“I weep when I cruise past my village in my BMW. My chauffeur thinks I’m crazy when I ask him to stop the car by a huge tree. I get out and rest in its shade. I give it a hug and even talk to it.”
—Ashok Khade, chairman, Das Offshore Pvt Ltd, Mumbai
The tree Khade stops by falls on the way to
his village Ped in Sangli district in Maharashtra, and is the very place where
his father made a living as a cobbler. Young Khade’s caste marked him out for
exclusion—from the village ground, the well, its water, the temple—almost
everything. Education held the lone hope in this dark abyss, and Khade clutched
firmly at this straw, sweating it out at the Mazgaon docks during the day and
studying for a diploma in mechanical engineering at night. It wasn’t easy; there
were times when he had to live under staircases because he could not afford to
pay the rent. But determination and hard work eventually paid off. Today, Khade
presides over a business empire that is worth Rs 550 crore and has a workforce
of 4,500 people. Das Offshore undertakes construction assignments for offshore
rigs, and also builds skywalks or foot overbridges.
Khade and 30 other
businesspersons, including a woman, are now part of a league of ‘Dalit
crorepatis’, comprising first-generation entrepreneurs who run successful
businesses and give jobs to others. And they haven’t used the ladder of quotas
to get to the top, preferring instead to strike out on their own, cocking a
snook at the cynics who disapprovingly cluck at the very mention of an inclusive
society based on positive discrimination. Propelled by sheer grittiness and
tremendous self-belief, they have arrived at a juncture far removed from their
predecessors and have acquired a clout their forefathers wouldn’t even have
dreamt of. So much so that the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) is trying
to formalise an association with their body, the Dalit Indian Chamber of
Commerce and Industry (DICCI).
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Outlook’s list of 30 Dalit crorepatis (sourced from the DICCI) is far from complete; members of the chamber say the numbers are likely to increase as more entrepreneurs come forward. But what makes each of these success stories that much sweeter is the fact that it has come after years of fighting a system whose very structure is designed to keep Dalits out. Not only that, many of the enterprises are in areas not traditionally open to the community.
As Surinder S. Jodhka of the Indian Institute of Dalit Studies at Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University puts it, “It is a tough struggle in a market where businesses are run on networks and caste lines, and being a Dalit often means no land and virtually no assets. The discrimination is not just on the lines of untouchability, a whole structure of stereotypes is built around them—that they lack the required skills or can’t speak good English—which takes time to work around.” Besides, Jodhka points out, the informal sector is brutal and exploitative, while shrinking avenues of employment in the government sector in the face of liberalisation have meant that the oppressed classes have had to perforce step out and try to forge networks as they rise up in the open market—the very reason DICCI was set up in 2005.
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Married off at the age of 12, Saroj took a loan of Rs 40,000 from Allahabad
Bank to purchase a few sewing machines and employed women to stitch and
embroider garments. But ambition got the better of her and she moved soon enough
into real estate and construction, using that money to buy Kamani Tubes
eventually. The company started small, but today boasts a turnover of Rs 100
crore. Her next project: to buy a helicopter before Diwali!
Did her Dalit background inhibit her in any way? “One
has to move forward,” Saroj says philosophically, adding that the initiative has
come from her side. “Not all Dalits can become businessmen,” notes political
writer Chandra Bhan, “just as not every bania (traditionally traders) is a
businessman. The Dalit crorepatis show how success is possible within the
system.”
Once a business gets going, though, getting loans becomes easier for
expansion and diversification. Devjibhai Makwana from Bhavnagar, Gujarat, found
it difficult to source funds when he tried to set up a unit manufacturing
multi-filament yarn used in fishing nets. But now things have changed, as his
son Nagin Makwana explains. “My father struggled to get a loan, now there is no
dearth of bankers queuing up to offer credit. We have a BMW now and our business
of multi-filament yarn can only look upwards.” Currently, the Makwanas’ Suraj
Filament has a turnover of Rs 300 crore.
Success, however, has not made these Dalit crorepatis turn their
back on where they came from. Instead, they are striving to uplift their
brethren, whether by example or through community service. Since education is
what liberated them from the chains of caste, Saroj, Khade and others have opted
to open schools in their villages. Dr Sushant Meshram, whose father worked as a
waiter in an ordnance factory and who himself went on to become a fellow at the
Johns Hopkins University, is now putting the final touches on a multi-speciality
state-of-the-art hospital in Nagpur which will be open to the public in a
month’s time. “Fortunately, I was a bright student and did well in college. We
are socially backward but we have chosen not to be economically backward,” he
says.
There is also the more celebrated
example of IIM graduate Sharath Babu, who grew up in the slums of Chennai and
whose mother sold idlis for a living. He went on to study at BITS Pilani and
then IIM-A and started the eatery chain Food King four years ago. With his
business yielding an annual turnover of Rs 7 crore now, Sharath decided it was
time to repay the faith people reposed in his abilities. And so he contested the
recent assembly elections in Tamil Nadu. He feels people like him should join
politics to rid it of its bad name.
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Ironically, inclusion is an initiative being taken by some Dalits themselves. IIT Roorkee graduate Harish Bhaskar, who started the Kota tutorials in Agra, takes pride in the fact that almost all castes come to him to gain an entry to the elite IITs. Started 10 years ago, Bhaskar says he is trying hard to persuade members of his community to take education seriously. “Most of them are too scared to look at IITs and IIMs, and there are few people to guide them,” he says.
Not all, however, are hurrying to raise a toast to this group of 30. Some
fear the lobby of Dalit crorepatis might well be gobbled up by big business as
other enterprises have been by an unsentimental market. Others say poverty and
backwardness are still endemic to most castes and not much should be read into
the lavish lifestyle and BMWs of Dalit businesspersons.
Which is not to say that new Dalit entrepreneurs should not be
helped along, and the field be made open to all. Karnataka announced a slew of
policies last year that ranged from a Rs 10 crore budgetary allocation for the
welfare of SC/STs and credit at 4 per cent rate of interest by the state finance
corporation to 40 per cent subsidy on land. Says Baalu of the Karnataka chapter
of small enterprises: “The state can intervene with loans on easy terms of
interest, easy credit and subsidies on land—as are made available for the big
business houses.” Adds professor Y.S. Alone of JNU: “All industrialists thrive
on government money and support. They are opposed to reservations but welcome
tax cuts, subsidised loans and many such government measures which are another
form of reservation.”
Ask the Dalit crorepatis, and they say they don’t see the need for
reservations for their children. Let others not as fortunate as us avail of its
benefits, they say. They are set on consolidating on the gains they have made so
far. And maybe get into Fortune’s list of billionaires. With a firm
named Fortune Constructions, Kamble just might make it
there.
Top 10 Dalit Crorepati Club
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20 Emerging ‘Dalpatis’