Untouchable, also called Dalit, officially Listed Caste, already Harijan, in classical Indian culture, the ancient name for any segment of a broad range of low-caste Hindu societies and any person outside the caste system. The implementation of any inability rising out of Untouchability shall be an assault condemned in accordance with law.
The question is asking to complete the said passage and base on my research and further investigation, I would say that the answer would be that the Ram tells the landlord that he is an untouchable. I hope you are satisfied with my answer and feel free to ask for more if you have questions and further clarifications
Ashima is a character from the novel ''The Namesake'' and she experienced changes that were defining her life trough the story. The novel is following her perspective between thirty-two years elapse where the readers can follow her growing from a young girl and mother to a great personality woman. In the beginning, she was devastated because of her father's death and she was feeling like she cannot raise her children, Gogol and Sonia. She wanted to give them more but she couldn't.
Her path was leading her to the independence that she needed even though her path was difficult and specific because <u>she experiences the death of her father and her husband and she also experiences separation of her family because they were separated in four different countries at one time</u>. At the end of the novel, she is realizing the importance of life in America for her and her family since she became a resident of the US and a resident of Calcutta.