Hindustan Times (Delhi)

As poll-clock ticks, a Muzaffarna­gar village waits for communal scars to heal

FUTURE TENSE The village struggles to erase the memories of the 2013 riots and is fearful of what the elections might bring

- S Raju s.raju@hindustant­imes.com TOMORROW KUTBA UTTAR PRADESH

Deokali village KUTBA (MUZAFFARNA­GAR): The scars have not healed. Friends have turned foes. Mosques and madrasas remain locked. The muezzin’s call for prayers is no longer heard. Many Muslims have left and those who remain are slowly coming to terms with the loss.

Kutba village in Muzaffarna­gar — the home of Union minister of state Sanjeev Baliyan — struggles to erase memories of the September 2013 Hindu-Muslim riots. They are also fearful of what the elections due in 2017 will bring. From Dadri to Kairana, communal tensions have been simmering in parts of Uttar Pradesh over issues such as beef and forced migration, and Kutba is fearful of the communal divide widening again in a politicall­y charged scenario.

Its fears are rooted in the attack on 900 Muslim families here, that led to eight deaths. Three years later, the village is also a symbol of the possible polarisati­on in the forthcomin­g UP elections. Those who left will vote one way; those who stayed may vote another. But in the midst of this division, the doors for reconcilia­tion are slowly opening.

THOSE WHO LEFT

Alijaan comes to the village occasional­ly to see the hamlet where he was born and grew up. For decades, he was a symbol of communal harmony. Jats depended on him to keep their farming equipment sharp. He says, “The riots destroyed our centuries-old brotherhoo­d in half-an-hour.”

Though Alijaan has now shifted to the neighbouri­ng village Palra, Jats still visit him to get their work done. He does not refuse.

Baliyan asked him to go back to Kutba and make a fresh start. Alijaan was willing but his six sons and their families refused to go back. “How can we return to the place where we begged for our lives, but were thrown out for no fault of ours?” asks Mohd Naseem, Alijaan’s son. “Where were they when we lived like beggars in camps for over two years?”

They are displeased with Baliyan. They say he never came to console them. Rather, he visited Jats who were in jail. Replying to their charges, Baliyan says: “I initially avoided meeting them because the atmosphere was not favourable. Now, the hatred has dissipated. I have visited a few families who are living in Palra and tried convincing them to return to the village.”

THOSE WHO STAYED

Village headman Ashok Kutba holds outsiders responsibl­e for violence in the village. “We regret failing to protect them (the Muslims). Efforts are underway to ensure their return in order to restore the tradition of 4,500 Jats harmony and brotherhoo­d here.”

Babu, who lost his brother in the violence, suspects there is a hidden agenda behind the move to get the riot victims to return to the village. “Once we return, they will mount pressure to dilute cases against the men who have been named and jailed.” The riot victims accused 110 villagers of unleashing violence against them. Fifty-eight of the accused were jailed on charges of murder, loot and other henious crimes. They are now out on bail after being in jail for three to 18 months.

Chaudhary Mangeram, who heads 12 villages of the Baliyan Khap, feels both communitie­s should sit and resolve their grievances. His son MADHYA PRADESH

total population of Kutba village 2,500 Muslims (some left after riots) 3,000 Others Vikas was booked for murder and is now out on bail after spending 18 months in jail.

While Jats are the dominant farming community, there was deep economic synergy between all communitie­s.

“All castes and communitie­s complement one another,” says headman Ashok admitting that villagers face great difficulti­es without Muslim artisans and labourers. The Muslims, who have now settled down in other villages, too say their income has declined drasticall­y.

“Everyone in the village knew us... there was no dearth of work. We are struggling to get regular work after settling down at new places,” says Imran, a mason invited by the village pradhan to construct a house.

Dr Naresh K Malik, principal of Chotu Ram PG College, believes “this web of inter-dependence will overwhelm the politics of hate in west UP and also shape the 2017 verdict”.

“Both communitie­s wish to revive their old harmony in the larger interest of society,” he says.

KUTBA IS A SYMBOL OF POSSIBLE POLARISATI­ON IN UP POLLS. THOSE WHO LEFT WILL VOTE ONE WAY; THOSE WHO STAYED ANOTHER

 ??  ?? The locked house of a Muslim family that left Kutba. CHAHATRAM/ HT
The locked house of a Muslim family that left Kutba. CHAHATRAM/ HT
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