By
Aliza Noor
04 Oct 2023
Over 90
years after the first caste census was carried out by British in 1931, Bihar
released the much-awaited caste survey which not only makes it clear that the
OBCs and EBCs comprise 63% of the population but it also gives the proportions
of Muslim castes and sub-castes in the state.
In 1931,
Muslims comprised 14.6% of the state's total population. The share of Muslims
has gone up by just 3% in over nearly a century, now standing at 17.7% of the
state's total population of 13 crore.
The Quint
spoke with Ali Anwar Ansari, Founder and National President of 'Pasmanda Muslim
Mahaz' and a former MP of Rajya Sabha who had served for two terms. His fight
to bring about a caste census to reveal realities of underprivileged Muslims is
over a decade old.
He had
first raised the cause as a special mention on 18 December 2009 in Parliament.
However, he claims no one supported him then. With the support of Mulayam Singh
Yadav, Lalu Prasad and BJP’s Gopinath Munde, it was raised in Lok Sabha in 2010
but it never materialised.
Now that
the Bihar's caste survey is out, what does it mean for Muslims?
Would
Bihar's caste survey create a churn in the Muslim community as caste-based data
has been given within Muslims as well?
Yes, it
will create a huge impact hopefully. It is the first caste-based survey since
1931 in which we have got a clear picture of Muslims and OBCs in a state. Till
now, the common misconception has always been that Muslims are a monolithic and
homogeneous group, and through everything, whether it’s about survey,
representation or population, there’s only been a 'Hindu vs Muslim' narrative.
It has to
be seen with a socio-economic lens as well, now we have the social aspect with
the Bihar caste survey, we need the economic one — how much land, property,
assets people own. Then we will know the overall condition of all caste groups.
"Most
important benefit is that caste census is the only way to diffuse communal
polarisation. Our slogan has always been: Sampradaik Dhurvikaran Ka Yahi
Ilaaj, Jati Jangarana Ke Liye Hojao Tayyar," said Ansari.
Are there
any myths or misconceptions that the Bihar caste survey has debunked?
Out of the
17.7% the population is of Muslims in the state, the survey has also revealed
that the ‘Raftaar’ or the rate at which Muslim population has been
growing, barely around 0.8%. This, as compared to Hindus’ which has declined
but overall, the rate is stable and slow. This totally punctures the BJP’s
often-peddled narrative that Muslim population is growing at a faster rate and
will overtake Hindu population.
Even in the
General category, there are of course, Syed, Pathan, Sheikhs in Muslims and
Brahmins, Rajput and Kayastha, but the percentage of Sheikhs (3.82%) is higher
than Brahmins (3.66%). Even the top most backward groups are those of Muslims.
Will
Bihar's state survey finally spur the reservation and representation debate in the
right direction?
Yes, it
must because Muslims too, have never really gotten fair representation. MPs
belonging to only one or two castes have been elected. Pasmandas as a whole
community has not been acknowledged.
And
Pasmanda means ‘those who were left behind,’ it includes downtrodden Muslims
and Dalits. Pasmanda denotes class, not caste.
Rahul
Gandhi recently remarked that “Out of 90 secretaries of the central government,
only 3 are OBC, who handle only 5% of India's budget.” All Muslims who have
been left behind, whether it’s in policy-making, government or the private
sector must be given their due representation.
Does the
Bihar’s state survey invariably also open the debate on the 50% ceiling for
reservations?
The survey
will lead to questioning the 50% ceiling of reservation as well as the 27% of
reservation for OBC, EBC and Muslims were included in it but now we know of
their proportions to the state population.
Each class
will get its due, especially political representation, parties will also have
to either include them in leadership or as office bearers. “Humaari Naukri
Mein Humaare Aadmi Badhenge.”
Moreover,
only 3% of the Brahmins are everywhere, dominating all sectors, institutions,
jobs, media, academia, etc.
The fight
should be to consider caste and religion as a secondary thought. This survey is
even “two steps ahead” of Mandal report as Mandal did not include EBCs.
Source: 'Bihar Caste Census Breaks the Myth
That Muslims Are a Monolith': Ali Anwar
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-politics/bihar-caste-census-myth-muslims-monolith-pasmanda/d/130833
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