*This is by Aakar Patel, one of the Directors at Hill Road Media. I've read
the piece, I am not sure whether to laugh or cry.....*


Indian society functions as a whole. Observed in part, it’s dysfunctional.
Let me explain. Without Gujaratis and Rajasthanis, India wouldn’t have an
economy. Delete Tata/Birla/Ambani/Mittal/Premji and India begins to look
like Bangladesh. The rest of the country - Bengal, Bihar, Orissa, Kashmir,
UP, etc., will have lots of culture, but little else.

That such a tiny community monopolizes the ability to raise and manage
capital is fright

ening. However, it needs to be understood as part of a whole. There are
things missing in Gujarat and Rajasthan as well, whole chunks, without
which those states wouldn’t function properly.

Gujarat’s contribution to the Armed Forces, for instance, is instructive.
In 2009, The Indian Express reported, Gujarat sent its highest ever number
of recruits to the Indian Army. How many? A total of 719, in an army of
over a million soldiers. Mind you, this was after a big awareness campaign.
In the preceding two years the number of Gujarati recruits was 230. Gujarat
has 55 million people but it depends on the rest of India to defend it.

Gujarat also needs another thing, though some might disagree. As a
mercantile culture, Gujarati literature is quite poor. The shelves of
Crossword stores in Ahmedabad (Surat has none) are lined with volumes of
Bengali novels in translation. I wonder how many Gujarati novels have
Bengali translations. Probably none, but Gujarat needs the literature of
others and I only discovered Camus through his Gujarati translations.

Gujaratis speak no English and though Azim Premji and Ratan Tata run
billion-dollar information technology businesses, they are dependent on
south Indians to staff their companies. This sort of dependency is
everywhere we look in India.

Mumbai’s two dominant communities, Marathi and Gujarati, are incidental to
Bollywood. Bollywood is properly the product of Punjab and the high culture
of north India’s Hindustani speakers. Why is this so? Punjab’s peasants
have an extroverted physical culture (writer Santosh Desai observed that
bhangra was the only Indian dance form which exposed the armpit), which is
unusual on the subcontinent. This culture is the basis and the setting for
entertainment, and the reason why Bollywood migrates so easily to Pakistan.
However, Punjabis and north Indians need the liberal environment that only
Mumbai can give for their talents to flower. That’s why Pakistan doesn’t
really have a film industry, though there is plenty of talent. Partition
hurt Punjabi Muslims, because they are perfect for our film industry.

Why is Pakistan such a mess? Some would blame Islam, but they’d be wrong.
The problem isn’t religion at all. The problem is lack of caste balance.
There aren’t enough traders to press for restraint and there are too many
peasants. Too many people concerned about national honour, and not enough
people concerned about national economy. Put simply: Pakistan has too many
Punjabis and not enough Gujaratis. The majority of Pakistanis live in
Punjab, but well over 50% of government revenue comes from just one city in
Sindh: Karachi. Why? That is where the Gujarati is.

Gujaratis are less than 1% of Pakistan’s population, but they dominate its
economy because they are from trading communities. Colgate-Palmolive in
Pakistan is run by the Lakhani Memons, the Dawood group is run by Memons
from Bantva in Saurashtra (the great Abdus Sattar Edhi is also a Memon from
Bantva). The Adamjee group, advertisers on BBC, are from Gujarat’s Jetpur
village and founded Muslim Commercial Bank. The Khoja businessman Sadruddin
Hashwani owns hotels including Islamabad’s bombed-out Marriott. Khojas
founded Habib Bank, whose boards are familiar to Indians who watched
cricket on television in the 1980s. The Habibs also manufacture Toyota cars
through Indus Motors. Pakistan's only beer is made by Murree Brewery, owned
by a Parsi family, the Bhandaras. Also owned by Parsis is Karachi’s Avari
Hotels.

People talk of the difference between Karachi and Lahore. I find that the
rational view in Pakistani newspapers is put forward by letter-writers from
Karachi. Often they have names like Gheewala, a Sunni Vohra name (same
caste as Deoband’s rector from Surat, Ghulam Vastanvi), or Parekh, also a
Surat name.

Today, capital is fleeing Pakistan because of terrorism and poor
governance. To convince investors that things will get better, the
Pakistani government has appointed as Minister for Investment a Gujarati -
Saleem Mandviwalla. The Mandviwallas own Pakistan’s multiplexes, which now
show Bollywood. The place where Gujaratis dominate totally, as they do also
in India, is Pakistan’s capital market. Going through the list of members
of the Karachi Stock Exchange (http://www.kse.com.pk/) this becomes clear.
However, few Pakistanis will understand this, because as Muslims, they have
little knowledge of caste.

The Gujarati tries to hold up the Pakistani economy, but the peasant
Punjabi (Jat) runs over his effort with his militant stupidity. Why cannot
the Pakistani Punjabi also think like a trader? Simple. He’s not converted
from the mercantile castes. There are some Khatris, like Najam Sethi, South
Asia’s best editor, but they are frustrated because few other Pakistanis
think like them. Are they an intellectual minority? Yes, but that is
because they are a minority by caste. One great community of Pakistani
Punjabi Khatris is called Chinioti. They are excellent at doing business
but in a martial society, they are the butt of jokes. I once heard Zia
Mohyeddin tell a funny story about the cowardice of Chiniotis and I thought
of how differently a Gujarati would look at the same story.

Can the individual escape caste? Of course he can. What defines behaviour
in this sense is not genes but culture. Baniyas are brought up to seek
compromise, to keep emotion in check, to identify value, to understand
capital, to persist. This does not come automatically, and it is wrong to
believe otherwise.

My teacher, the most learned writer in journalism, is from the Burki tribe
of Waziristan. It isn’t the place you would look for intellectuals, but he
cannot be defined by his tribe. It takes intellectual effort, however, to
distance one’s self from culture and upbringing. This is especially true in
a society that is collective. And yet examples of those who defy caste and
community are all around us.

There aren’t many Sardarji jokes you can crack about Manmohan Singh, an
austere and measured intellectual. I believe it is not possible to
understand India without feeling caste. That’s why I respect the individual
who breaks away, and he is everywhere you look. Our army chiefs immediately
after independence, were drawn from warrior castes. The Coorgs Cariappa and
Thimayya, and Saurashtra’s Jadeja (from a warrior caste Gujaratis call
“Bapu”). But in a few decades we had Brahmins (Sharma and Joshi) and even
traders (Malhotra, Malik and Kapoor). We can learn from each other since we
live with each other.

However horrible a place it may be, India is balanced out by all of us:
North Indians, South Indians, East Indians andWwest Indians. We are a unit,
and the unit works.





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