For hundreds of years before the British rule, there had seldom been major 
social disturbances and communal conflicts in Bihar, involving the two 
important religious groups, namely Hindus and Muslims. The reason was simple: a 
strong socio-economic interdependence. Production was organized primarily to 
meet the local needs. The role of market and money was limited mainly to 
facilitating the exchange of goods and services. There were very few needs for 
which people were dependent on the outside world. One of the goods brought from 
outside was salt. Even land rent was paid in produce, i.e., Bhowlee system of 
rent was in vogue. Market was thus, to borrow Karl Polanyi's terminology, 
embedded in the society. As is known, land was not an object of sale and 
purchase, i.e., it was not a commodity. All members of the society, 
irrespective of their castes and religions, were dependent on one another. If 
there was any disturbance, the interests of all including the rulers were to be 
adversely affected.

Another fact to be noted is that the proportion of the descendents of the 
immigrants constituted a very tiny proportion of the total Muslim population in 
Bihar. The local converts were in overwhelming numbers. The conversion to Islam 
was due to a number of factors in which the role of force was seldom 
significant. In conversions, Sufi saints played a major role. The influence of 
Sufism cut across the barriers of religions and castes. To cite just one 
example, in Mehsi town of East Champaran district, the Dargah of Halim Shah is 
revered by both Hindus and Muslims. This shrine predates the establishment of 
Muslim rule over the district. At the entrance is the Samadhi of Mahesh, the 
chief disciple of Halim Shah, who did not convert to Islam and, according to 
popular belief, as per the mandate of Halim Shah, people entering the Dargah 
have to offer floral tributes first to Mahesh. The town is named after him. 
Such shrines are scattered throughout Bihar in dozens. As is common knowledge, 
both the communities took part in each other's religious festivals with great 
devotion and enthusiasm.

The social fabric of the state started weakening after the establishment of the 
British rule, which, in turn, began destroying the existing structure and 
organization of production. Market gradually became disembedded from the 
society and the production for market took strong roots after the introduction 
of commercial crops like poppy, indigo, sugarcane, jute, tobacco etc. and the 
mode of rent payment changed from Bhowlee to Nakadi. Handicrafts decayed or 
were destroyed. The introduction of the Permanent Settlement weakened the 
traditional socio-economic interdependence and the British government, after 
the revolt of 1857, which demonstrated the unity of both the communities 
against the foreign rule, began a conscious policy of sowing the seeds of 
discord between the two. Even then it took a long time for the British to 
achieve its goal. As late as 1917, during the Champaran Satyagrah of Mahatma 
Gandhi, it could not succeed in breaking the unity of the two communities. 
Among the prominent lieutenants of Gandhi were Pir Muhammad Moonis and Sheikh 
Gulab who refused to succumb to the pressures from the British. Gandhi's cook 
Buttuck Mian, though very poor, refused to be bribed into poisoning Gandhi.

The British, however, began achieving success from this time onwards. The first 
major expression of this came in the form of Shahabad communal riots of 1917 
that took a heavy toll of human lives and property. From then onwards, communal 
chasm went on increasing and, even after the partition of the country, it has 
not stopped. The emergence of communal forces and organizations in both the 
religious groupings was actively encouraged by the British and the indigenous 
vested interests. They were provided with ‘sophisticated-looking theories and 
rationalizations' to carry on their divisive activities. Even after more than 
six decades of the end of the British rule, communal divisions are not only 
there but also bursting, off and on, in violent forms. This is simply because 
the ideas and organizations left behind by them have been in tact, nay, getting 
strengthened.

This has been brought forth by Prof. Papiya Ghosh who met her tragic death a 
few years ago at a young age. At the time of her death, she was engaged in a 
serious study as to how and why Bihar's social fabric was damaged by the virus 
of communalism. She had already published a number of research papers that had 
aroused great expectations from her.

