Dr. Bhimrao Ambedkar was born in 1891 in India to an untouchable family and faced extensive discrimination based on his caste. He became a prominent political leader and pushed to end untouchability and the caste system in India. He was the chief architect of the Indian Constitution and advocated for rights of Dalits, women and religious freedom. Finding no place for his people within Hinduism, in 1956 Ambedkar publicly converted to Buddhism along with hundreds of thousands of followers as he saw it as a religion that promoted equality.