Muslims -- India's new 'untouchables'
The condition of the country's Muslims has deteriorated, and the world has 
overlooked the nation's problems.
By Asra Q. Nomani 
December 1, 2008 
The news of the attacks in Mumbai eerily took me back to a quiet morning two 
years ago when I sat in Room 721 of the Taj Mahal Palace & Tower hotel, reading 
the morning newspaper, fearing just the kind of violence that has now exploded 
in the city of my birth. The headlines recounted how the socioeconomic 
condition of the people of my ancestry, Muslims in India, had fallen below that 
of the Hindu caste traditionally called "untouchables," according to a 
government report.

"Muslims are India's new untouchables," I said sadly to my mother, in the room 
with me. "India is going to explode if it doesn't take care of them." Now, 
indeed, alas it has. And shattered in the process is the myth of India's 
thriving secular democracy.

Mumbai police said over the weekend that the only gunman they'd captured during 
the attacks -- which left nearly 200 dead and more than 300 wounded -- claimed 
to belong to a Pakistani militant group. But even if the trouble was imported, 
the violence will most certainly turn a spotlight of suspicion on Muslims in 
India. Already, my relatives are hunkered down for a sectarian backlash they 
expect from anti-terrorism agencies, police and angry Hindu fundamentalists.

India, long championed as a model of pluralism, used to be an example of how 
Muslims can coexist and thrive even as a minority population. My extended 
family prospered as part of an educated, middle class. My parents, who settled 
in the United States in the 1960s when my father pursued a doctorate at Rutgers 
University, were part of India's successful diaspora. I love India, and on that 
trip, I wanted to show it off to my son, Shibli, then age 4.

But on that visit, across India from Mumbai to the southern state of Tamil Nadu 
and north to Lucknow, the hub of Muslim culture, I was deeply saddened. Talking 
to vegetable vendors, artisans and businessmen, I heard about how the condition 
of Muslims had deteriorated. They had become largely disenfranchised, poor, 
jobless and uneducated. Their tales echoed those I'd heard on previous trips, 
when my extended family recounted their humiliating experiences with 
bureaucratic, housing, job and educational discrimination.


Indeed, the government report I read about in the newspapers two years ago 
acknowledged that Muslims in India had become "backward." "Fearing for their 
security," the report said, "Muslims are increasingly resorting to living in 
ghettos around the country." Branding of Muslims as anti-national, terrorists 
and agents of Pakistan "has a depressing effect on their psyche," the report 
said, noting Muslims live in "a sense of despair and suspicion."

According to the report, produced by a committee led by a former Indian chief 
justice, Rajender Sachar, Muslims were now worse off than the Dalit caste, or 
those called untouchables. Some 52% of Muslim men were unemployed, compared 
with 47% of Dalit men. Among Muslim women, 91% were unemployed, compared with 
77% of Dalit women. Almost half of Muslims over the age of 46 couldn't read or 
write. While making up 11% of the population, Muslims accounted for 40% of 
India's prison population. Meanwhile, they held less than 5% of government jobs.

The Sachar committee report recommended creating a commission to remedy the 
systemic discrimination and promote affirmative-action programs. So far, very 
few of the recommendations have been put in place.

Since reading the report, I have feared that Islamic militancy would be born 
out of such despair. Even if last week's terrorist plot was hatched outside 
India, a cycle of sectarian violence could break out in the country and push 
some disenfranchised Muslim youth to join militant groups using hot-button 
issues like Israel and Kashmir as inspiration.

What has irked me these last years is how the world has glossed over India's 
problems. In 2006, for instance, former U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen, 
whose Cohen Group invests heavily in India, said the U.S. and India were 
"perfect partners" because of their "multiethnic and secular democracies." When 
I asked to interview Cohen about the socioeconomic condition of Muslims, his 
public relations staffer said that conversation was too "in the weeds." But, to 
me, the condition of Muslims needs frank and open discussion if there is to be 
any hope of stemming Islamic radicalism and realizing true secular democracy in 
the country.

India's 150 million Muslims represent the second-largest Muslim population in 
the world, smaller only than Indonesia's 190 million Muslims. That is just 
bigger than Pakistan's 140 million Muslims or the entire population of Arab 
Muslims, which numbers about 140 million. U.S. intelligence reports continually 
warn that economic, social and political discontent are catalysts for 
radicalism, so we would be naive to continue to ignore this potential threat to 
the national security of not just India but the United States.

Throughout my 2006 journey, I found the idea of India's potential for danger 
unavoidable. On one leg, my son tucked safely in bed with my mother in our Taj 
hotel room, I went out to watch the filming of "A Mighty Heart," the movie 
about the murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl by Muslim 
militants in Pakistan. When the location scouts needed to replicate the 
treacherous streets of Karachi's militant Islamist culture, they didn't have to 
go far. They found the perfect spot in a poor Muslim neighborhood of Mumbai.

Asra Q. Nomani is the author of "Standing Alone: An American Woman's Struggle 
for the Soul of Islam."

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-nomani1-2008dec01,0,4752.story

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