Hindustan Times (Patiala)

INDIA: A NATION IN MOTION

In this excerpt from India Moving, author Chinmay Tumbe looks at the ‘Great Indian Migration Wave’, the largest and longest noncoerced migration stream for work in documented history

- Chinmay Tumbe letters@htlive.com n

Mere piya gaye Rangoon, kiya hai vahan se telephone,

Tumhaari yaad sataati hai, jiya mein aag lagaati hai. — Patanga, 1949

Shamshad Begum’s famous song in a classic Hindi film about a wife bemoaning her migrant husband’s absence in the middle of the 20th century echoes the feelings of millions of women before and since… Rangoon in Burma, now Yangon in Myanmar, happened to be one of the important places in the world that saw many Indian migrants in the early 20th century, but similar voices can be unearthed across the world in songs, letters and books across eras...

What makes the Indian case unique is the sheer persistenc­e and magnitude of this phenomenon, one that has lasted for well over a century now. It is also a phenomenon that affects regions covering at least 20 per cent of the Indian population, currently comprising over 200 million people. I call it the ‘Great Indian Migration Wave’, and it ranks among the largest and longest migration streams for work in documented history. It led to the rise of cities like Kolkata and Mumbai in India and Yangon and Dubai abroad… It played a significan­t role in shaping the history of modern India. Surprising­ly, it is a story that has never been told.

…the Great Indian Migration Wave… is male-dominated, semi-permanent and remittance yielding. Mass migration is considered to arise from a source region where usually over 20 per cent of the households report outmigrati­on or over 5 per cent of the population is enumerated outside. … over 70 per cent of the net outflow of migrants from a particular region comprises men. Semi-permanent durations are those where migrants spend a greater part of the year away from their homes and who do not permanentl­y settle in their destinatio­ns. They return after working outside for a few years or even decades. Remittance­s are the inevitable outcome of such migrations to support families back home. Of course, some individual­s and families do settle away from home, but the bulk of the migrations do not lead to permanent settlement.

…Broadly, this wave mirrors India’s engagement with the global economy, rising from the late 19th century to the 1930s and then once again since economic liberaliza­tion was introduced in 1991. These migrations have fundamenta­lly been labour migrations towards plantation­s, mines and cities… Geographic­ally, the maximum source-region impact of the wave is observed in the coastal belts, lower Indo-Gangetic plains and the northern Himalayan range. A remarkable aspect of the Great Indian Migration Wave is the near constancy of the source areas but, lit- erally, a sea change in the destinatio­ns from the Bay of Bengal towards the Arabian Sea… THE WAVE CONTINUES

It would be difficult to write the history of Europe in the late 19th century without acknowledg­ing the significan­ce of the ‘Age of Mass Migration’ between Europe and the rest of the world. Similarly, it would be hard to omit the ‘Great Migration’ of African–Americans within the US in its 20th century history. And yet, the migrations that I have described in this chapter, of greater scale and enduring significan­ce, are rarely featured in historical works on modern India...

The… Great Indian Migration Wave… stands tall among the big migration episodes of global history. The trans-Atlantic slave trade lasted for centuries but was coercive in nature. The migration of Europeans in the age of mass migration was intense, but not coerced, and lasted for less than seven decades… Compared to these episodes, the Great Indian Migration Wave is arguably the largest and longest non-coerced migration stream for work in documented history.

…What explains the tremendous persistenc­e of the Great Indian Migration Wave even in the 21st century? To answer this question, one has to understand why most Indians chose to return home after working outside for many years, sustaining long-lasting circulator­y paths. This was because of factors arising in both the source and destinatio­n regions. In some destinatio­n regions, permanent settlement was and is simply not possible due to horrendous and astronomic­ally priced housing options… and strict legislatio­ns on citizenshi­p, as is the case with Gulf countries. The inability to settle due to hostile conditions… automatica­lly structured circulator­y migration strategies… Departures from the general pattern of the Great Indian Migration Wave occurred precisely when women could also work in destinatio­n regions such as the tea plantation­s of Assam and Sri Lanka and garment knitting textile hubs across India.

The regions affected by the Great Indian Migration Wave … are also remittance economies with strong consumeris­t cultures, little manufactur­ing and a booming service economy…. The Great Indian Migration Wave… is a unique model of developmen­t where entire regions become residentia­l sites and work is located at some distance.

The clusters and corridors of the wave shifted over time .... At times, two unrelated clusters would accidental­ly cross each other. For instance, Ratnagiri’s political star, Tilak, would serve out a term of imprisonme­nt in Burma between 1908 and 1914 at the same time that the last King of Burma —Thibaw — was serving his life in exile in Ratnagiri… In other times, two corridors could unexpected­ly meet through a marriage alliance. The Rai-Bachchan name signifies as much the union of two acting talents as the union of families linked with two distinct migratory corridors, one from coastal Karnataka and the other from east Uttar Pradesh, both meeting in Mumbai.

Such unexpected interconne­ctions between clusters will continue in the 21st century as there is no terminal date in sight for the Great Indian Migration Wave. ... It is quite likely that the persistent zones, especially in the Gangetic belt, will continue to send out migrants for several more decades… If the Bihari migrant went purab in the 19th century and paschim (west) in the 20th century, dakshin (south) may be a major calling in the 21st century… The north–south corridor within India will be the latest addition to the Great Indian Migration Wave, already reflected in the fact that over 2 million north Indians work in Kerala today...

The migration songs will continue.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The RaiBachcha­n marriage is a result of two migratory corridors, one from coastal Karnataka and one from east Uttar Pradesh, meeting in Mumbai.
GETTY IMAGES The RaiBachcha­n marriage is a result of two migratory corridors, one from coastal Karnataka and one from east Uttar Pradesh, meeting in Mumbai.
 ?? COURTESY PENGUIN ?? Chinmay Tumbe
COURTESY PENGUIN Chinmay Tumbe
 ??  ?? India Moving; A History of Migration Chinmay Tumbe 285pp, ~599 Penguin
India Moving; A History of Migration Chinmay Tumbe 285pp, ~599 Penguin

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