More Muslims studying, but can't find jobs

27 Oct 2008, Subodh Varma, TNN

NEW DELHI: It's crunch time for Faidul, and Nazma, his mother, is worried. He 
is in class 10, and the sole hope of his parents for a better future. The 
three-member family lives in a small house in Pahari Imli, Old Delhi. They earn 
a meagre living making necklaces at home, from material provided by 
contractors. Faidul is an indifferent student, and Nazma is desperately looking 
around for somebody to help him. They can't afford a regular tuition. 

"Once he clears 12th, he will get a job. Otherwise, he will have to spend his 
life like us," she says. But Faidul has to help in the necklace work at home 
apart from going to school. Between them, Nazma and Faidul symbolize the hope 
and the shackles of a large section of the Muslim community. 

Like other under-privileged sections in India, Muslims have taken to education 
in a big way, hoping to escape from poverty. Attendance of Muslim children in 
schools has increased much more rapidly than other religious communities. This 
rush to school is even more marked in rural areas and among girls. 

But is better education leading to better jobs? It is too early to say, but 
trends of employment still show much lower opportunities, even for educated 
Muslims. In rural areas, while 7% of Hindu graduates were unemployed, among 
Muslims this was more than double at 15%. In urban areas too the unemployment 
rate among Muslim graduates was double that of Hindus. 

A comparison of data collected by the National Sample Survey Organisation 
(NSSO) in 1999-2000 and in 2004-05 shows that in rural areas, attendance of 
Muslim boys (5-14 years old) increased by nearly 12% compared to about 9% for 
other communities, and for Muslim girls it increased by 16% compared to about 
13% for others. As a result, 76% of Muslim boys and 71% of girls were attending 
school in 2004-05, quite close to boys (84%) and girls (71%) from the Hindu 
community. 

In urban areas, the pace of increase in school attendance in the 5-14 years age 
group was practically the same for Muslim boys compared to other communities, 
while it was almost double, at 12%, for Muslim girls compared to Hindu girls. 
Here too, the gap is fast closing, except that the pressure of finding work 
appears to be telling on the boys more, costing them their education. A 
similar, though somewhat muted, trend is visible in the older age group of 
15-19 years. 

Attendance rates among Muslim boys have increased at nearly twice the rate as 
Hindu boys, both in urban and in rural areas. The participation of Muslim girls 
too has increased at a faster pace than their Hindu counterparts in this age 
group. The highest increases have been shown in the Christian community. 

In the 20-24 years age group, there has been a very rapid increase in 
attendance in higher education centers among Muslim youth, except for men in 
urban areas, where there has been a decline in attendance. In the urban areas, 
the gap between the two communities becomes deep in the older age groups, 
primarily because of steep fall in attendance of Muslim males. Like Faidul, 
they are under pressure to earn as well as learn. 

But, does better education lead to better jobs? The NSSO reports reveal a mixed 
picture. Between 1993-94 and 2004-05 the proportion of employed who had studied 
beyond secondary level increased much more for Hindus than for Muslims. In 
rural areas the increase was about 6% for Hindus, but only by about 3% for 
Muslims among men, and around 3% for women from both communities. In urban 
areas, among men, the increase was about 7% for Hindus compared to 5% for 
Muslims while among women it was 8% for Hindus and 6% for Muslims. 

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/More_Muslims_studying_but_cant_find_jobs/articleshow/3643935.cms

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