Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

A GRAVE MATTER

Shrinking urban spaces and illegal land deals have made Muslim burial a costly affair. HT looks at the crisis of vanishing graveyards

- Furquan Ameen Siddiqui with Afroz Alam Sahil ■ furquan.siddiqui@hindustant­imes.com

As if finding a piece of land to live on wasn’t difficult enough, the search for an eternal resting place, those precious ‘two-yards’, is making many Muslims lose their sleep. With an increase in the Muslim population and lack of planning in many cities, the hunt for graves is becoming a serious problem and has led to such trends as the advance booking of graves and even the reuse of old family graves.

In 1971, Muslims in Delhi formed just 6.5% of the population. Now they form 11.7% of the city’s 1.78 crore population. 18.56% of Mumbai’s population of 1.26 crore are Muslims, while Lucknow has 29 lakh Muslims. Most Muslims in these cities are ghettoized, often living in close proximity with each other in a small geographic area. These areas tend to lack several basic resources so having a graveyard near your locality can even be considered a luxury.

But every luxury comes at a price. These days, the cost of your final resting place can range between a few thousands and more than a lakh. Many sniff a business opportunit­y in the problem of a lack of space that continues to afflict graveyards across the country.

Pervez Khan, who came to Delhi from Patna five years ago, earns about ` 5,000 a month tailoring clothes on the sewing machine that he operates on the side of the road in the Batla House locality of Jamia Nagar. When Khan’s sons, Shabbir (9) and Sohail (8), were accidental­ly electrocut­ed to death late last year, he went to the Jamia Nagar graveyard to bury them. He was asked to pay a total of ` 10,000 for the burial. After much negotiatio­n, the graveyard caretaker agreed to ` 6,500. “They don’t think about the situation of the person. For them, it is someone else’s problem. They demand whatever they feel like,” says Khan who had to borrow the money from his landlord.

RECLAIMING GRAVEYARDS

Earlier this year, a campaign led by Ameeque Jamei, a local CPI activist, urged locals to speak out against the irregulari­ties in the running of the only available graveyard in the locality. Parvez Khan’s plight was made public.

The graveyard serves a population of around 5 lakh people and witnesses around 80 to 150 burials a month. According to a survey conducted by Dr Firdous Azmat, assistant professor at Jamia Millia Islamia, the lack of sufficient burial places is one of the main problems faced by Jamia Nagar’s migrant population. “The two portions of land, which serve as the graveyard, is engulfed in a dispute between the family of the caretaker and the Wakf board,” says Jamei, who adds that a committee formed by the Board was supposed to take over the land. “But a nexus between local politician­s and the caretaker, who claims it is his ancestral land, is preventing the proper functionin­g of the graveyard.” Caught in this trap are poor people like Parvez Khan.

An RTI filed with the Delhi Wakf Board revealed that, according to Delhi Wakf ’s 1970 gazette, there were 488 Muslim graveyards in the city. Khurshid Farooqui, a section officer at the Delhi Wakf Board, put the number of existing graveyards in the city at around 75.

Two graveyards of the listed 4 in Jamia Nagar area survive; Nizamuddin has 25 listed graveyards, of which about four survive; Mehrauli has 41 against its name, but in reality only a few remain. The same RTI also revealed that ` 13.9 lakh was spent on the maintenanc­e of the surviving graveyards between 2006 and 2013.

“Many of these listed graveyards are not even directly overseen by the Wakf board, but are done by local committees,” says Farooqui who adds that in several areas where the local Muslim population has dwindled, the local land mafia has been encroachin­g freely upon the graveyards as the Board dares not raise it voice.

REAL ESTATE OF GRAVES

Delhi is not alone. Other major cities are facing a similar crisis. Mumbai has 71 Muslim graveyards. Fourteen of these are managed by the Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) with the remaining 57 being entrusted to Muslim organizati­ons. Until 1984, you could pre-book a grave at Badakabris­tan, the largest Muslim graveyard in the city with 7000 graves. That system was abolished and the graveyard now reuses land after a year. Unlike, Christian burial which requires a coffin, Muslim burial only requires the body to be swathed in cloth with a layer of wood or stone then being placed over it.

The Wakf Board in Lucknow is divided into individual Shia and Sunni boards which look after the graveyards of their own community. Of the 47 Shia graveyards registered with the Shia Central Board of Waqfs (SCBW) in Lucknow, 31 have disappeare­d and have been replaced by shops and buildings. As a result, there has been a surge in demand for Hayati

Kabr or pre-booked graves. Prices range between ` 50,000 to ` 1.5 lakh. “The way these graves are bought and sold, it seems like they are door that opens directly into heaven,” says Syed Waseem Rizvi, former chairman of the Shia Wakf Board. “People who prefer a place near their dear ones after death tend to buy such Hayati Kabr. Poor people who can’t afford them are forced to the outskirts.” Rizvi claims the problems are not so severe in the city’s Sunni graveyards but prices there too range around ` 25,000 per grave.

