The Caste System In The Modern World

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Caste System Throughout the history of the world there have been many ways that a civilization has justified their social class. A social class as defined by the dictionary states that a social class is a division of a society based on social and economic status. Religion is one of the many factors that lies on the heart of a civilization when justifying a social class. One of the world’s elite and well followed religion is Hinduism. Hinduism is one of the oldest religion in the world. The oldest religions has one of the oldest social classes which is called the caste system. The caste system has affected the lives of millions of people around the world from the ancient times to the modern and changing world in India and other Hindu nations today. A Caste system is a social structure that is determined by …show more content…

They are the lowest members of the caste system. In ancient times,they were not allowed to even come to the cities or village of the other caste during day time or even walk the same streets where a man of other caste walked. As far as a social discrimination go even the shadows of Dalits was considered impure. In Hindu believes that a lowest caste came to earth to serve their punishment from the other previous life. Even in today’s modern world the Dalits are not even welcomed to an upper caste home as I have learned from the society that I grew up on. Hindus believe that whatever a Dalit touches becomes a impure as well. The untouchables are like the low working class in modern United states they mostly lived on fringes of society, unknow and uncared from other social classes and caste. Lavanya Sankaran of The New York Post writes that the caste system is locked firmly into a place of birth and a rigid structure of social rules. Sankaran is trying to referee this to how the low caste members have disadvantage over the social orders than the those in upper caste

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