Seattle Becomes First City in the U.S. to Ban Caste Discrimination

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Seattle became the first city to ban discrimination based on caste after a Tuesday vote by the city council.

The move to add caste to the city’s anti-discrimination laws was spearheaded by Kshama Sawant, a member of the Socialist Alternative party and an Indian American. Dating back 3,000 years, the caste system rigidly divides Hindu society into a hierarchy based on birth or descent.

In recent years, calls to address caste have grown among some members of South Asian diaspora communities. The city council approved the measure in a 6-1 vote. However, a debate is now brewing over whether such measures unfairly target a single community.

“Caste discrimination is a widespread and increasingly grave contributor to workplace discrimination and bias faced by South Asian Americans and other immigrants—not just in other countries, but here in Seattle and across the United States,” explained Sawant in a petition circulated before the vote.

“The fight against caste discrimination is deeply connected to the fight against all forms of oppression, and against the economic exploitation of the vast majority of people under capitalism,” Sawant continued.

Sawant has previously talked about her experiences being raised in an upper-caste Hindu Brahmin household in India. Though caste discrimination has been banned there since 1948, discrimination against the lowest rung on the hierarchy — the Dalits, or untouchables — continues.

“We’ve heard hundreds of gut-wrenching stories over the last few weeks showing us that caste discrimination is very real in Seattle,” Sawant said, according to an Associated Press report.

The idea to add caste to anti-discrimination policies is not novel. Seattle’s vote has been preceded by the introduction of similar bans on U.S. college campuses.

Council member Sara Nelson, who cast the lone dissenting vote, called the ordinance “a reckless, harmful solution to a problem for which we have no data or research.”

Opponents have also emerged within the Hindu American community who argue that such bans are not necessary and actively single out those they’re designed to protect.

In a statement, the Washington D.C.-based Hindu American Foundation (HAF) praised the intention of the move, but agreed with Nelson that there was little evidence of widespread caste discrimination.

“Seattle has taken a dangerous misstep here, institutionalizing bias against all residents of Indian and South Asian origin, all in the name of preventing bias,” HAF managing director Samir Kalra explained.

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