Patna is no different. The Sheikhpura graveyard is now part of a golf club and the Sultanganj graveyard is now part of a police station. A petition managed to wrest a graveyard back from the proposed site for AIIMS in the city. “Encroachme­nt is a major issue in the city. The government should be held responsibl­e for the widespread encroachme­nt that has been happening even after the launch of the central scheme to protect every graveyard by fencing them,” says social activist Adil Hasan Azad.

Encroachme­nt and graveyard mismanagem­ent has also led to communal violence in many places. In July this year, Muslims and Sikhs clashed in UP’s Saharanpur when a structure was being constructe­d on a vacant plot that the Muslim community claimed was a graveyard. In Goregaon, Mumbai, two sects (Barelvi and Tabligi) of the Muslim community rioted over the treatment of a graveyard. In Maharashtr­a’s Bhiwandi, local Muslims clashed with police over the constructi­on of a police station on land adjacent to a graveyard. In 2012, Jats and Muslims in Mathura (UP) clashed after a protest against the alleged encroachme­nt of a graveyard. In 2011, the Meo Muslims and the Gujjars of Gopalgarh area in Bharatpur (Rajasthan) rioted when Gujjars laid claim to land near a Muslim graveyard.

FIGHTING CORRUPTION

The fight to get land allotted for a graveyard is almost as intense as these riots. And it isn’t just cities that suffer. In Chakarnaga­r, a small village near Etawah, people bury the dead in their homes or even on the road as there is no graveyard. In 2010, the Shia community in Mumbai got seven burial grounds after fighting for two decades. It took eight years for Muslims in Dwarka, Delhi, to get a graveyard. The situation isn’t entirely hopeless. Millennium Park, one of the biggest developmen­ts in the city that usurped around 14 acres of graveyard land will return it to the Wakf board so that a new burial ground can come up in the area. Celebratio­ns might be premature, however. While the land is being given back to the Wakf Board, its fate is still in doubt. At the crux of the issue of the encroachme­nt of graveyards is the widespread corruption in Wakf boards across the country. Wakf, an Arabic word, is used to typically for donations of a religious or charitable nature. According to the Joint Parliament­ary Committee on Wakf under K Rahman Khan it was estimated that the total land under the Wakf in India is over four lakh acres. According to findings submitted in its ninth report in 2008, the JPC mentioned that about 80% of Wakf properties have been encroached upon. Clearly, wakf property worth thousands of crores has been illegally handed to the land mafia. Several committees including the Sachar Committee and the JPC had suggested stringent actions to curb encroachme­nt and misuse. The Union Ministry of Minorities Affairs had even directed state Wakf boards to undertake an assets survey and computeris­e records. However, responses to the RTIs filed suggest that there has been no progress. Perhaps the Wakf (Amendment) Act, 2013, will bring some order to Wakf boards and help make Wakf properties commercial­ly viable.

Bahadur Shah Zafar, the last Mughal, who was banished to Rangoon by the British after the events of 1857, lamented that he couldn’t be buried in his own country: Kitnaa hai bad_naseeb Zafar dafn key liye/Do gaz zamin bhi na mili kuu-e-yaar mein (How unfortunat­e is Zafar that he can’t get two yards for his burial in the land of the beloved).

It would seem that, though the world has changed, the fight for do gaz zameen continues.

(Afroz Alam Sahil is a Delhi-based RTI journalist)

 ?? PHOTOS: SUBRATA BISWAS / HT ?? A young boy plays at the Mehndiyan graveyard located behind the Lok Nayak Jai Prakash Hospital in New Delhi. It is known as the resting place of of Muslim religious scholars buried here
PHOTOS: SUBRATA BISWAS / HT A young boy plays at the Mehndiyan graveyard located behind the Lok Nayak Jai Prakash Hospital in New Delhi. It is known as the resting place of of Muslim religious scholars buried here
 ??  ?? Parvez Khan with photos of his dead sons. He was asked to pay an exorbitant fee for burial space at the Jamia Nagar graveyard. Citing several such instances, a campaign was launched in the locality against mismanagem­ent of graveyards
Parvez Khan with photos of his dead sons. He was asked to pay an exorbitant fee for burial space at the Jamia Nagar graveyard. Citing several such instances, a campaign was launched in the locality against mismanagem­ent of graveyards

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