hidden image

Indian Muslims and Electoral Choices

Ram Puniyani Ram Puniyani
19 Feb 2024

As the 2024 General Elections loom on the horizon, some Muslim elite are appealing to the Muslim community to take a re-look at the BJP. They claim that Indian Muslims are not being discriminated against. Such intellectuals also argue that the BJP is giving special attention to Pasmanda Muslims and the Sufi Muslims. They also argue that Muslims are beneficiaries of BJP's schemes for social welfare: food, housing, gas, and water, among others, and lastly, that there has been no major communal violence since 2014 and that India has been most peaceful during the last fifty years.

Such appeals are based on half-truths and ignore the core problem which shapes the lives of Muslims in India. True, some elite Muslims may not be facing the difficulties so severely. Still, overall, the central issue of insecurity, marginalisation and ghettoisation as a whole is not accounted for in such appeals. The point that there has been no major violence against Muslims since 2014 is a blatant lie. The horrific Delhi violence in the aftermath of the massive Shaheen Bagh movement, instigated by BJP worthies (Goli Maro, and 'we will get them removed from the place of Dharna') led to the death of 51 people, 37 of those being Muslims.

Day in and day out, bulldozers are on the streets to target Muslim properties on one or the other pretexts. In BJP-ruled states, there seems to be competition as to who can inflict more damage to Muslim properties. AP Shah, a retired chief justice of the Delhi High Court, affirmed to the news portal Coda, "Mere alleged involvement in criminal activity cannot ever be grounds for demolition of property."

While the cow-beef politics has led to stray animals causing accidents on roads and attacks on the standing crops on the one hand, on the other, it has led to the initiation of a new phenomenon of lynching on Indian streets. Starting from Mohammad Akhlaq, there are many cases where Muslims (and also Dalits) have been the target of the incited mobs.

The case of Monu Manesar, who was one of the criminals who killed Nasir and Junaid, is most frightening. Harsh Mander, who visited victims' families, wrote, "I am profoundly chilled as I scan social media pages of Monu Manesar. He and members of his gang live stream as they openly brandish sophisticated firearms, sound sirens mimicking police jeeps, shoot at vehicles, and brutally thrash the men they catch." The proper data on bovine-related violence is not available as the state wants to hide it, but it has created fear among large sections of Muslims.

In Mewat, in particular, where Muslims deal with the dairy business, face a tough time. Just a couple of horrific incidents which give us chills are when Shambhulal Regar not only killed but videotaped the brutal killing of Afrazul in Rajasthan. We saw those accused of murdering Kalimuddin Ansari feted by Jayant Sinha, a Union Minister at the time. Such incidents have now become a 'new normal'.

We also saw the scare created around Love Jihad, and then types of Jihad were tabulated, UPSC and Land Jihad, among others. The amusing one was Corona Jihad, where the Tablighi Jamaat meeting was blamed for the spread of Corona, and the Muslim hawkers were denied entry into societies.

Islamophobia is reaching new heights by the day. This intimidatory atmosphere is leading the rise in the process of ghettoisation of Muslims in the cities. Muslims are being denied housing in the mixed localities in most places. This is accompanied by the decline in their educational and economic status. One example is the scrapping of the Maulana Azad Fellowship, the primary beneficiaries of which have been the Muslim students trying to pursue higher education. The economic climb-down of the community has continued in recent years. Gallup data shows that "For both groups (Hindus and Muslims), perceptions that standards of living were worsening shot up between 2018 and 2019, as the Indian economy entered a deep slowdown. Among Muslim Indians, the percentage jumped to 45% in 2019, up from 25% the previous year. And among Hindu Indians, the percentage saying the same hit 37% in 2019, an increase of 19 percentage points from 2018."

The threat of disenfranchising Muslims through the exercise of NRC and CAA is very much present. The Assam exercise showed that among the 19 Lakh people who did not have proper papers, the majority were Hindus. For Hindus, the safety clause of CAA is in place, and for Muslims, detention centres are coming up.

The present show of sympathy for Pasmanda Muslims is a mere eye wash. We understand the majority of victims of violence inspired by majoritarian politics are Pasmanda Muslims. The Muslim Ashrafs do need to ensure better treatment of the Pasmandas. Still, the bigger threat for the community as a whole is the insecurity, which affects them both and makes a fertile ground for orthodox elements to flourish. Reform amongst the Muslim community is a must. However, the point is that reforms remain on the back burner until the community feels the threat to their existence and citizenship.

The BJP Government in different states is now planning things which are further discriminatory against Muslims. With Ram Temple inaugurated, the RSS-BJP's majoritarian politics may become more assertive. Already, Muslims have been losing representation in political institutions. We remember that in this Hindu nationalist party, not a single MP is a Muslim.

Even earlier governments could not alleviate the suffering of this community. The major obstacle in this direction has been the opposition from RSS-BJP. Sachar Committee has been an example of how any affirmative action for this deprived community is marred. In the aftermath of this report, then-Prime Minister Manmohan Singh stated that deprived and marginalised communities have the first right to national resources. And then there was a break in any initiative to alleviate the miseries of this community. BJP claims that its free rations, etc., are reaching all sections of society. Such schemes and the very concept of Labharthis are against the democratic 'Rights-based approach'. We need to introspect about electoral choices in general for all the communities. Of course, the luring of the Muslim community is a hollow drum bereft of any substance.

Recent Posts

The Supreme Court of India ruling in the Harish Rana case revives ethical questions on euthanasia—especially withdrawing nutrition and care—juxtaposing legal permissibility with Catholic teaching that
apicture Bp Gerald John Mathias
23 Mar 2026
The Supreme Court of India ruling in Harish Rana affirms the right to die with dignity, applying passive euthanasia guidelines while raising complex ethical questions on withdrawing care, patient inte
apicture Adv. Rev. Dr. George Thekkekara
23 Mar 2026
Three weeks into Operation Epic Fury, promised victories ring hollow: Iran remains resilient, oil leverage has grown, allies are uneasy, and costs mount. What was meant to project dominance instead ex
apicture A. J. Philip
23 Mar 2026
"Congress Mukt Bharat" has been a calculated strategy to weaken opposition and entrench dominance. Amid eroding institutions, constrained dissent, and majoritarian politics, India faces a pivotal mome
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
23 Mar 2026
The Viksit Bharat Shiksha Adhishthan Bill, 2025, proposes a sweeping overhaul of higher education, replacing key regulators while centralising authority and funding. The Bill undermines federalism, er
apicture Joseph Maliakan
23 Mar 2026
India's celebrated demographic dividend masks a deeper crisis: soaring graduate unemployment and a broken education-to-employment pipeline. As the 2026 report shows, degrees no longer guarantee jobs,
apicture Jaswant Kaur
23 Mar 2026
The US Commission on International Religious Freedom 2026 report sharply criticises India's religious freedom record, urging sanctions and "country of particular concern" status—charges the Government
apicture Cedric Prakash
23 Mar 2026
Amid heat, traffic and a sealed venue, slum women in Patna lit candles against a distant war that hits closest home—fuel prices, hunger, survival. Led by Sister Dorothy Fernandes, their small protest
apicture Frank Krishner
23 Mar 2026
Your eighth stage Is persecution: Forced removals, Confiscated Dalit bodies, Legal harassment.
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
23 Mar 2026
The old men may continue to regulate, supervise and register the youth. But there is one small problem.
apicture Robert Clements
23 Mar 2026