NEW DELHI — Members of the 'South Delhi Literary & Mindfulness Circle' announced Wednesday that they have officially added three new Dalit memoirs to their April Kindle queue, a move experts believe will finally dismantle the structural foundations of the Varna system by early next month.

The initiative, timed to coincide with Dalit History Month, involves purchasing high-quality hardback editions of works by Shailaja Paik and B.R. Ambedkar, placing them prominently on coffee tables, and nodding solemnly while reading the back-cover blurbs.

"Last year we read a very moving account of systemic exclusion," said Circle president Aditi Sharma, while checking the caste-coded surnames of prospective tenants for her basement apartment. "It was so eye-opening. We all agreed that discrimination is terrible. After we finish the 2025 list, we’re fairly certain the concept of 'purity and pollution' will just naturally evaporate from the national consciousness."

Sources confirm that the annual ritual of recommending 'essential' anti-caste books has become a vital pillar of the Indian spring, allowing the nation’s professional classes to achieve social justice through a rigorous process of adding items to a cart. The current list, featured prominently across major media platforms, is expected to generate record-breaking levels of 'awareness,' a resource that has increased by 400% since 2013 while the actual percentage of inter-caste marriages remains stagnant at roughly 5%.

"The progress is undeniable," said an official from the Ministry of Cultural Aesthetics, speaking on condition of anonymity. "Ten years ago, people didn't even know which books to ignore. Now, thanks to these listicles, every educated citizen knows exactly which 400-page academic texts they are currently 'getting around to' reading."

Publishing executives expressed optimism that the surge in Dalit History Month sales would provide the necessary revenue to fund their next high-budget biography of a 19th-century Brahmin reformer.

At press time, the Reading Circle had reached Chapter 2 of Ambedkar’s 'Annihilation of Caste,' though a brief pause was called to discuss whether the author’s tone was perhaps 'a bit too divisive' for a Sunday brunch setting.