![]() There was hardly any other community in the world which suffered such ignominy. On the other hand, the Dalits of India were not only poverty-stricken but they were deprived of their political, economic, religious and educational rights, courtesy religious diktats. They had no handicaps vis a vis politics and religion. The Marxist proletariats were weak only in the economic sense. History cast this responsibility on the shoulders of Ambedkar and he discharged it with remarkable success. Marx could not come out with a formulation to combat birth-based exploitation and inequality. In comparison, in America, 70 per cent Whites exploited the Blacks. In India, the exploiters constitute 15 per cent of the populace while the exploited are the remaining 85 per cent. While in the capitalist system, a handful of capitalists exploit the masses, in casteism and apartheid, an entire section of the society exploits another section. And that was why the Indian Dalits were deprived of economic, political and religious power for thousands of years. That was why women and Blacks were treated worse than animals. The truth is that since the dawn of civilization, birth-related inequality was and continues to be prevalent in many countries of the world. He had no understanding of the inequality and exploitation that is rooted in birth. The inequality which Marx sought to eliminate had its roots in science and technology. But those who consider Marx as the foremost philosopher of the world do not probe his limitations. They believe that Marx was the first to evolve a scientific solution to the problem of inequality. ![]() A majority of the people place Marx in the top slot. Among such great personalities were Buddha, Mazdak, Aristotle, Seneca, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Voltaire, Thomas Paine, William Godwin, Proust, Charles Hall, Robert Owen, Marx, Lincoln, Mao and Ambedkar. And these persons not only dreamt of such a society but they put everything they had at stake to build such a society. The ‘persons who changed the world’ were great men who worked for creating a society that would be free from exploitation and persecution a society in which all men would be equal a society which would have no place for economic inequalities. Be that as it may, the question is whether Ambedkar was a person who “changed the world” only among the alumni of Columbia or in the world as whole. Here, it would be pertinent to mention that Columbia University has produced 95 Nobel laureates but it preferred to put Ambedkar above many of them. The card listed the names of 40 persons of the world who had studied in the varsity and who had “given important contribution to bringing about effective changes in the world”. Those who still harbour doubts about Ambedkar being the greatest Indian should better have a look at the cards issued by the School of International and Public Affairs of Columbia University in the US to mark 250 years of the varsity in the year 2004. But there were many who could not digest the naming of Ambedkar as the greatest Indian and they voiced their disagreement publicly. George Tillman Jr.The Ambedkarites were overjoyed by the outcome of the survey conducted in 21 states by OUTLOOK magazine in conjunction with CNN-IBN and History-18 channels to mark the 66th anniversary of Indian Independence. Peter Teschner – Editor ( Borat, Dodgeball, Charlie's Angels)Īnnie Tighe MFA ’02 – Emmy-winning editor ( Top Chef, Project Runway) Janusz Kaminski ’87 – Two-time Academy Award-winning cinematographer ( Saving Private Ryan, Schindler’s List, Lincoln, The Post)ĭeclan Quinn ’79 – Cinematographer ( Rachel Getting Married, Leaving Las Vegas, In America, Hot Tub Time Machine 2)Ĭhristian Sprenger '07 – Cinematographer ( Atlanta, GLOW, Baskets, Last Man on Earth)īob Teitel ’90 – Producer ( Men of Honor, Barbershop, Notorious) Jeffrey Jur ’76 – Emmy award-winning cinematographer ( Bessie, Dirty Dancing, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, Colony, Masters of Sex, The Mentalist, Dexter) Michael Goi ’80 – Cinematographer ( American Horror Story, Glee, The Mentalist) Mauro Fiore ’87 – Academy Award-winning cinematographer ( Avatar) Humanities, History and Social Sciences. ![]()
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