FOUNDING AND VISION OF NATIONAL OBC INTELLECTUAL FORUM
The National OBC Intellectual Forum was conceived at a time when backward class communities, despite decades of reservation policies and legal protections, continued to face structural disadvantages in education, employment, and political participation. Its founder, Alla Rama Krishna, recognized a crucial gap: while political organizations and agitation-based groups were abundant, there existed no coherent platform that brought together the intellectual resources of the OBC community — academics, legal professionals, scientists, journalists, bureaucrats, and social scientists — to systematically analyze, document, and advocate for BC interests.
The vision of the Forum, as articulated from its inception, rests on a fundamental belief: that lasting social change for backward classes cannot be achieved through agitation alone. It requires intellectual engagement — research, documentation, litigation, and participation in policy-making. The Forum was built on the conviction that OBC communities possess extraordinary intellectual capital, historically suppressed, which when organized and directed, can transform the social and political landscape of India.
The Forum was formally established in Hyderabad, Telangana, and quickly expanded its reach to other states with significant OBC populations. Its founding brought together professionals, activists, academics, and community leaders under a common banner, with a stated commitment to the constitutional values of equality, social justice, and fraternity.
Central to the Forum's founding ideology is the principle that knowledge is power. By creating a network of OBC intellectuals, the organization aimed not only to give voice to marginalized communities but to ensure that this voice was informed, articulate, and strategically deployed in the corridors of power — in Parliament, in courts, in universities, and in the media.