Decoding the Narrative ‘there will be no Hindus left in Bangladesh in the next 30 years’

Hindu numbers are rising in absolute terms

Bangladesh has recently been depicted by some in the international media by saying ‘there will be no Hindus left in Bangladesh in the next 30 years if the current rate of exodus continues’ and Hindus keep fleeing to India’.

However, this understanding is completely incorrect. Bangladesh is being depicted unfairly and without evidence as a country that discriminates against its minorities, particularly Hindus. There is no doubt that Bangladesh has seen a steady outflow of Hindus since Partition. Minorities accounted for 23.1 percent of the population in 1951, but only 9.6 percent in 2011. A recently published book has predicted that there will be no Hindus left in Bangladesh in the next 30 years if the current rate of exodus continues. According to the book, 11.3 million Hindus were either forced to leave the country or migrated between 1964 and 2013. The author of the book said the rate of exodus over the last 49 years paints a grim picture for the Hindu minority in Bangladesh, where their population remains just 8.2 percent, according to the last census.

The book, perhaps, is unable to make the reader understand the real situation in Bangladesh. For example, Priya Saha a Hindu minority rights activist, participated in the Second Ministerial Meeting to Advance Religious Freedom held at the US Department of State in Washington, DC from16  to 18 July 2019.  In a video clip that went viral on social media, Priya Saha was heard telling US President Donald Trump: “Sir, I’m from Bangladesh … 37 million Hindus, Buddhists and Christians have disappeared. Please help us – for the Bangladeshi minor people. We want to stay in our country. “

In a video message, Priya Saha explained her position and tried to defendhe her remarks tagging Abul Barkat’s research findings. Then the author said in 2019 Priya Saha has distorted his research findings by her comments during an interaction with US President Donald Trump that 37 million Hindus, Buddhists and Christians have disappeared in Bangladesh. However, the author’s works sparked a controversy in Bangladesh.

On the other hand, during the eruption of communal violence in Bangladesh against Hindu minorities in 2021, countless arguments and numerous criticisms had been brought to light. Some claimed that Bangladesh has become quite a case of ethnic cleansing- subtly but forcefully forcing Hindu minorities across the border. Some even went further, claiming that Bangladesh had failed to form a state where different religious and ethnic groups could coexist based on the principle of secularism, one of the four fundamental pillars of the liberation war in 1971.

Minority is a phenomenon which every country must possess, be it ethnic or linguistic or religious. But a state-sanctioned discriminatory policy, inherent ethnic or religious tension or historical schism mobilized to settle political scores usually contributes to violence against minorities. However, in Bangladesh mostly politically cornered vested groups have played out on the minority card to stoke crises and manipulate the situation to their end. Besides long cherished pluralistic sentiment in Bangladesh is, rather in times, menaced by ‘spill-over effect of politics and policies in proximate neighbors, of course by political fringe groups

As evidence to prove those criticisms, most of them point fingers at the continuous decline of Hindu minority population in Bangladesh, a case drawn to demonstrate Bangladesh was a prolific ground of persecution against Hindu. But an objective discernment of those allegations, especially through comprehensive statistical appraisal, relative systemic endeavours and within the broader political landscape, makes them, in most part, lose their grounds.

According to the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics data, the percentage of the Hindu community in the total population was 13.5 percent in 1974, in Bangladesh’s first population census, which, as of the latest census in 2011, stands at 8.5 percent, and again increased to 10.7 percent in 2015. Ostensibly, these statistical figures, continuous decline in percentage, seem to confer legitimacy to predominant arguments about the decline of Hindu population. But mere percentage estimation tells only half the truth about the broader demographic landscape of the Hindu minority in Bangladesh. If we take the increase in total number, other than mere percentage, over the years along with other factors that have contributed to decline, into account, it will substantially clarify the whole picture and weaken the predominant narratives about the decrease of the number and persecution of Hindus in Bangladesh.

Taking the total number into account, in 1974, the number of Hindu populations was 10.31 million which reached slightly above 12.7 million in 2011 and 17 million in 2015. It is seen that the total number has remained increasing whereas it has come down relative to the total Muslim population, due to a relatively higher growth in the size of the Muslim population from 65.24 million in 1974 to135.4million in 2011. It is true that growth in numbers is a little slow among Hindu population and could hit 22 million by 2011 only if it increased linearly in terms of percentage as reported in 1974 (13.5%). But that is not because of any systematic persecution against the minority rather, in most part, of international economic migration, relatively lower birth and high mortality rate among Hindu population, higher rate of contraceptive use and a particular political reality in the history of Bangladesh.

According to the study paper prepared by researchers from ICDDR, B’s Health Systems and Population Studies Division and the University of North Carolina (Chapel Hill), studying the population data of 1989-2016 of Matlab Upazila in Chadpur to find out why Hindus have lower population growth than Muslims, the birth rate of Hindu populace in every thousand falls short by 3 points comparing to Muslims. While the probability of having a child among the Muslim women is 35, it is 32 among Hindu women.

The study found that the tendency to late marriage and having not more than 2 children and relatively higher use of contraceptives also contribute to the low birth rate among the Hindu populace. Even higher numbers of deaths, 4 more than that of Muslims in every ten thousand, can also be subscribed to the decrease in percentage. Finally, researchers concluded that 71 percent of low growth rate may be attributed to the lower rate of fertility and 23 percent to the international emigration by Hindus.

In the report, it was also observed that, since 2006, more Hindus have been opting for countries other than India for immigration. Only 36 percent of the migrating Hindus of Matlab went to India between 2005 and 2012, while a larger portion of them went to the states other than India for better living- a countervailing evidence against predominant propaganda that more Hindus have been leaving for India due to persecution.

To be sure, the percentage of the Hindu minority compared with that of Muslim has declined over last 50 years. But this estimation has overlooked a subtle but solid point: the fundamental political upheaval and constitution of Bangladesh from 1975 to 1991. Just take the number into account, from 1974 to 1991 the percentage of the Hindu minority in the total population came down from 13.5 to 10.5 in 16 years.

But, after the end of anti-secularism-fueled military rule in 1991 and installation of constitutional democracy, the percentage decline slowed down: 10.5 in 1991 to 8.5 in 2011 within 20 years. In 2011, after the 15th Amendment to the Bangladesh constitution, secularism was restored which especially contributed to increase of the percentage of Hindu people in the total populace to 10.7 percent in 2015. Unlike, its two bordering states- Myanmar and India, the former denying Muslim Rohingya minority of citizenship since 1982 out of pathological hatred and the latter rendering Muslims stateless through anti-Muslim laws, Bangladesh has never, particularly since 1991, intended to promote any discriminatory policy, be it in practice or by laws. Praiseworthy and prompt  action taken by the Government of Bangladesh against the menace of the recent Durga Puja incident, is a salient example of this.

Minority is a phenomenon which every country must possess, be it ethnic or linguistic or religious. But a state-sanctioned discriminatory policy, inherent ethnic or religious tension or historical schism mobilized to settle political scores usually contributes to violence against minorities. However, in Bangladesh mostly politically cornered vested groups have played out on the minority card to stoke crises and manipulate the situation to their end. Besides long cherished pluralistic sentiment in Bangladesh is, rather in times, menaced by ‘spill-over effect of politics and policies in proximate neighbors, of course by political fringe groups.

Samina Akhter
Samina Akhter
The writer is a freelance columnist

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