The Sunday Guardian

Activists work to unite Dalits and Muslims

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As the Uttar Pradesh Assembly polls are drawing nearer, some social and religious groups have become active to forge Dalit and Muslim unity to consolidat­e the largest voting bloc in the state. Dalits (21.5%) and Muslims (19%) together make up 40.5% votes, a figure well above the winning percentage of any ruling party in the state in recent years.

Last month, the National Confederat­ion of Dalit Organisati­ons (NACDOR) organised a joint conference in New Delhi with Jamiat Ulema e Hind (Mehmood Madni faction) to discuss social and political unity among Dalits and Muslims. Former Samajwadi Party leader and prominent Muslim face in New Delhi, Kamal Farooqi also took part in this conference.

Ashok Bharti of NACDOR told The Sunday Guardian that the conference was part of a long-drawn plan of forging a social unity among Muslims and Dalits. “It is imperative for both Dalits and Muslims to forge an unshakeabl­e unity to defeat fascist forces. And the most opportune time for such a unity is right now as they are facing the most tiring time under the current government in the Centre and the government in the state,” said Ashok Bharti. But he denied that their efforts aim to benefit a Dalit-oriented party like the Bahujan Samaj Party.

Kamal Farooqi said that it is not only incumbent on Muslims to socially and politicall­y seek friendship with Dalits, it is their religious duty. “Islam guides Muslims to abhor any kind of discrimina­tory behaviour towards fellow human beings. Hence, friendship with all, especially with Dalits, should be a religious mandate for Muslims. Plus, the current political scenario makes it all the more important for them to realise this,” said Farooqi.

Syed Salman Nadwi, a prominent cleric from Lucknow, had formed a front of all small parties during the 2012 UP Assembly polls to challenge the mainstream parties. That experiment didn’t succeed.

Nadwi is now, through his organisati­on Ekta Manch, working with Bharat Mukti Morcha of Waman Meshram, a prominent Dalit activist and president of Backward and Minority Communitie­s Employees Federation (BAMCEF). These two organisati­ons have recently organised their programmes in West UP districts like Muzaffarna­gar, Meerut, Saharanpur and Moradabad.

“We have conveyed our message to society that Muslims and Dalits have to bury their difference­s and come together,” said Nadwi.

He denied any political project coming out of his efforts, but hinted that such a Muslim-Dalit consolidat­ion may help the BSP in the elections. Waman Meshram said that the “communal forces” are critically planning their moves in west UP. “In west UP, OBCs and Dalits are not playing into the hands of the communal forces, hence they have tried to rope in the Jats. In our campaign, we also plan to create awareness among the Jats along with Dalits, Muslims and OBCs,” said Meshram.

Similar efforts of DalitMusli­m unity are being conducted by Jamiat Ulema e Hind (Arshad Madni faction), which last month organised a Dalit-Muslim unity conference in Allahabad and has planned a grand programme in New Delhi at the end of September.

Maulana Wali Rehmani, vice president of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board, is also touring various parts of the country with Dalit activists to gather support for his Deen and Dastoor Bachao (Save religion and Constituti­on) programme. Six years after the Commonweal­th Games were held in the National Capital, many of the sprawling stadiums that had been built spending hundreds of crores of rupees, mostly remain inaccessib­le, even to journalist­s, leave alone the common man.

The Sunday Guardian visited several such stadiums maintained both by the New Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n (NDMC) and Sports Authority of India (SAI) separately. Though this correspond­ent could gain access to the stadiums maintained by the NDMC after several phone calls, he was turned away from the stadiums maintained by SAI even after personally requesting Rachnaa Govil, the Executive Director of Stadia, who said: “Media is not allowed into the stadiums.”

When The Sunday Guardian reached the Indira Gandhi Sports Complex, maintained by SAI, this correspond­ent was stopped at the gate. Phone calls to Manjushree Roy, the administra­tor of the stadium, requesting access also did not yield any result. Roy said nobody could be allowed inside the stadium without the prior written approval from the Director General of SAI. “You canview the stadium on our website,” she said.

Asked how common people could come and play here if they are being restricted right at the gate, she said, “We cannot allow everybody to come here and play. There is a process and one needs to follow that.”

An 18-year-old athlete, who was standing outside the Indira Gandhi Sports Complex,

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