French govt-funded report praises Gujarat's affluent Juhapura Muslims for "favouring" economic integration, Modi
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Juhapura, Ahmedabad, as seen by French scholar |
A French government-sponsored report has said that one of Indiaโs biggest Muslim ghettos, Juhapura in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, is witnessing a unique development: The absence of public infrastructure here has forced affluent Muslims to come up with private initiatives to develop the ghetto, thus privatizing โpublic actionโ.
Funded by the French Defense Ministry and the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), and written by Charlotte Thomas following her study of the ghetto between 2009 and 2014 as part of doctorate in political science, the report gives full marks to affluent Muslims โof superior jamaatsโ who arrived in Juhapura after the 2002 Gujarat riots.
The scholar estimates, the ghetto had just 50,000 people, but now houses around five lakh Muslims, all of it following the 2002 Gujarat riots, adding, Even the Muslim upper-classes decided to shift to this ghetto, as for the first time, they โwere also victims of violence, while they had been spared until then.โ
โNotably through the zakat, they have financed two hospitals, dispensaries, schools, libraries, support/training courses for public service examinations, etc. Education has been at the core of preoccupations for the inhabitants of Juhapura, from all jamaatsโ, the researcher says.
Published by the French Institute of Political Sciences of the Centre for International Studies and Research, the report believes these affluent Muslims focus more on โeconomic integrationโ as an alternative to the communityโs development, instead of the โpolitical activist wayโ.
Insisting that their main channel for resistance is โbusinessโ, the scholar says, to these affluent sections, the โeconomic sphere is perceived as the integrating matrix to the majoritarian society for the Muslims of Juhapura, and appears to them as the best defence against violence.โ
The scholar insists, โEconomically integrated, participating to national enrichment, the Muslims see themselves as โusefulโ to Indian society, and notably to their Hindu partners; as they have ties through an economic interdependency relationship.โ
By basing their โsalvationโ thus, she thinks, these Muslims โhave aligned themselves with one of the elements of the national narrative offered by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, for whom economic growth outshines every other societal stake.โ
The result was, Thomas says, the โaffluent entrepreneurs of Juhapuraโ were by โcourtedโ by Modi as Gujarat chief minister, followed by his successor, Anandiben Patel, with some of them forming โthe link between the minority and the authorities, facilitating the presence of Gulf businesses at the Vibrant Gujarat Summit.โ.
โThe bridge with the Gulf must not be understood as a mimetic fascination leading, for example, to the Wahhabisation of local religious practicesโ, the scholar insists. Nurtured by Saudi Arabia, Wahhabism is considered a religious movement of Sunni Muslims, and is criticized for being "ultra-conservative".
At the same time, the report, titled โDomination and resistance of the Muslim minority of Ahmedabad (India): paradoxes of the ghettoization process in Juhapuraโ, says that these affluent sections believe, in case of renewed violence, โeconomic affluence would enable them to faceโ any attacks they may face, as it happened in 2002, โbetter.โ
According to Thomas, โEducation is seen as the means to access a stable or higher paying job, and from there, the stepping stone towards a good economic integration. The girls and women are at the centre of a specific schooling effort, which is, as recognised by the interviewees (men or women), unheard of.โ
She further notes, โBeyond entrepreneurship and/or commerce, the more or less traditional occupations of Gujarati Muslims, more and more mention the importance of obtaining public jobs, more stable and higher paying, to which the Muslims have traditionally had less access.โ
โIn parallel with locality planning, the inhabitants have also managed to get branches of Indian banks to open locally, the multiplication of businesses, or even to equip their own society (residency) by asphalting the paths, bringing water, electricity, etc.โ, she adds.
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