Education

‘I Don’t Believe In Caste Because…’: Nitin Gadkari’s Take On Brahmins, Reservation

By News18,Shankhyaneel Sarkar

Copyright news18

'I Don't Believe In Caste Because...': Nitin Gadkari's Take On Brahmins, Reservation

Union Minister Nitin Gadkari said at a Nagpur event that he does not believe in caste, stressing, “No human is greater because of caste, religion or language, but only because of their qualities.”
“I tell them that no human is greater because of caste, religion or language, but only because of their qualities,” he said. “I often joke that the biggest favour God has done for me is that I was not given reservation.”
Gadkari was speaking at the Golden Jubilee celebrations of the Halba Samaj Mahasangh in Nagpur, where he also said he thanks God for not having received reservation benefits.
The remarks come at a time when Maharashtra is witnessing renewed agitations over reservation and quotas.
The senior BJP leader also underlined the role of entrepreneurship in community upliftment. Nagpur Today in a separate report said that Gadkari urged those who are economically well-off and highly educated to support people in need.
“It is the responsibility of those who are educationally and economically well-off to help others in their community progress,” he said, according to the report.
Gadkari has made similar observations in the past as well. While addressing the Charmakar Seva Sangh in Nagpur in September last year, he said youths of the community should become job givers rather than job seekers. At an event to felicitate meritorious students from the Charmakar community, traditionally engaged in leather work, he highlighted that “education is the key to prosperity.”
At that time too, he remarked that being ineligible for reservation pushed him towards entrepreneurship. “I often say that not being able to get reservation benefit was the biggest favour God did to me. Else, I would have joined as a clerk in some bank or become a class 1 officer at best. Very early in my life I had told my parents that I will become a job giver, not a job seeker. I eventually entered business and now employ 15,000 people,” he said, according to a Times of India report.