Dear  Friends,
please find below a statement of Jamia Teachers' Solidarity Association,
signed by several teachers of the University on the issue of minority status
to Jamia. This was released in Feb 2010 and questioned the dominant
discourse being put forth. The statement raises several issues about the
demand for minority status--all of which have been left unaddressed by the
votaries of the minority status. These questions remain relevant, indeed
need to be responded to even more urgently now.
**
*Jamia Millia Islamia and Minority Status: Unresolved issues*

The moot question facing us today in Jamia is how to best ensure Muslim
representation in our institution. This sentiment is entirely legitimate
given the fact that Muslims lag behind in higher education, as established
by the Sachar Committee Report. The debate remains whether minority status
for Jamia is the best recourse to realize this. The crucial thing to discuss
is if minority interests will be served better by granting minority status
or by retaining Jamia as its founders visualized—that is, a university that
will have a stake in the national mainstream. Jamia was envisaged as a space
of higher learning and critical thinking against the insularity and
isolationism of all kinds. The demand for minority status vitiates that
glorious history of Jamia as a secular inclusive space.

Over years, Jamia has emerged as a centre for academic excellence, thus
enhancing the value of the university’s degrees, and making our students
genuinely competitive once they leave the university. The tag of minority
status will deprive them of this edge and render them unfit for wider market
and opportunities. If there is a diverse student population in Jamia, it is
because Jamia’s stature has grown in stature to be able to attract a larger
pool of talent. If today, we turn inwards, the worst sufferers will be our
Muslim students. In the current scenario, where Muslim youth already stand
stigmatized and suspect, degree from a ‘minority’ institution will mar,
rather than enhance their chances of success in life and career. Jamia has
the potential to emerge as an indisputable centre of cultural engagement
between different communities—as indeed its founders envisioned it—and as it
has emerged over the years. A turn towards ‘minority’ status will rob it of
its historical role in bridging the cultural gap between communities and its
vanguard role in breaking stereotypical assumptions about Muslims.

Rather than isolationism, accepting OBC reservations will lead to manifold
increase in the resources and infrastructure as well as expansion in the
intake of students and teaching positions. The increase in the number of
seats will ultimately benefit students from the minority community.
Furthermore, the OBC issue has emerged out of a democratic churning and we
can ill afford to retreat in our shell, aloof from forging solidarities with
the democratic aspirations of other social groups.

Those who think that the minority status will promote the interests of the
minority community will only be advocating a shallow minorityism at the cost
of securing genuine minority rights.

Those in favour of minority status argue that the OBC reservations will
nullify Jamia’s internal reservation, and will in the long run, negatively
influence the intake of Muslim students in the university. A case is being
made out as though Muslim and OBCs are two mutually exclusive and opposed
categories, and as if Muslims are a monolithic and homogenous group with no
internal hierarchies. This is patently incorrect and academically unsound. A
large proportion of the Muslim population is OBC. It stood at 40.7 per cent
according to the 61st round of NSSO (2004-5), (in Bihar and UP, the
proportion of OBC Muslim population is much higher, standing at 63.4 per
cent 64 per cent respectively).



While the Sachar Committee report has clearly established that the
educational level and representation of Muslims as a whole is low, the
condition of Muslim OBCs are worse off than those of general Muslims. A
larger percentage of Muslim OBCs fall in the law income category than the
general Muslims. (p. 213, SCR).   The monthly per capita expenditure (mpce)
among general Muslims is Rs 833 while among the Muslim OBCs, it stands at Rs
689. Illiteracy among general Muslims is 33.3 per cent; while among the OBCs
it is 38; in higher education, the proportion of graduates and post
graduates is 2.4 per cent for general Muslims and 1.9 per cent for Muslim
OBCs.



*Are we to ignore the material, social and educational differentials within
the community and allow the most marginalized and deprived groups (such as
the Saifis, Julahas, Dhunias, Kunjras, and Hajjams included in the OBC list)
who could have probably benefited from the OBC reservation? *



While the Right-wing has created a mythic discourse of ‘Muslim appeasement’;
the supposedly secular polity has also consistently evaded the issue of
genuine Muslim empowerment and distributive justice, happy only to engage
with cultural questions with a largely conservative leadership. This is best
exemplified in the State’s approach towards addressing the educational needs
of the Muslims. The 15-point Programme launched amidst much fanfare by the
present government to alleviate the educational backwardness of the Muslims
cannot see beyond madarsas (accessed only by 3-4 per cent Muslim children).
Even here, according to the Ministry of Minority Affairs report, a mere Rs.
49.50 crore was allocated under the scheme to cover 14539 Madarsa teachers
across 14 states in 2008-09. This programme remains silent about higher
education, ignoring SCR’s recommendation to open new centres of higher
learning in Muslim populated areas, and the typical strategy has been to
hand out certificates of minority status (according to the Ministry of HRD’s
own press release dated 29 Jan 2008, so far 1000 institutions have thus been
deemed minority institutions).

 *The granting of minority status to Jamia would in one stroke allow the
Indian government, without spending even a single extra paisa, to claim a
surge in its budgetary allocation for minority education*. The resources
which would have come to Jamia as a central university, would instantly be
subsumed under the 15 point progarmme.



Any genuine struggle for Muslim empowerment and rights should be to demand
and ensure the presence of Muslims in all institutions of higher education
rather than creating and limiting their presence in separate educational
enclaves. This is a demand that the state would only be too ready to grant,
allowing it to wash its hands off the more crucial and difficult task of
making higher education across the board more accessible to Muslims. We
caution the government not to perpetuate the politics of minorityism while
abandoning the cause of minority rights.





* Sd/-*



Prof. (Retd.) Shamim Hanafi,

Prof. Azra Razzack,

Dr. Farah Farooqi,

Prof. M.S. Bhatt,

Dr. Manisha Sethi,

Adeel Mehdi,

Tanweer Fazal,

Dr. M. Ghazi Shahnawaz,

Dr. Arshad Alam,

Ahmed Sohaib,

Dr. Arvinder Ansari,

Dr. Kulwinder Kaur,

Dr. Sarwat Ali,

Prof. Farida Khan,

Prof. Anwar Alam,

Prof. Arif Ali,

Prof. Inayat Ziadi,

Prof. Sunita Zaidi,

Prof. Durga Prasad Gupta,

Mukul Kesavan,

Prof. Sheena Jain,

Prof. Madhu Khanna,

Dr. Nuzhat Kazmi,

Dr. P.K. Basant,

Dr. Ajay Behera,

Dr. Gomati Bodara,

Dr. Pradyuman,

Dr. Firdaus,

Mujibur Rehman,

Harpreet Kaur,

Dr. Narendra Kumar,

Dr. Samrendra Padmanabh,

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