On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 11:07 PM, Zainab Bawa <bawazaina...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I was almost compelled to put out a request here because we are finding it a
> problem to find apartments in Jayanagar/Lalbagh area.This is owing to the
> condition that only vegetarian tenants are required. While we don't cook
> non-veg in our home usually, we do have friends over which is when non-veg
> is cooked.
> In a few cases, I have even been told that Muslims will not be rented out
> apartments.

Interesting piece in the WaPo today:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/18/AR2009041800792_pf.html

India's Muslims See Bias in Housing
Recent Increase Is Blamed on Islamist Terrorist Attacks in Mumbai Last Fall

By Emily Wax
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, April 19, 2009

MUMBAI -- The sunny apartment had everything Palvisha Aslam, 22, a
Bollywood producer, wanted: a spacious bedroom and a kitchen that
overlooked a garden in a middle-class neighborhood that was a short
commute to Film City, where many of India's Hindi movies are shot.

She was about to sign the lease when the real estate broker noticed
her surname. He didn't realize that she was Muslim, he said. Then he
rejected her. It was just six weeks after the November Mumbai
terrorist attacks and Indian Muslims were being viewed with suspicion
across the country. He then showed her a grimy one-room tenement in a
Muslim-dominated ghetto. She felt sick to her stomach as she watched
the residents fight over water at a leaky tap in a dark alley.

"That night I cried a lot. I was still an outcast in my own country --
even as a secular Muslim with a well-paid job in Bollywood," said
Aslam, who had similar experiences with five other brokers and three
months later is still sleeping on friends' sofas. "I'm an Indian. I
love my country. Is it a crime now to be a Muslim in Mumbai?"

In the months after the brazen three-day Mumbai terrorist attacks,
stories like Aslam's are common, even among some of the country's most
beloved Bollywood actors, screenwriters and producers in India's most
cosmopolitan city. The accusations of discrimination highlight the
often simmering religious tensions in the world's biggest democracy,
where Muslim celebrities can be feted on the red carpet one minute and
locked out of quality housing the next.

The phenomenon has become known here as "renting while Muslim." It
raises questions that go to the heart of India's identity as a secular
democracy that is home to nearly every major religion on the planet.
Although India has a Hindu majority, it also has 150 million Muslims,
one of the largest Muslim communities in the world.

"The new generation wants a better India that isn't bogged down in
religious strife," said Junaid Memon, 34, a Muslim Bollywood director
who is trying to promote religious harmony through his films and his
Facebook site. "We shouldn't be an India that ghettoizes all Muslims
to apartments near a mosque. This is a real test for modern India."

With national elections across India that began Thursday and last a
month, some Muslim activists and Bollywood film directors are raising
the issue with political parties and trying to form a voting bloc.

"This election, we have to talk about housing discrimination against
Muslims," said Zulfi Sayed, a Muslim actor who is outspoken about the
issue and is courting Hindus who agree with him. "In a shining India,
this shouldn't be still such a common practice."

Muslims have long served as an important swing vote in India, since
Hindus are increasingly divided among nearly 200 regional parties.
Historically, India's Congress party won elections with the help of
the Muslim vote by running on a platform of promoting religious
diversity. The opposition Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party
has, at times, used anti-Muslim sentiment to court votes while
pledging to keep Hindu heritage alive.

India blames the Pakistan-based Islamist militant group
Lashkar-i-Taiba for the November attack in which 10 gunmen left more
than 170 people dead, including 40 Indian Muslims.

Many Muslims here feared the attacks would unleash cycles of revenge
killing of the sort that have recurred throughout India's modern
history, from the violence of partition between India and Pakistan in
1947 to the 1992 riots in Mumbai. In the days after November's Mumbai
attacks, Muslims from all corners of society united, holding
candlelight vigils with a message to protest terrorism and pledge
loyalty to India. In the end, there was no communal violence.

But across the country, reports of housing discrimination have increased.

Afroz Alam Sahil, 21, a student activist at Jamia Millia Islamia
College in New Delhi, said that more than a dozen students from states
such as Uttar Pradesh and Bihar -- which have large Muslim populations
-- have been unable to find housing since the Mumbai attacks.

"Some Muslim friends have dropped out of college because they have
nowhere to stay," Sahil said. "There is intense suspicion. Sometimes I
ask myself why I was born Muslim."

Rana Afroz, a Muslim editor with the newspaper the Hindu, is
investigating the issue after spending three months unable to find a
landlord willing to rent to her and her husband.

"It is ridiculous that I have to prove to non-Muslims that I am not
making bombs in my kitchen," she said. "Is this really the modern
India I live in?"

In India, Muslims are often segregated, and they experience high
poverty rates and low literacy. Although they make up nearly 14
percent of India's population, they hold fewer than 5 percent of
government posts and are just 4 percent of the student body in India's
elite universities, according to a 2006 government report.

But there are few issues more emotional than housing, especially in
Mumbai, formerly known as Bombay, India's pulsating city of dreams
where aspiring farmers and filmmakers come from across the country to
seek fame and fortune.

"The ethos of Bombay is a city open to the world. The Muslims of this
city feel that way, too. But the real question is why do we as Indian
Muslims always have to be proving our loyalty?" asked Nawman Malik, a
popular Bollywood producer who spent months searching for an
apartment.

Mumbai has always had tensions over what are known here as "vegetarian
buildings," where meat eaters are not allowed to live and are thus
seen as devices to keep out Muslims and lower-caste Hindus. Those
kinds of buildings have become more common in middle-class and posh
neighborhoods as more merchants and industrialists from the
neighboring state of Gujarat, where vegetarian Hinduism is the norm,
migrate to India's richest city.

Managers of vegetarian buildings say they don't want the smell of meat
in their hallways. But they often also explain their rules by saying
they are worried about security and want like-minded residents to live
together.

"Say you check one renter and they seem okay. But then they go to
mosque and bring back their bearded friends and those friends are
terrorists," said Raj Pathak, a vegetarian-building manager in
downtown Mumbai. "Why do we have to live with such fears?"

Muslims, who have seen housing discrimination and the number of
vegetarian buildings spike after every terrorist attack, see the issue
as blatant discrimination.

"Everyone knows the vegetarian-only restriction is code language for
'No Muslims,' " said Naved Khan, a Muslim real estate broker who is
trying to help Bollywood's Muslims find housing.

On a recent afternoon, Aslam, the producer, hung out at a cafe, as she
sometimes does so she doesn't get on the nerves of those she is
staying with. She wore jeans and a hooded sweat shirt.

Until January, she was living with a Hindu roommate. Then their lease
ended. Her roommate was getting married.

"So I thought I would get my own place as a successful adult," said
Aslam, who had come to Mumbai from Kolkata with dreams of landing a
Bollywood job. "My mom was really proud of me. Now she's really
upset."

A broker recently showed her a house in a working-class neighborhood.
"It looked haunted. But I was denied even that," she said.

Another broker gave her advice: "Madam, live with a Hindu roommate.
Only then will you get a flat."

Special correspondent Ria Sen in New Delhi contributed to this report.


-- 
   "You'll have to speak up, I'm wearing a towel." -- Homer J. Simpson

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