking is a form of equality creation.
Eclecticism in their religious sensibilities, indicates how superficial adherence to the externals of major religions, was a survival tactic. Their hidden religion and exclusion from Hindu dharm, shows why they never saw themselves as 'Hindus.' It traces how one group, Mazhabi Sikhs, became a model of
social mobility, how their economic world was transformed in the Chenab Canal Colonies and how a new identity began with the founding of Christian villages. It analyses their embracing of Christianity as a 'Tactics of Consumption,' noting the factors that contributed to a turn towards Catholicism. It observes their growing exclusion due to the Islamization of Pakistan. Cautioning against the suppression of the 'memory' of oppression, it argues that seeing themselves as a lineage of belief and
praxis, can give meaning to their on-going historical struggle.
  • ISBN10 0199063540
  • ISBN13 9780199063543
  • Publish Date 28 June 2012
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 16 February 2022
  • Publish Country PK
  • Imprint OUP Pakistan
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 350
  • Language English