The book under review contains ten papers by her, focusing on the rise of 
Muslim separatism, culminating in the partition of the country, and the exodus 
of Bihari Muslims mostly to the newly-created eastern wing of Pakistan. They 
deal, in great details, in the rising tensions and alienations between the two 
communities, leading to large-scale riots during 1946-47, taking heavy toll of 
lives and property. She has described at length the fate of the emigrants 
before and after the creation of the independent state of Bangladesh. They 
could not easily adjust themselves to environment of East Pakistan. Their 
language and culture proved to be insurmountable barriers. As Ms Ghosh has 
explained, most of the Bihari Muslim migrants to East Pakistan were from the 
lower economic strata of the society with no great skills which created 
difficulties for them in securing the avenues of livelihood. The rich had opted 
for West Pakistan, hoping that with their higher economic status and skills, 
they would be accommodated among the ruling strata, but their expectations 
failed to materialize and they, like their inferior socio-economic counterparts 
in East Pakistan remained alienated and this alienation continues even after 
more than six decades. While the former have not been able to get rid of their 
refugee status, the latter have met a worse fate, termed as agents of Pakistan; 
they have not been granted citizenship rights by Bangladesh while Pakistan has 
refused to allow most of them to enter it. A tiny number could succeed, with 
great difficulty, in returning to Bihar. Thus Ms Ghosh has brought home the 
point that the movement for Pakistan in which Muslim leaders and population of 
Bihar played a very important role led to great frustrations for them. Besides, 
Bihari society has been irreparably damaged and a space has come to be 
appropriated by communalists, be they Hindus or Muslims.

The first paper in the book discusses the theoretical basis of the separatist 
movement. Those who wanted a separate homeland argued that the Muslims 
constituted a nation of their own and they did not have much in common with 
their Hindu neighbours with whom they had lived for hundreds of years. To them, 
religion was the most important determinant of their identity. This proposition 
was not acceptable to the Jamiyat-al-Ulma and the Momin Conference. Looking at 
the socio-economic complexion of the protagonists and the opponents of Muslims 
as a separate nation, one finds that the former were mostly from the strata, 
comprising zamindars, businessmen and the English educated lawyers and civil 
servants, while the latter were tenants, labourers, handicraftsmen and so on 
and comprised what came to be known as Pasmanda Muslims. While the protagonists 
were not vociferous against foreign rule, the antagonists actively worked for 
Independence of India. To quote Ms Ghosh, "The Jamiyat-al-ulma ... worked out a 
theory of Islamic nationalism, grounded in the basic tenets of Islam that is 
deployed against imperialism and subsequently the Muslim League's communalism. 
Thus an important section of the ulama did not perceive their role only in 
relation to the community. They developed a theory of composite nationalism and 
intervened in politics through an integrated alliance with other groups and 
communities. Thus it was Maulana Abul Kalam Azad's view that the prophet's 
covenant with the people of Medina [AD 628], which included the Jews and 
pagans, was valid as a precedent for other situations and in other lands in the 
subsequent history of Islam and was, in particular, pertinent in India." 
Further, "Azad's rallying point in forging Hindu-Muslim unity for the Khilafat 
movement was that the divide was not one between Muslim and non-Muslims but 
between those who do not attack Muslims (the Hindus) and those who do (the 
British). This he supported with a quranic quotation."

Similarly, Hussain Ahmad Madani underlined that Indian Muslims, in spite of 
following a different religion, were one with the Hindus in the endeavour to 
create a society and administration equally beneficial to both of them. "To the 
extent that contemporary nations were formed and defined by reference to land, 
Muslims were not a nation.... However, as a millat (religious community) they 
could co-exist with other religious communities not as a qaum (nation) in the 
modern sense, but as a qaum in the Quranic sense, that is, as part of a 
confederation of religious communities."

A.Q. Ansari who led the Momin Conference, comprising Muslim weavers and other 
handicraftsmen rejected the claim of the Muslim League to speak on behalf of 
the Muslims in general. In fact, according to him, it represented the upper 
socio-economic strata of the community (i.e., sharif), not the laboring 
population (razil).

