Missing a dalit messiah
THE WEEK India|September 10, 2023
Thrown out of a first-class train coach by a white man despite possessing a ticket, Mohandas Gandhi resolved to fight the notions of racial supremacy that were prevailing across the globe. The ordinary attorney's struggle metamorphosed into history's most remarkable civil and political struggle that would culminate in the end of the mightiest empire.
R. PRASANNAN
Missing a dalit messiah

Rosa Parks refused to leave her seat for white passengers on an Alabama bus. Her prosecution for disobedience of the American state's segregation laws kindled a landmark litigation and a non-violent movement led by Martin Luther King that led to the establishment of civil rights in the world's mightiest nation.

Attorney Gandhi and seamstress Parks were shamed because of their skin colour that revealed their birth in a particular race. Both fought back in their own ways and prevailed against the mightiest empire and the mightiest nation, even when the racial numbers weren't favouring them. The coloureds in South Africa and the blacks in America didn't constitute even a tenth of those nations' populations then, yet they triumphed.

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