Empathy: Bhimrao Ambedkar
Empathy is not just a soft stirring of the heart at
the sight of another’s suffering. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar showed that it is the
courage to feel deeply, understand honestly, and above all, act decisively.
Born in a caste of so-called
untouchables, Ambedkar experienced humiliation every moment of his life. He was
made to sit apart in classrooms, refused water by those who believed that his
touch would defile it, and reminded constantly of his ‘place’ in a rigid social
hierarchy.
Ambedkar grew up and transformed
personal suffering into a profound sensitivity towards the suffering of others.
His life became an answer to a silent question: What does one do with pain?
His answer was: Enlarge it into empathy.
His concept of empathy was, however,
not a soft feeling, but a radical, political, and reconstructive force. It was
a force that led thousands of Dalits, people who were oppressed for centuries
by the brutal caste system, in a peaceful procession to the Chavdar Lake in
1927.
In 1923, the Bombay Legislative
Council passed a resolution allowing untouchables to take water from any public
source. But the upper caste people of Chavdar resisted.
“We are not going to the Chavdar Lake
merely to drink its water,” Ambedkar told his followers whom he led to the lake
four years after the resolution was passed. “We are going to the Lake to assert
that we too are human beings like others.”
We too are human beings
like others. The empathy that underlay Ambedkar’s vision was a revolutionary force
that challenged an age-old social system. Such empathy is certain to cause
social upheavals. The upper caste people of Mahad reacted violently. When the
Dalits left the place, the upper castes performed a “purification” ceremony of
the lake by pouring 108 pots of a mixture of the urine, dung, and milk of cows
into the water. Bizarre are the ways of religion sometimes.
Ambedkar responded to that religious
ritual too. On 25 Dec 1927, Ambedkar, along with his followers, burned the
Manusmriti, the ancient text that provided the ideological basis for caste
discrimination and stipulated the rituals like the one that had been performed
at Mahad.
Ambedkar was a fighter. With empathy.
His vision was radically different from the philosophy of Krishna’s Gita.
Krishna’s
Gita systematically suppresses empathy, according to Ambedkar’s essay, Krishna
and His Gita. Krishna’s intent was to serve a specific social and political
agenda.
Arjuna’s hesitation on the
battlefield is a profound moment of human empathy. Arjuna doesn’t wish to harm
others with whom he feels a shared sense of humanity. Krishna’s counsel
extinguishes that empathy. Krishna uses philosophy as a “noble lie” employed
for the sake of maintaining the status quo of the social order. The Gita’s
doctrine of Svadharma – doing your duty as stipulated by your caste – is
inherently anti-empathetic, in Ambedkar’s view. True empathy requires the
freedom to question and change one’s relationship with others, whereas the Gita
fixes those relationships in a divinely ordained hierarchy.
Ambedkar argues that Krishna’s act of
redefining Arjuna’s empathy as weakness and elevating caste dharma as a noble
virtue with yogic disregard for emotional involvement are all philosophically
troubling. Krishna legitimises harmful actions as long as they are performed in
the name of duty. Empathy faced a thousand deaths on Krishna’s Kurukshetra.
A duty that silences compassion,
forget empathy, ceases to be moral and becomes blind obedience. After the
horrors of the Holocaust came to light, many Nazi officials defended themselves
with a chillingly simple line: “I was only following orders.” In other words,
they were doing their duty, as Krishna advised.
PS. This post is a part
of Blogchatter A2Z Challenge 2026
Previous Posts in this
series
Tomorrow:
Faith – Swami Vivekananda



Congratulations, Tomichan. This piece is A Masterstroke - seeing Dr Ambedkar's vision through the lens of radical empathy, which does not acquisce to the status quo, labelled as Sanatanadharma, forcing Arjun to stretch the bow, against humanity, kith and kin - in the name of Dharma, to defend the Varna Duty of the Kshatriya. We could find echoes of it in the larger than life amplification of Kshatradharma and the politicisation of the Forces, in today's warped political conext. Ambedkerian. Radical Empathy is the software chip of Fraternity, which he privileged, over against and with Equality and Liberty, in the Preamble of We the People and the entire Constitution, inviting the Dwijas, to evoke the same sense of radical empathy in themselves. Fraternity is the operating and operational engine of Social Democracy, without which Political and Economic Democracy do not fructrify.
ReplyDelete"History has been unkind to Ambedkar," as Arundhati Roy wrote in one of her essays. "First it contained him, and then it glorified him. It has made him India's Leader of the Untouchables, the King of the Ghetto. It has hidden away his writings. It has stripped away the radical intellect and the searing insolence."
DeleteI wish people went beyond the hypocritical piety that is woven around the Gita these days and saw reality through the lens held by people like Ambedkar.
There's a term for people with no empathy. Psychopaths.
ReplyDeleteThe Krishna mentioned in the post was not a psychopath but he does merit a lot of psychological probes. He can be a fascinating subject of studies.
Delete