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Make them laugh: India鈥檚 Dalit comics challenge caste, one joke at a time

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Qadri Inzamam
Dalit stand-up comedian Manjeet Sarkar performing at a cafe in Bengaluru, India, on Sept. 10, 2022. 鈥淏eing on the stage gives me a sense of liberty and equality,鈥 says the comedian, who uses humor to challenge the Hindu caste system.

Late one recent Saturday night, stand-up comedian Manjeet Sarkar walked up to a makeshift podium inside a jampacked cafe in the posh city of Bengaluru. Mr. Sarkar is a Dalit, a community regarded as 鈥渦ntouchable鈥 by upper-caste Hindus. The audience welcomes him with loud applause, and once everyone settles in, Mr. Sarkar cracks his first one-liner: 鈥淚f anyone does not laugh at my jokes, I touch them.鈥澛

The crowd loves it.

The quip takes aim at the Hindu caste system, a rigid, centuries-old hierarchy that places Dalits like him on the lowest possible tier, below Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaishyas, and Shudras. Old laws called for their physical and social segregation, and although the practice of 鈥渦ntouchability鈥 has been outlawed in modern India, anti-Dalit violence and stigma across the country.聽

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Comedy can be a tool to talk about the taboo. In India, a growing number of Dalit stand-ups are opening up about caste and demanding equality 鈥 onstage and off.

For another half-hour, Mr. Sarkar makes a largely upper-caste audience laugh at jokes about the discrimination Dalits face and the classism that exists in elite Indian circles.聽

He is one of a small but growing number of Dalit comedians breaking into India鈥檚 Brahmin-dominated comedy scene. Onstage, they鈥檙e finding that examining caste through humor not only makes for better comedy, but is also personally empowering.聽

鈥淚 can convey my thoughts without thinking twice whether I will be mob-lynched or beaten up by someone,鈥 says Mr. Sarkar. 鈥淏eing on the stage gives me a sense of liberty and equality.鈥

Caste can be funny

The culture of independent stand-up comedy emerged in India in the early 2010s, fueled by the rise of YouTube and influenced by comedians in Britain, Canada, and the United States. Back then, only upper-caste people could afford to work unpaid shows and open mics, and even nowadays, when there鈥檚 more money to be made, that鈥檚 who dominates the comedy circuit.

Madhavi Shivaprasad, an independent researcher based in Bengaluru who has also published a on caste and stand-up comedy in India, says that like other art forms, Indian stand-up has historically been very exclusivist. While many upper-caste comedians identify as feminists and progressive, they 鈥渄o not acknowledge the caste barrier they are responsible for putting up鈥 in the industry, she says.

In her paper, Ms. Shivaprasad argues that comedians have a special responsibility to challenge castism, writing that 鈥渄anger lies in the possibility that discriminatory attitudes get sanctioned and reinforced, particularly through the guise of humour, where 鈥榥othing is serious anyway.鈥欌

Until recently, few comedians in India have been willing to do that. But when Mr. Sarkar looked overseas, he saw comic legends like Kevin Hart, Jordan Peele, Bernie Mac, and Eddie Murphy criticizing racism.

In America, Black comedians 鈥渢alk about how their people faced generational oppression. That intrigued me,鈥 says Mr. Sarkar, who鈥檚 been performing stand-up for five years now. 鈥淚 realized comedy is an art form where you can talk about things which are taboo.鈥

Mr. Sarkar鈥檚 jokes are rooted in his lived experiences as a Dalit growing up in a tribal Naxalite area in eastern India. During the show, Mr. Sarkar talks about how untouchability was normalized in his home village. He recalls how in his childhood he was yelled at by an upper-caste woman for drinking from a public hand pump. The woman later washed the hand pump with Gangajal 鈥 the sacred water of the Ganges 鈥 to purify it.

鈥淭hen I touched the Gangajal itself, and she had to purify the Gangajal with Gangajal,鈥 Mr. Sarkar tells the audience, eliciting another burst of laughter.

People come up to Mr. Sarkar after most shows and ask him to 鈥渢one down the anti-caste jokes,鈥 but not at this one.

After Mr. Sarkar leaves the stage, audience member Pranjal Das comments that he and his sibling didn鈥檛 know Mr. Sarkar was a Dalit going into the show, but they enjoyed his set nonetheless. 鈥淚 was shocked to hear a few things he said,鈥 Mr. Das adds.聽

That鈥檚 one of Mr. Sarkar鈥檚 favorite parts of this job 鈥 shocking the audience members out of their comfort zone, forcing them to think about caste from a new perspective.聽

鈥淚n most cities, the audiences are privileged and upper caste. 鈥 When they laugh at my jokes, they are in a dilemma whether they should laugh or feel guilty,鈥 Mr. Sarkar says.聽

Finding authenticity onstage

Not every Dalit comic leans into their caste identity. For some, the first instinct is to veer away from that topic.

Courtesy of Ankur Tangade
Dalit stand-up comedian Ankur Tangade began including her identity in her performances this year. 鈥淲e are here to tell people that you cannot ignore us and that we are equal,鈥 she says.

Ankur Tangade, a stand-up comedian and social activist who travels frequently to perform around India, has only started integrating her caste identity into her comedy this year.聽

She used to stick to subjects that were familiar to upper-caste audiences. 鈥淚 thought connecting to the audience was important, and being a Dalit and having such content would not be relatable,鈥 she says.聽

But recently, her perspective shifted. She realized she could make a better mark for herself and create more useful comedy, if she let her audience get to know her. Ms. Tangade gradually started talking about being queer and a Dalit in her shows, and now she frequently pulls from her life experiences, like when a former partner had 鈥渂acked out鈥 once he learned she was a Dalit. 鈥淗is parents were OK with anyone but a Muslim or Dalit girl,鈥 she says with a chuckle.聽

Ms. Tangade says she鈥檚 trying to raise awareness about discrimination, and hopes her visibility as a Dalit comic will help pave the way for more equality in the entertainment industry and beyond. 鈥淲e are here to tell people that you cannot ignore us and that we are equal,鈥 she says. 鈥淓veryone talks about their own life, but no one talks about minorities.鈥

The growing number of Dalit comics gives Ms. Shivaprasad, the researcher, hope for India鈥檚 comedy scene. Dalit comics have gone viral online for poking fun at caste-related issues, and some comedy shows now market all-Dalit lineups. 鈥淭here are people and groups that do anti-caste and feminist comedy,鈥 she says, 鈥渨hich is different than the way mainstream comedians perform.鈥

Still, having more openly Dalit comedians doesn鈥檛 always translate to more opportunities.聽

Ms. Tangade recalls an instance when a production house she had worked for chose to sign an upper-caste performer despite having a dozen Dalit artists to pick from. Only later did she learn that all the people in positions of power at that company were upper caste themselves.聽

鈥淧eople want to help their own,鈥 she says. 鈥淒alits don鈥檛 have anyone to pull them up. As a Dalit, you have to carve your way up.鈥

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