Skip to main content

Anti-Hindu, Hindu phobic? Why Google talk to mark Dalit Equality Month got cancelled

 By Subhash Gatade 
On May 9, 1916, a young BR Ambedkar presented a paper at Colombia University in the United States titled Castes in India: Their Mechanism, Genesis and Development. He referred to caste as a “local problem, but one capable of much wider mischief”. He wrote, “...if Hindus migrate to other regions on earth, Indian caste would become a world problem.”
More than a century later, as one of the biggest corporations, Google, battles allegations of caste discrimination in the United States, the predictive value of Ambedkar’s words is evident. Recently, Google News cancelled a scheduled talk by Thenmozhi Soundararajan, the founder and executive director of Equality Labs, after many Google employees (of Indian origin or Indians) opposed it. The discussion was supposed to mark Dalit Equality Month, celebrated every April to mark the month Ambedkar, the first law minister of independent India and its leading anti-caste activist, was born. Equality Labs is a leading non-profit group in the United States that advocates Dalit rights. According to its 2016 survey, a third of Hindu students in the United States reported experiencing caste discrimination.
Thenmozhi was subjected to an organised campaign led by a section of Google employees, who called her “Hindu-phobic” and “anti-Hindu”. The name-calling went on in emails her opponents sent to company bosses and documents they posted on a mailing list that thousands of Indian employees access.
Instances of caste discrimination are rising in the 1.5 million-strong Indian community, which likes to call itself a “model minority” but has fewer than 1.5% Dalits, according to an oft-cited 2003 study by the Center for the Advanced Study of India in the University of Pennsylvania. It would seem that American companies can no longer gloss over these representation, inclusion, and exclusion concerns. However, the Google employees who campaigned against Thenmozhi’s talk do not seem to notice the winds of change.
Thenmozhi and her organisation consistently raised a voice against the exclusion and discrimination of Dalits in the United States. She has brought attention to fissures within the Indian Hindu community in a struggle to correct the iniquities that caste breeds. During the Black Lives Matter protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd, tech companies were encouraged to organise conversations on caste with their employees. At the time, Thenmozhi was invited to speak at meetings organised by Microsoft, Salesforce, Airbnb, Netflix and Adobe. But this, too, does not seem to matter to Google employees who opposed her talk. Those who did care, such as Tanuja Gupta, who organised the discussion by Thenmozhi, have had to resign.
The Google episode is not the first time Hindutva organisations and conservative Hindu groups have locked horns with Equality Labs and other defenders of Dalit rights in the United States. Bringing up the discrimination Dalit Americans face in places of work or trying to reform school curriculums to reflect the reality of caste has always sparked their anger.
However, the efforts of anti-caste and anti-discriminations groups that take up the cause of Indian Americans are bearing fruit. Of late, The Washington Post noted critically of Google that the diaspora is fuelling the “Hindu nationalist movement”, which has “arrived inside Google”. Other American media houses are slowly upping their awareness of caste and consequent discrimination issues. Besides, corporate giants in the United States are being called out for their exclusion of Dalit employees. Such attention puts a spanner in the dream of the Hindu right to project pan-Hindu unity at the cost of those systematically excluded by caste.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai—who is of Indian origin and presumably well-versed in what caste discrimination entails—has remained silent as developments in his company unfold. Thenmozhi had directly approached him to intervene as employees campaigned against her but to no effect. Pichai’s silence is galling, for the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movements had prompted leading tech companies, including Google, to address race issues. Even at the time, Pichai and Google were criticised for ignoring caste and embracing BLM for optics.
Now, Pichai’s failure to take a stand on caste sends the impression that Google News has no qualms about bias -- other than raising questions about his socio-political position.
Some years ago, a Dalit employee at Cisco Systems, another tech giant, had raised discrimination by two senior managers, members of dominant castes in the traditional Hindu hierarchy. According to the employee, the company had unearthed evidence of being denied a raise and facing exclusion from priority tasks, which the allegedly company suppressed. Dalit and human rights groups campaigned for the employee and a civil rights case was registered in California. The case is being heard in the courts.
An adverse verdict in this matter would hurt Cisco’s image as an employer and undoubtedly involve compensating the aggrieved employee, other than action against the two “upper” caste managers. However, it would also set a much-needed legal precedent in the United States against caste-based discrimination. Further, a verdict favouring the employee would prove the vacuousness of the “Hindu unity” cause that the Hindutva groups are peddling. It would be a tremendous relief to the employees silently battling caste without institutional assistance or acknowledgement.
The present case has polarised organisations such as Equality Labs and the Ambedkar International Centre, a civil rights body in the United States, against the Hindutva or Hindu groups, who wish to dilute such complaints or distract from the issues they raise.
Caste discrimination is rising in 1.5 million-strong Indian diaspora, which calls itself model minority, but has just 1.5% Dalits
However, it is an opportune moment to legitimise anti-caste movements and stop stigmatising those like Thenmozhi who struggle for Dalit dignity in the United States. Silencing discussion around caste or name-calling those opening up conversations about it is akin to white supremacists opposing critical race theory in American schools and colleges. 
They call it reopening old wounds that will hurt the psyche of young students and ensured such classes are excluded from the curriculum in many States: just as the Hindu right opposes the inclusion of caste in school courses. However, caste and race are live issues and far from settled. In California, where the school curriculum is reviewed every ten years, the possibility that caste would be taught and discussed is genuine.
In 2005, there was a commotion over caste as petitions from human rights groups and counter-petitions from Hindutva supremacist groups struggled for its inclusion and exclusion (respectively). The rights groups won that debate, sort of, but by 2015, the discourse peddled by so-called spiritual-cultural organisations started to gain the upper hand. 
Conservative Hindu American Foundation (HAF), a non-profit with roots in the World Hindu Council America, pushed through the dilution or erasure of caste from syllabi. It also watered down the significant role caste plays in Hindu societies and erased Dalit, Muslim, Sikh and Christian histories in textbooks. 
However, earlier this year, caste was included in the entire California State system as a ground in its non-discrimination policy. This means that the biggest public university system in the United States, with 500,000-odd students on 23 campuses, now will address caste bias. Indeed, the California State school syllabus is not as egalitarian as it can be. It sanitises caste concerns, but such changes show that the resistance is also growing.
What is happening in the United States is a battle of ideas, where substantive issues of justice and equality are battling phoney notions of unity that push social fissures under the carpet. This battle is opening up new vistas to discuss and end caste discrimination decisively.
---
Distributed by Dalit Media Watch, this article was first published in Newsclick

