outcaste - definição. O que é outcaste. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é outcaste - definição

STATUS OF CERTAIN SOCIAL GROUPS CONFINED TO MENIAL AND DESPISED JOBS
Outcaste; Untouchable (social system); Un-touchability
  • A.D.]])

outcaste         
¦ noun (in Hindu society) a person who has no caste or a person who is expelled from their caste.
¦ verb cause (someone) to lose their caste.
Untouchability         
Untouchability is a form of social institution that legitimises and enforces practices that are discriminatory, humiliating, exclusionary and exploitative against people belonging to certain social groups. Although comparable forms of discrimination are found all over the world, untouchability involving the caste system is largely unique to South Asia.
Dalit         
  • Punjab]] had the highest proportion of its population as SC (around 32%), while India's island territories and two northeastern states had approximately zero.<ref name=2011Census/>
  • ''A school of untouchables near Bangalore'', by [[Lady Ottoline Morrell]]
  • p=133}} and Mazhabi Sikhs and Valmikis prayer together.
  • Dalit leaders at Bahujan Samaj Party Head office
  • [[Bahujan Samaj Party]] (BSP) is an Indian Dalit party.
  • page=133}}</ref> and one can indirectly inquire about a person's [[caste]] based upon which [[gurdwara]] the person attends.
MARGINALIZED COMMUNITIES IN THE SOUTH ASIAN CASTE SYSTEM
Harijan; Achuta; Dalits; Dalit (outcast); Harijans; Dahlit; Untouchable caste; Hari (outcaste); Hindu Untouchables; Harijan (outcaste); Dalit (outcaste); Untouchable castes; Dalit Socialism; Nepali Dalit; Ati-shudra; Dalit leaders; Discrimination against Dalits; Untouchable (caste); Untouchables (caste); Untouchables (India); Untouchable (India); Dalit conflict; Downtrodden caste; Acchoot; Hari jan; Oppressed caste; Bahujan music; Dalit people
['d?:l?t]
¦ noun (in the traditional Indian caste system) a member of the lowest caste. See also untouchable, scheduled caste.
Origin
via Hindi from Sanskrit dalita 'oppressed'.

Wikipédia

Untouchability

Untouchability is a form of social institution that legitimises and enforces practices that are discriminatory, humiliating, exclusionary and exploitative against people belonging to certain social groups. Although comparable forms of discrimination are found all over the world, untouchability involving the caste system is largely unique to South Asia.

The term is most commonly associated with treatment of the Dalit communities in the Indian subcontinent who were considered "polluting". The term has also been used to refer to other groups, including the Burakumin of Japan, the Baekjeong of Korea, and the Ragyabpa of Tibet, as well as the Romani people and Cagot in Europe, and the Al-Akhdam in Yemen Traditionally, the groups characterized as untouchable were those whose occupations and habits of life involved ritually "polluting" activities, such as pursuing a career based on killing (e.g. fishermen) or engaging in common contact with others' feces or sweat (e.g. manual scavengers, sweepers and washermen).

According to the religious Hindu text, untouchables were not considered a part of the varna system. Therefore, they were not treated like the savarnas (Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaishyas and Shudras).

Due to many caste-based discriminations in Nepal, the government of Nepal legally abolished the caste-system and criminalized any caste-based discrimination, including "untouchability" in 1963.

Untouchability has been outlawed in India, Nepal and Pakistan. However, "untouchability" has not been legally defined. The origin of untouchability and its historicity are still debated. B. R. Ambedkar believed that untouchability has existed at least as far back as 400 AD. A recent study of a sample of households in India concludes that "Notwithstanding the likelihood of under-reporting of the practice of untouchability, 70 percent of the population reported not indulging in this practice. This is an encouraging sign."

Exemplos do corpo de texto para outcaste
1. I’ll remain stuck in this shelter like an outcaste.
2. He was born even lower than low–caste, into the nightmarish limbo of the outcaste, once known pejoratively as the Untouchables.
3. Such language was not unfamiliar to Narayanan, who never escaped the sniggering whispers of certain higher–caste government officials who resented his outclassing them, even if he could never outcaste them.
4. Permission to reprint/republish "It is the story of my family, but at another level it is a story about the enormous social changes of the past '0 years and how it has liberated minds," he says of the book that was published in India as "Outcaste÷ A Memoir" in 2003.
5. As young Mohan stood unmoved the community chief swore at him pronouncing his order that Mohan was henceforth an outcaste and anyone helping him or seeing him off at the dock would be fined a rupee and a quarter, says Gandhis grandson, Rajmohan in his new book Mohandas, A True Story of a Man his People and an Empire.