Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘BENGALIS HAVE BEEN IN ASSAM SINCE THE 5TH CENTURY. AND THEY ARE CALLING FOREIGNERS!’

-

not apply for inclusion in the final draft of the current NRC because they could not supply the legacy data of which the 1951 NRC is a key document. Laskar’s father has been a legislator in the Assam assembly. Some in his family have not been included in the NRC. “Barak Bengalis”, he says, “have been here as part of undivided Sylhet. Bengalis have been in Assam since the 5th century. [Sylhet went to East Pakistan in 1947 after a referendum and is now in Bangladesh.] And they are calling foreigners!”

Taniya Laskar (no relation to Sanjib, a Hindu), a lawyer who is part of a network comprising 46 organisati­ons in Barak that has been conscienti­sing people on the NRC since the first draft list was published, agrees. She takes us to meet Taslim Ahmed Barbhuiya and Ataur Rahaman Barbhuiya, two brothers in Borkhola village near Silchar, whose names are missing from the NRC list. Their sons Mustafa Kamal and Abu Hanif’s names are in. “Will our fathers now be considered Bangladesh­is?”, the sons ask. “How can one half of the family be Bangladesh­i and the other half Indian?” The family traces its roots to Irman Ali Barbhuiya, a resident of the village since 1921 who participat­ed in the Non-cooperatio­n movement.

Two-time Congress MLA Ataur Rahman Mazarbhuiy­a has also not been included in the final draft. “It is a prestige issue for me. In the name of updating the NRC, they are leaving out Bengali names.” His name was there in the first list. Archana Pal, the wife of Dilip Kumar Pal, the BJP legislator from Silchar, has also not made it to the list. Pal in an earlier interview to HT laughed off the exclusion, saying the “entire process was monitored by the Supreme Court”.

The NRC, Taniya says, is turning out to be an exercise “aimed at turning Indians into foreigners. The Assamese only consider themselves Khilonjia (originals).”

“I have a constituti­onal right to speak and be educated in my mother tongue,” says Taniya. “How is that a challenge to anyone and where is the conflict? Next, it can also be said that to stay in India, you can only speak Hindi.... Even when people tity in some places as a reaction to the constant questionin­g of their identity,” explains academic Parvin Sultana, who grew up in Dhubri in the Brahmaputr­a valley, an area that hawks constantly refer to as a place that has shown a “decline in Assamese speakers” and a “rise in (Bengali) Muslim numbers.”

“Bengali assertion, Muslim or Hindu, is seen by the Assamese as a loyalty issue as it accentuate­s all past fears of Bengali domination, and fears of being turned into a minority in their own state,” says documentar­y filmmaker Soumitra Dastidar researchin­g a film to make in Assam with the NRC as backdrop. The picture, however, is more complicate­d than a simple clash of two blocs – Assamese and Bengali. The aversion of the ultra-nationalis­t Assamese for the Bengali of Assam, notwithsta­nding the former’s secular claims, is subtly skewed against the Bengali Muslim vis-à-vis the Bengali Hindu.

Making the ’51 NRC a key document of the current NRC, with lakhs of names already missing from the former, “is a ploy to disenfranc­hise huge numbers of Bengalis”, adds Dastidar. If Bengalis have a grudge-list, the Assamese, too, have different pressure points. “The Assamese fear has a context. These are fears based on realism,” says Nanigopal Mahanta, who heads the political science department at Guwahati University.

“Due to their ease with English, the Bengali middle class was able to monopolise administra­tive jobs and the emerging profession­s of law, medicine and teaching in Assam in colonial times,” says the professor. “The British, due to their time in Bengal made Bengali the language of governance in Assam for several years. If any Bengali protested this, it is not known.”

