Abstract

India has a unique and complex religious history, with faith and spirituality playing an important role in everyday life. Hinduism is the majority religion, and there are many minority religions. India also has a complicated class system and entrenched gender structures. Disability is another important identity. Many of these factors determine people’s experiences of social inclusion or exclusion. This paper explores how these intersecting identities influence the experience of inequality and marginalisation, with a particular focus on people with disabilities from minority religious backgrounds. A participatory qualitative methodology was employed in Chennai, to gather case studies that describe in-depth experiences of participants. Our findings show that many factors that make up a person’s identity intersect in India and impact how someone is included or excluded by society, with religious minority affiliation, caste, disability status, and gender all having the potential to add layers of marginalisation. These various identity factors, and how individuals and society react to them, impact on how people experience their social existence. Identity factors that form the basis for discrimination can be either visible or invisible, and discrimination may be explicit or implicit. Despite various legal and human rights frameworks at the national and international level that aim to prevent marginalisation, discrimination based on these factors is still prevalent in India. While some tokenistic interventions and schemes are in place to overcome marginalisation, such initiatives often only focus on one factor of identity, rather than considering intersecting factors. People with disabilities continue to experience exclusion in all aspects of their lives. Discrimination can exist both between, as well as within, religious communities, and is particularly prevalent in formal environments. Caste-based exclusion continues to be a major problem in India. The current socioeconomic environment and political climate can be seen to perpetuate marginalisation based on these factors. However, when people are included in society, regardless of belonging to a religious minority, having a disability, or being a certain caste, the impact on their life can be very positive.

Highlights

  • 15 per cent of the world’s population experience some form of disability (WHO and World Bank 2011)

  • Our findings show that many factors that make up a person’s identity intersect in India and impact how someone is included or excluded by society, with religious minority affiliation, caste, disability status, and gender all having the potential to add layers of marginalisation

  • Participant 14 mentioned that ‘we have been denied rented houses when we revealed that we are Christians’, they feel this is tied into the association of Christians with Dalits and their disability and ‘in the belief that we will not be able to pay rents in time’

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Summary

Introduction

15 per cent of the world’s population experience some form of disability (WHO and World Bank 2011). Religion has various aspects and layers, including faith and spirituality, institutions, behaviour, and practice It can represent a dynamic and complex amalgamation of beliefs (Tadros and Sabates-Wheeler 2020). Religion and religious affiliation are factors that, along with others (such as ethnicity, gender, and social class), can intersect with disability to impact on the social inclusion of people with disabilities in their communities and result in inequalities being experienced (Higashida 2019). With this framing in mind, this paper seeks to explore how religious identities of people with disabilities intersect with other identities to influence experiences of inequality and social marginalisation. There is a complicated class and caste system, as well as entrenched gender structures and norms

Methodology
River of life
Narrative interview
Ethics
Limitations
Disability experience in India
Religious minority experience in India
Dalit experience in India
Exclusion/inclusion as a result of people’s religious identity
Exclusion/inclusion as a result of people’s disability
Exclusion/inclusion as a result of caste
Intersectional inequalities
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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