It has been seen over the years that all political parties cash in on the Muslim mandate but later they ignore the issues that affect the community using them as tissue paper.
However, even the media keeps those in limelight who are of nuisance value like the Shahi Imams, Owaisis, Shahabuddins owing to their vitriolic remarks and rabble rousing as such things give colour to the reports and put the community and Islam to shame.
The Congress-led government has been hoodwinking the Muslim community regarding upliftment of their masses. Like all previous governments, there have not been any concrete policies to achieve this.
The field of education provides evidence. If India’s literacy rate is 63.07 per cent, Muslims are way behind at 41.27 per cent. Muslim women have just 21.66 per cent literacy rate as against 40.54 per cent being the average, according to surveys carried out by Friends for Education.
Not more than two per cent Muslims are in government jobs. Of the 479 judges at an all India level, only 30 are Muslims that makes it just 6.26 per cent. Of the 3,284 IPS officers, just 120 are Muslims.
The government-backed Sachar Committee and the Planning Commission reports the pathetic educational state of Muslims in India.
On the electoral front, despite having substantial numbers —such as constituting about 20 per cent of Uttar Pradesh’s population and around 10 per cent in other important states, Muslims have not really mattered in electoral politics.
History has proved that reservations on communal lines are not in the interest of national unity. Muslims should understand that the ostrich mentality is never going to help them.
Muslims today are aware that their leadership has lost its voice and its utility. Because of their leaders and the petty politicians who represent them, Indian Muslims live in a system of unofficial apartheid.
Hindus and Muslims have developed separately; very often wholly ignorant of what is in the other’s mind. This ghetto existence has allowed the rise of a class of political middlemen who serve as interlocutors between the Muslim masses and the rest of Indian society.
It’s very sad that Indian Muslims have been snowballed into one controversy or the other, none of them being the real problem. This reinforces stereotypes and widens the gap between the two communities.
In this ghettoised situation emerged the churlish political middlemen as interlocutors for communities picking on sensational issues that would apparently tighten their stranglehold on the people they pretend to represent by diverting the attention from real bread and butter issues.
Utter educational backwardness, women’s education, social stagnation, communalisation of the police force and absence from the mainstream were never addressed by these self-appointed interlocutors with the same emphasis as the Babri Masjid.
This leadership has completely failed to understand the aspirations of the youth aiming for excellence for an enlightened future. A desire to compete rather than grovel and grope for quotas and special favours, passion for the modern education, questioning the clergy and coming out of the veil, are now some of the altered ground realities for the Muslim youth who have all been disillusioned by the likes of Ghulam Nabis, Shahi Imams, Najmas, Shahabuddins, Salman Khurshids, etc.
According to a senior lawyer, M Atyab Siddiqui, India’s 150 million Muslims — the largest religious minority — have contributed umpteen and grand successes since Independence in 1947. Many of the Muslim icons are present in all walks of life, including leaders of India’s freedom struggle, politics, cricket, film, academics, etc. What is unfortunate is that despite Muslims having repeatedly asserted their identity as Indians, they find their patriotism being questioned.
During the Babri Masjid imbroglio, while in New York, I reacted instantly as an Indian to the telecast of the Babri Masjid demolition while the American newspaper headlines shrieked: Hindu terrorism. Nevertheless, the community must come out of Babri illusion and educate their children.
Many socio-economic problems Indian Muslims face are the same as faced by others. But there are other issues that affect only them like their backward Urdu medium school system.
That Bollywood has confined the portrayal of Indian Muslims to bearded men in sherwanis, burqa-clad women, skull-capped mullahs, inebriated nawabs and dancing girls is just a symbolic indicator of this harsh reality.
The dargah of Moula Ali, for instance in Kolkata, is believed to be frequented more by Hindus than Muslims. In rural Bengal, there are many shrines which are worshiped by Hindus by one name and by another name by Muslims.
Any honest assessment would suggest that 90 per cent of India is secular. The example of this fact is that the likes of Togadia have been sidelined. India happens to be the safest place for Muslims — even safer than Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.
Anger against Muslim zealots, is common among younger educated Muslims as they feel upset about the fact that the media is not giving place to liberal Muslims and is taking them to be the spokespersons of the community.
(The writer is a grandnephew of Maulana Azad)