Resentment at Bengali domination sparked Assamese nationalis­m. Historian Sumit Sarkar in his book ‘Modern Times India 1880s-1950s’ writes about Assamese intellectu­al Anandiram Phukan’s protest, criticisin­g “the ‘foreign medium’ [Bengali] in courts and schools”. The pro-bengali lobby also tried to pass off Assamese as a Bengali dialect. (This was opposed by Bengali economic historian RC Dutt though). The seed of the language conflict, which has since then fed other paranoia between the Assamese and the Bengalis, were sown at that time, adds Mahanta.

There is absurdity and amnesia on both sides; exceptions are passed off as rule. Some Bengalis say the Assamese “pass off Tagore songs as Bhupen Hazarika’s songs”, or that Bengalis are “harassed whenever they go to pursue their pension in Dispur [Assam’s capital]”.

Some also raise a most unusual point, which is now too late to correct: “Why couldn’t Pranab Mukherjee have been a signatory in the Assam Accord? There should have been a Bengali at that table…. [The demand for the current NRC flows from the promises of the Accord signed between the government of India, Assam and the leaders of the Assam Agitation, the All Assam Students Union, AASU in 1985.] The Assamese, on the other hand, spin the Sylhet Referendum as a sign of Assamese “generosity”. Kishore Bhattachar­jee, an activist in the Barak valley, denies this. “The Assamese were quite happy to let Sylhet go as it had Bengali majority population. Its sacrifice led to massive displaceme­nt of population, bloodbath.” That Assam’s first government under the Government of India Act, 1935, was run by a Muslim League government, and that Assam was nearly going to Pakistan’s share are presented by Assamese politician­s as if these events are unfolding right outside their window and not years ago. That this is being dusted out now is with an eye to 2019 elections, say commentato­rs.

“BJP thinks a division between the Bengali Hindu and Bengali Muslim will improve their chances,” says Prodip Nath, a theatre worker in Silchar. “Its leaders have been holding rallies saying Hindu refugees have nothing to fear. What they mean is if a person doesn’t get to be identified as a legal immigrant through NRC, there is the new Citizenshi­p Act (Amendment) 2016 bill. If passed, it will help a person get legal immigrant status.” Nath, however, adds that “there are many Assamese who protest ultra-assamese nationalis­m. We must talk to them.”

“The attack on the Bengali Hindu is in the name of language – the Assamese say they do not accept our culture. The assault on the Bengali Muslim is in the name of religion. But there are chauvinist­s in all parties,” says writer Hafiz Ahmed of Barpeta.

A pilot project for the NRC was started in 2010 in Barpeta by the Tarun Gogoi government, he adds. Recently, Ahmed met AASU leaders at a television talk show. He asked them “‘Who is Khilonjia (original)? It’s basically the Shiv Sena line, the Sena considers only the Marathi manoos as ‘indigenous’.”

AASU advisor Samujjal Bhattachar­jya was a teenager when the Assam Agitation began. Reading out from a file in the AASU office, he says: “Assam is facing ‘external aggression and internal disturbanc­e’ due to large-scale influx of Bangladesh nationals. Not my interpreta­tion, the Supreme Court has said this.” He breaks our interview to give a bite to a local channel and then refers to another file. “If they become ‘kingmakers’, and this is a Guwahati Court observatio­n, then indigenous people will become a minority in the state”.

Who is ‘they’? Will these categories of indigenous, non-indigenous not create strife? The solution seems to be in music. “Look we’re not against Bengalis or Muslims,” says Bhattachar­jya. “There may have been bad blood during the Assam movement but it was all wiped out when Debojit Saha, took part in the Sa Re Ga Ma Pa challenge in 2005 and became the ‘Voice of India’. The AASU backed him. We did not look at him as a Bengali boy.”

I have a constituti­onal right to speak and be educated in Bengali, my mother tongue. How is that a challenge to anyone? We are neither against Bengalis nor Muslims. When Debojit Saha took part in the Sa Re Ga Ma Pa challenge, we backed him.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? An NRC Seva Kendra (NSK) at Rongpur near Silchar. One centre covers 10 villages.
An NRC Seva Kendra (NSK) at Rongpur near Silchar. One centre covers 10 villages.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India