Thus Ms Ghosh rightly concludes: "The inflation of religion to a foundational 
status in communitarian-identitarian and communal politics negated a whole 
range of social process that cross-cut the redefining and reformation of major 
religions in nineteenth-century north India. Homogenizing attempts succeeded 
only in segmentary ways. Given the deeply fractured and fragmented internal 
structures of the Muslim community, the organization of Muslims as a religious 
collectivity was and is based on mistaken assumptions. This the muhajirs, 
Partition's refugees in Pakistan and Bangladesh, are still bitterly coming to 
terms with."

Though the first major Hindu-Muslim riots occurred in 1917 in the then Shahabad 
district, they could not cause a permanent breach between the two communities 
as was evident from the popular participation of both communities in Rowlatt 
satyagrah and Non-co-operation/Khilafat movement. This alarmed the British 
government which prompted both Hindu and Muslim communal outfits to cause 
dissensions and bring about a permanent breach. Big zamindars and traders on 
both sides became the instruments in the hands of the British. Hindu zamindars 
and traders patronized the Hindu Mahasabha while the Muslim ones promoted the 
Muslim League. To begin with, when communal characters of these outfits were 
not clear, a number of Congress leaders, without hesitation, associated 
themselves with either of them. In the 1930s they contested elections on either 
Hindu or Muslim planks. Except a few leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Nehru, Azad, 
Madani, etc. there was no sustained campaign by the Congress in Bihar to 
educate the masses of the real character of communalism and the dangers 
emanating from it. Whenever disputes involving religion took place, attempts 
were made to defuse the situation and pacify the masses, incited by communal 
propaganda. In fact, both Hindu and Muslim communalism fed each other. In 
communal riots, as it became crystal clear in 1946-47, it was the common masses 
that suffered. They lost lives, homes and movable and immovable property. 
Age-old bonds between the two communities were weakened and economic 
interdependence destroyed.

After Independence, the Congress successfully co-opted the leaders of communal 
outfits in the mistaken belief that it would cement the gap. On the one hand, 
the zamindars like Maharaja of Darbhanga and Kumar Ganganand Singh and the 
leaders like Jagat Narayan Lall, actively associated with Hindu communal 
outfits were given important positions, on the other, a prominent functionary 
of Bihar Muslim League, Jafar Imam, was inducted into the Congress and made a 
minister. It is needless to add that the erstwhile zamindars and businessmen, 
actively associated with communal outfits, rushed into the Congress and grabbed 
positions of power and influence. This had long-term implications and in the 
course of time eroded the mass base of the Congress. The seeds of poison sown 
by leaders like B.S. Moonje, V.D.Savarkar, Jagat Narayan Lall, Jafar Imam, 
Latifur Rahman, Abdul Aziz, etc. have not been eliminated even till today. Ms 
Ghosh has underlined this time and again.

Papers 4, 6 and 7 need to be read and pondered over carefully by all those who 
value secularism as the basis of our polity and realize that, without 
strengthening secularism, no sustained and rapid economic progress is possible. 
Every student of economic history knows that during the two centuries that 
comprise the period of modern economic growth, secularism has been one of the 
indispensable ideas. It implies the disengagement of society from religion that 
withdraws to its own separate sphere and becomes a matter for private life, 
acquires a wholly inward character and ceases to influence any aspect of social 
life outside of religion itself (Hamilton, Malcolm B., The Sociology of 
Religion, London, 1995, p. 166).

To strengthen secularism, it is necessary that one understands the nature and 
character of communalism and the factors that give rise to it and strengthen 
it. Looking at the fate of Pakistan and its present situation and the plight of 
its erstwhile protagonists, one can realize the damage it has done to the 
Indian subcontinent. Ms Papiya Ghosh's book is a very valuable addition to our 
knowledge and there is an urgent need to continue the study begun by her and 
this will be the appropriate homage to her memory.

Girish Mishra

M-112 Saket,

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