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India Today

Letter from the Editor-in-Chief

India Today, April 5, 1999
April 5, 1999


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Bihar was a land of superlatives, one of India's most learned and prosperous regions, home to universities like Nalanda, spiritual centres like Bodh Gaya, a land of plenty. Bihar is still a land of superlatives -- but all the wrong ones. It is India's most impoverished, most ill-educated, most wretched state. The horror stories of a crumbling society and disintegrating administration have made Bihar, and unfortunately its 86 million people, a metaphor for misery, frustration and mindless violence. But more dangerously, Bihar is a cancer that can so easily consume the rest of India

To understand India's worst-case scenario, we sent Associate Editor Harinder Baweja, Principal Correspondent Sanjay Kumar Jha and Senior Photographer Sharad Saxena to Jehanabad, whose endless caste wars are a disturbing case study for all that is wrong with Bihar. It was Jehanabad's escalating massacres -- five during 1999, claiming 80 lives -- that led to the dismissal of Rabri Devi's Government in February. Baweja, a veteran of reporting the violence of terrorism-ravaged Punjab and Kashmir, said she had, quite simply, never seen anything as senseless as Jehanabad. It isn't a battle between the rich and the poor: the landlords with holdings of a sixth of an acre, are not landlords in the true sense of the word. It is a fight between the poor and the poorest. The lives of the upper castes and lower castes revolve not around roads, schools or healthcare -- none of which seems to exist in Jehanabad -- but around a grim war for "self-respect". Says Jha, an old Bihar hand: "They have nothing else to fight over." Bihar's politicians fuel this fire; this "self-respect" is their sole agenda. Nothing else matters, not Bihar's wretchedness, not its horrifyingly low literacy (38 per cent), not its fall from ancient glory. If India still refuses to learn the lessons Bihar offers, she will be doomed to repeat them.


Aroon Purie

 

(Aroon Purie)

 

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