Biharis

Bihari
(बिहारी समुदाय Bihāri Samudāy in Devanagari)
Total population
c.105 million
Regions with significant populations
 India 103,804,637[1]
 Pakistan A significant percentage of the 20 million Muhajirs[2][3][4][5][6]
 Bangladesh 250,000[7]
Languages
Bhojpuri, Maithili, Magahi, Angika, and Bajjika,
Religion

Predominantly:
Hinduism
Minorities:

Related ethnic groups
Indo-Aryan peoples, Maithils, Bhojpuris, Magahis

The Biharis ( listen ) is a demonym given to the people who live in the Indian state of Bihar and the adjoining regions of Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh and the Terai region of Nepal. Bihari people can be separated into three main ethnic groups, Bhojpuris, Maithils and Magahis with other smaller groups also being present.[8] The main languages spoken are Bhojpuri, Maithili, Magahi, Angika, Bajjika and Surajpuri.

Besides the state of Bihar, Biharis can be found throughout Purvanchal, North India, West Bengal, Assam, Maharashtra, and in the neighbouring countries of Nepal, Pakistan and Bangladesh. During the partition of India in 1947, many Bihari Muslims migrated to East Bengal (later East Pakistan and subsequently Bangladesh).[9][10] Bihari people are also well represented in Pakistan's (formerly West Pakistan) Muhajir people as a result of the partition of India,[11] as well as the recent relocation of some Bihari refugees from Bangladesh to Pakistan.[12]

Pre-history

Bihar, the state in northern India where majority of Bihari people live
Magadha, Anga and Vrijji (or Vajji) Confederacy of Mithila in circa 600 BCE

Mythological stories claim that Bihar was the place where Manu resided after the great flood, with the help of Matsya.[13] A king of the Yadus nicknamed "Mahabali" ruled over this last in ancient times. He was impotent. His guru was Dirghatamas. Mahabali had many wives and so Maharishi Dirghatamas with the permission of his king impregnated Mahabali's chief queen Sudeshna.[14] Queen Sudeshna bore five children or "Kshetrajas" (rulers of lands), one of them was King Anga, which is modern-day Bihar. From Anga sprang Anapana.[15]

According to the historian Asim Maitra, the history of Magadha from the earliest times to the dawn of the Buddhist era is not well known. The Vedas display open hostility and disgust towards Magadha because it was a great stronghold of the non-Aryans and refused to be absorbed in the stereotyped Brahmanical pattern.[16] Before the discovery of the ruins of Mohenjo Daro and Harappa, the cyclopean walls on the hills of Rajgir were an ancient archaeological remains in India.[16]

History

Ancient period

Modern Bihar is a combination of two great ancient kingdoms, Magadha and Mithila. From Magadha arose two traditions, Jainism and Buddhism. The first Indian empires, the Nanda Empire, and the Maurya Empire, originated from Magadha, with their capital at Pataliputra (modern Patna) in 325 BCE.

Mithila is known for its literary traditions, education and culture. Four of the āstika (orthodox) schools of Indian philosophy - Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Mīmāṃsā, and Samkhya - were developed in the Mithila region. Vidyapati and his work shaped the language and culture of the entirety of eastern India, comprising Bengal, Assam, Odisha and even up to some extent to Nepal. It is believed that Mithila became the power centre of India in the later Vedic Period under the rule of Janaks. Sita, the daughter of one of the Janaks of Mithila is mentioned as the consort of Lord Rama in the Hindu epic Ramayana, written by Valmiki. [17] The Maurya emperor Ashoka is believed to be one of the greatest rulers in the history of India and the world. He became a Buddhist.[18]

According to indologist Arthur Llewellyn Basham:

The age in which true history appeared in India was one of great intellectual and spiritual ferment. Mystics and sophists of all kinds roamed through the Ganges Valley, all advocating some form of mental discipline and asceticism as a means to salvation; but the age of the Buddha, when many of the best minds were abandoning their homes and professions for a life of asceticism, was also a time of advance in commerce and politics. It produced not only philosophers and ascetics, but also merchant princes and men of action.

Bihar remained an important place of power, culture and education during the next one thousand years. The Gupta Empire, which again originated from Magadha in 240, is referred to as the Golden Age of India in science, mathematics, astronomy, religion and Indian philosophy. The peace and prosperity created under leadership of Guptas enabled the pursuit of scientific and artistic endeavours. Historians place the Gupta dynasty alongside the Han and China and the Roman Empire as a model of a classical civilisation. The capital of the Gupta Empire was Pataliputra.

