Well, life for a bihari is a lot different from an average Indian. In a
state which has highest percentage of population below poverty line and
lowest rate of literacy, you can't expect life to be great. There are social
issues of caste, political issues of crime and violence and economic issues
of poverty and unemployment. How can you expect someone to be happy? Still,
the ones who live in Bihar do not complain. Either biharis have too limited
expectations or due to lack of exposure to the outside world, they just do
not know what they deserve or can wish for. But, why am I referring to
Biharis as 'they'. I should use the term 'we'. For years, I was as much a
Bihari as anyone else living in those geographies. I spent my first sixteen
years growing there. The city that my parents had moved in the 70's became a
part of a newly formed state Jharkhand while their native village still fell
in the boundaries of Bihar. Suddenly the feeling of being Bihari started
coming in.



The local Jharkhandis, who had now settled in the cities, started looking at
us as outsiders and wanted to drive us back to Bihar. There was huge hue and
cry over the issue of Domicile and I remember how an angry crowd of
"original" Jharkhandis chopped off the right hand of the government official
who was issuing Domicile certificates of Jharkhand to Biharis who had
resided for a long period in Jharkhand. I was too shocked to try for a
Jharkhand domicile and requested my dad to get me a Bihar domicile. I was
told, since I was born in Jharkhand and my education had happened in
Jharkhand, my candidature for a Bihar domicile was less eligible than for a
Jharkhand one.



Frustrated, I gave up, deciding not to appear in any selection process which
demanded a domicile certificate. Fortunately, India doesn't has single
citizenship and hence I was free to practice my education and career
anywhere in the country. I appeared for the national exam of entrance to
IIT's and got admitted in Kanpur (Uttar Pradesh). Kanpur, for all practical
purposes, appeared an extended version of Bihar. Similar accent, same food,
similar climate and the same ethos of the Ganges. I felt I was safe to be in
a place which was almost Bihar. I was soon to be proved wrong. The IIT had
students from all across the country, mostly north Indians. There were
people from UP, Delhi and Punjab. They unanimously hated Biharis. Hate, I
think, might be an overrated word. They just didn't like the fact that
Biharis also studied in the same place. As if Biharis had a stink or a color
that would irritate. Soon I was to find some more biharis who felt disgusted
at such behaviour from friends. Interestingly, my roommate happened to be
from Khagaria and my close friends from Dhanbad and Patna mostly. We got
along well and decided to teach a lesson to all who ridiculed Biharis.



The moment we heard someone saying anything against Bihar or Biharis, we
would treat the culprit with a solid GPL (G*** pe laat). In months time, we
were recognized and though not loved, we ensured that no one spoke ill of
Biharis in front of us. In fact, many of the guys we GPL'ed later became our
close friends and soon our group had friends from Uttaranchal, UP and
Andhra. But those were college days....



During my IIT days itself, my sister finished her school and had to go for
her grads. My parents preferred Pune than Delhi as Delhi was already known
for its ridicule to Biharis and its forward culture that my parents didn't
approve of. Pune was an unknown territory and we expected a good welcome.
Reaching pune, we realized that there were many students from
Bihar/Jharkhand (for all practical purposes, the public still treats both
states as same) especially from the cities of Jamshedpur and Bokaro. My
sister soon got comfortable. Her initial roommates were from Bokaro or
Jamshedpur and later she became friends with a few Marathis as well. One of
my school friends who was also studying in Pune, was to marry a Marathi
later on. My parents were relieved that Pune was a good decision. Later,
though we heard about what a frustrated politician tried to do. He is named
Raj Thackery. Still, my sister was sheilded from the political actions as
Pune didn't get as heated as Mumbai.



My parents were happy for her eductaional achievements but a pain of not
being able to give good education to kids at home lingered on their minds.
They soon realized that there kids had left Bihar for long, probably for
ever. In the job, I travelled to various places including Mumbai and Delhi
along with other 10-15 cities of the country. Finally I stopped at Gurgaon.
By now I had already fallen in love with a girl I had met at IIT. She came
to IIT to do her Phd after her graduation and post graduation from Delhi
University. She was a true Delhi, born and brought up in Lajpat Nagar, did
her schooling from Lodhi Road, shopping from South Ex and spent her weekend
evenings at India Gate. Her parents had settled in Delhi for quite some
time, though they belonged to the undivided Punjab of pre-independence. Many
of her relatives still had roots in the Indian part of Punjab. She is a nice
girl and liked me for weird reasons. I was always aware that we not only
belonged to different castes and social classes but also to different
states. I soon came to know about her feelings about Biharis and they were
similar to what every other Delhite feels. Within months, she realized that
Bihar wasn't as bad as potrayed in the media, or even if it was, it could
not have an impact on all Biharis.



The relationship has been going fine for years with normal ups and downs
that any relationship goes through. We realized that if we want to get this
relationship to the next level, we need to get our parents involved. I was
the first to inform my parents. I had reactions worse than anticipated. A
Bihari Maithil Brahmin and a Delhite Punjabi Arya Samaji girl, who still
goes to Gurudwaras. Sounded an impossible proposition. Well, in the midst of
those difficult times, we decided to tell her parents too. The reaction was
similar. Only that the impact of the word Bihari was more than I had
anticipated. I had thought that the difference of cultures would be
difficult to be accepted by parents. But I was shocked that probably a UP or
a Kashmiri or a Marathi would not have mattered so much, but a Bihari - the
state of rickshaw-pullers, thieves, maid-servants, sweepers and coolies. Oh
no. This is next to impossible.



I don't know how I should react. Humiliated, yes I feel, but sorry, no. I am
not sorry of being a Bihari and though not proud of my state because of its
backwardness, I still am in love with the place I was born in. I also have a
culture, a cuisine, traditions and festivities. Above all, I too have
values. I am not sure what will happen to a relationship and probably that
is not the objective of writing this post. Relationship is a personal matter
and so shall it remain. But the tag of being Bihari is a bigger issue and
will keep haunting me for long. I am not sure if I can convey my feelings
through words, but an incident in history speaks for the feelings I would be
having now.



It was in the early 20th century that an Indian was thrown out of train at a
railway station in South Africa, because he dared to sit in the first class
despite being an Indian - a coolie. The man, named Mohandas, remembered that
pain for long and made sure the next generation doesn't go through it.



Chandra Mohan Thakur

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