Comments

TRENDING

From plagiarism to proxy exams: Galgotias and systemic failure in education

By Sandeep Pandey*   Shock is being expressed at Galgotias University being found presenting a Chinese-made robotic dog and a South Korean-made soccer-playing drone as its own creations at the recently held India AI Impact Summit 2026, a global event in New Delhi. Earlier, a UGC-listed journal had published a paper from the university titled “Corona Virus Killed by Sound Vibrations Produced by Thali or Ghanti: A Potential Hypothesis,” which became the subject of widespread ridicule. Following the robotic dog controversy coming to light, the university has withdrawn the paper. These incidents are symptoms of deeper problems afflicting the Indian education system in general. Galgotias merely bit off more than it could chew.

Covishield controversy: How India ignored a warning voice during the pandemic

Dr Amitav Banerjee, MD *  It is a matter of pride for us that a person of Indian origin, presently Director of National Institute of Health, USA, is poised to take over one of the most powerful roles in public health. Professor Jay Bhattacharya, an Indian origin physician and a health economist, from Stanford University, USA, will be assuming the appointment of acting head of the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), USA. Bhattacharya would be leading two apex institutions in the field of public health which not only shape American health policies but act as bellwether globally.

The 'glass cliff' at Galgotias: How a university’s AI crisis became a gendered blame game

By Mohd. Ziyaullah Khan*  “She was not aware of the technical origins of the product and in her enthusiasm of being on camera, gave factually incorrect information.” These were the words used in the official press release by Galgotias University following the controversy at the AI Impact Summit in Delhi. The statement came across as defensive, petty, and deeply insensitive.

Farewell to Saleem Samad: A life devoted to fearless journalism

By Nava Thakuria*  Heartbreaking news arrived from Dhaka as the vibrant city lost one of its most active and committed citizens with the passing of journalist, author and progressive Bangladeshi national Saleem Samad. A gentleman who always had issues to discuss with anyone, anywhere and at any time, he passed away on 22 February 2026 while undergoing cancer treatment at Dhaka Medical College Hospital. He was 74. 

Growth without justice: The politics of wealth and the economics of hunger

By Vikas Meshram*  In modern history, few periods have displayed such a grotesque and contradictory picture of wealth as the present. On one side, a handful of individuals accumulate in a single year more wealth than the annual income of entire nations. On the other, nearly every fourth person in the world goes to bed hungry or half-fed.

From ancient wisdom to modern nationhood: The Indian story

By Syed Osman Sher  South of the Himalayas lies a triangular stretch of land, spreading about 2,000 miles in each direction—a world of rare magic. It has fired the imagination of wanderers, settlers, raiders, traders, conquerors, and colonizers. They entered this country bringing with them new ethnicities, cultures, customs, religions, and languages.

Thali, COVID and academic credibility: All about the 2020 'pseudoscientific' Galgotias paper

By Jag Jivan*    The first page image of the paper "Corona Virus Killed by Sound Vibrations Produced by Thali or Ghanti: A Potential Hypothesis" published in the Journal of Molecular Pharmaceuticals and Regulatory Affairs , Vol. 2, Issue 2 (2020), has gone viral on social media in the wake of the controversy surrounding a Chinese robot presented by the Galgotias University as its original product at the just-concluded AI summit in Delhi . The resurfacing of the 2020 publication, authored by  Dharmendra Kumar , Galgotias University, has reignited debate over academic standards and scientific credibility.

Conversion laws and national identity: A Jesuit response response to the Hindutva narrative

By Rajiv Shah  A recent book, " Luminous Footprints: The Christian Impact on India ", authored by two Jesuit scholars, Dr. Lancy Lobo and Dr. Denzil Fernandes , seeks to counter the current dominant narrative on Indian Christians , which equates evangelisation with conversion, and education, health and the social services provided by Christians as meant to lure -- even force -- vulnerable sections into Christianity.

Sergei Vasilyevich Gerasimov, the artist who survived Stalin's cultural purges

By Harsh Thakor*  Sergei Vasilyevich Gerasimov (September 14, 1885 – April 20, 1964) was a Soviet artist, professor, academician, and teacher. His work was posthumously awarded the Lenin Prize, the highest artistic honour of the USSR. His paintings traced the development of socialist realism in the visual arts while retaining qualities drawn from impressionism. Gerasimov reconciled a lyrical approach to nature with the demands of Soviet socialist ideology.