[The following report, while highlighting the sorry state of Muslims in
West Bengal, does not really give any details of comparison across time,
except for the bland assertion that things have not changed.

To begin with, the Muslim population in West Bengal is overwhelmingly
rural, as the report indicates. The Urdu speaking Muslims, one would
assume, are mostly urban - labourers working in various industries
migrating mostly from Bihar, and UP.

All said and done, it is widely acknowledged that West Bengal under the
Left rule had seen very thoroughgoing land reforms - distribution of small
parcels of land among the landless and security of tenure for the
sharecroppers, quite unlike most of the rest of India. (Zamindari had
already been abolished under the Congress rule.) And, consequently,
agriculture in West Bengal, in clear contrast with its industrial scenario
of constant decline, had also experienced impressive growth rate.
This was expected to change the lot of the rural poor - cutting across
religious lines, rather palpably, even if not too radically. A radical
change usually comes only the rural poor get educated and migrate to the
cities and find gainful employment. The urban employment scene remaining
understandably pretty dismal, that was obviously not the case here. The
migrants are, again understandably, mostly low paid workers - large
sections in the unorganised sectors.

The causes for the obtaining sorry state of affairs deserve close
attention.]


Bengal's Muslims worse off: study

SUVOJIT BAGCHI

*
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/bengals-muslims-worse-off-study/article6070555.ece?homepage=true
<
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/bengals-muslims-worse-off-study/article6070555.ece?homepage=true
>*

 Report establishes the nature of socio-economic disparities

[image: Poet Sankha Ghosh and Literrateur Nabanita Deb Sen releasing report
on]
Poet Sankha Ghosh and Literrateur Nabanita Deb Sen releasing report on
"Status of Muslims in West Bengal" in Kolkata on Saturday. Photo: Sushanta
Patronobish

A report on the status of Muslims in West Bengal released on Saturday gives
startling information on the socio-economic status of the community. The
report suggests that only 17 per cent of Muslims in the State live in urban
settlements as against the national average of 28 per cent.

The report underscores the fact that the condition of Muslims has not
improved much in the State over the decades. Releasing the report, poet
Sankha Ghosh said such comprehensive research was rarely conducted on
Muslims in the State, and highlighted the need to "act" on such reports. .

It is perhaps the most comprehensive field-level survey on the Muslims of
West Bengal. More than 250 field-level researchers, activists and scholars
came together to survey nearly one-lakh households to produce the 77-page
interim document. Several members of the civil society played a significant
role in getting the project off the ground.

Members of Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen's Pratichi trust and academics with
the Centre for Studies in Social Science joined hands with non-governmental
organisations working among the minorities such as the Social Network for
Assistance to People (SNAP) and Guidance Guild, to publish the report. A
survey was conducted on 97,017 households in 325 villages and 75 urban
wards in 81 developmental blocks and 30 municipal bodies across the
State.The report questions certain accepted myths about the minorities. For
example, the minority politics of West Bengal practised by all mainstream
political parties is largely driven by the idea that Urdu-speaking and
Bengali-speaking Muslims are equal in number in West Bengal. The report
dispels the myth.

"More than 90 per cent of rural Muslims are Bengali-speaking, and only a
tiny section reported Urdu to be their mother tongue," the report said. As
83 per cent of West Bengal's nearly 2.5-crore Muslims live in non-urban
areas, the report concluded that an overwhelming majority of Muslims are
Bengali-speaking in the State.

. The report establishes the nature of socio-economic disparities between
communities. For example, only 0.4 per cent of the surveyed community can
access "socially preferred professions such as medical, legal or
engineering."

Only about 10 per cent of the families surveyed were found to be in
occupations that can be "described as socially coveted," the report said.
Quoting from the report, one of the key researchers and coordinators of the
study, Kumar Rana, said that 52 per cent of the Muslims in Bengal "do not
study beyond primary level." "It is also important to highlight that they
[Muslims] like any other community is not one homogenous whole ... their
problems are diverse, so also the socio-economic factors," he added.

Explaining the methodology of the research, Sabir Ahamed, the other key
researcher, said that the survey would not have been possible without the
active support of "many people." "People actually have spent out of their
pocket to conduct this mammoth survey and complete this report," Mr Ahamed
said.

The final report is expected by the year-end.




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