A number of viharas (Buddhist monasteries) grew up during the Pala Empire in Magadha and ancient Bengal. According to Tibetan sources, five great Mahaviharas stood out: Nalanda University were among the oldest and best centres of education in ancient India, Vikramashila, the premier university of the era, was established by the second Pala emperor, Dharmapala (783 to 820); Somapura Mahavihara (now in Bangladesh) was built by king Dharmapala of Pala dynasty, Odantapurā Mahavihara was established by king Dharmapala in the 8th century, and Jagaddala was founded by the later emperors of the Pala Empire, Ramapala (c. 1077 – 1120) (now in northwest Bangladesh). Some writers believe the period between 400 and 1000 saw gains by Hinduism at the expense of Buddhism.[20][21][22][23] Although the Hindu kings gave much grants to the Buddhist monks for building Brahmaviharas. A National Geographic edition[24] reads, "The essential tenets of Buddhism and Hinduism arose from similar ideas, best described in the Upanishads, a set of Hindu treatises set down in India largely between the eighth and fourth centuries B.C."

Arrival of Islam

The Buddhism of Magadha was swept away by the Islamic invasion under Muhammad bin Bakhtiyar Khilji, during which many of the viharas and the universities of Nalanda and Vikramashila were destroyed and thousands of Buddhist monks and nuns were massacred in the 12th century.[25][26][27][28] The region saw a brief period of glory for six years (1540–1546 CE) during the rule of Sher Shah Suri, who built the longest road of the Indian subcontinent, the Grand Trunk Road. The economic reforms carried out by Sher Shah Suri, like the introduction of Rupee and Custom Duties, are still used in the Republic of India. He revived the city of Patna, where he built up his headquarters.[29][30] During 1557–1576, Akbar, the Mughal emperor, annexed Bihar and Bengal to his empire.[31] With the decline of the Mughal Empire, Bihar passed under the control of the Nawabs of Bengal and Murshidabad. During 1742 to 1751 Marathas under the two Maratha chiefs, the Peshwa and Raghuji attacked eastern India (Bihar, Bengal & Orissa). The Marathas defeated the nawab Alivardi Khan (1740–1756) and took charge of these provinces. Thus, the medieval period was mostly one of anonymous provincial existence. Many South Asian rulers recruited soldiers from Bihar and neighbouring Awadh who were referred to as Purbiyas who gained a reputation in there use of firearms.[32] The 10th and the last Sikh guru, Guru Gobind Singh was born in Patna.

British rule

Coin of Samudragupta

After the Battle of Buxar (1764), the British East India Company took the diwani rights (rights to administer, and collect revenue or tax) for Bihar, Bengal and Orissa. From this point, Bihar remained a part the Bengal Presidency of the British Raj until 1912, when the province of Bihar and Orissa was carved out as a separate province. In 1935, certain portions of Bihar were reorganised into the separate province of Orissa. The British recruited many soldiers from the Bihar and Awadh region, mainly from the Rajput and Brahmin caste.[33] These soldiers were referred to as Purbiyas.

Babu Kunwar Singh of Jagdishpur and his army, as well as countless other persons from Bihar, contributed to the India's First War of Independence (1857), also called the Sepoy Mutiny by some historians. Resurgence in the history of Bihar came during the struggle for India's independence. It was from Bihar that Mahatma Gandhi launched his pioneering civil-disobedience movement, Champaran Satyagraha. Raj Kumar Shukla drew the attention of Mahatma Gandhi to the exploitation of the peasants by European indigo planters. Champaran Satyagraha received the spontaneous support from many Biharis, including Sri Krishna Sinha, the first Chief Minister of Bihar, Rajendra Prasad, who became the first President of India and Anugrah Narayan Sinha who ultimately became the[34] first Deputy Chief Minister and Finance Minister of Bihar.

Independence movements

In North and Central Bihar, a peasant movement was an important side effect of the independence movement. This movement aimed at overthrowing the zamindari system instituted by British Raj. It was being led by Sahajanand Saraswati and his followers Yamuna Karjee, Rahul Sankrityayan, Karyanand Sharma, Nagarjun and others. Karjee along with Rahul Sankritayan and a few others started publishing a Hindi weekly Hunkar from Bihar in 1940. Hunkar later became the mouthpiece of the peasant movement and the agrarian movement in Bihar and was instrumental in spreading the movement.

Bihar's contribution to the Indian independence struggle was immense, producing outstanding leaders like Sahajanand Saraswati, Rajendra Prasad, Krishna Sinha, Dr.Anugrah Narayan Sinha, Brajkishore Prasad, Maulana Mazharul Haque, Jayaprakash Narayan, Thakur Jugal Kishore Sinha, Ram Dulari Sinha, Satyendra Narayan Sinha, Basawon Singh, Rameshwar Prasad Sinha, Yogendra Shukla, Baikuntha Shukla, Sheel Bhadra Yajee, Yamuna Karjee and many others who worked for India's independence.[35]

Modern era

The state of Jharkhand was carved out of Bihar in the year 2000.[36] 2005 Bihar assembly elections ended the 15 years of continuous Rashtriya Janata Dal rule in the state, giving way to NDA led by Nitish Kumar. Bihari migrant workers have faced violence and prejudice in many parts of India, like Maharashtra, Punjab and Assam.[37][38][39]

Cuisine

The food culture of Bihar is both vegetarian and non-vegetarian. Most of the people are non vegetarian. Among all the varieties of food eaten by the Bihari people, Litti-Chokha is the most famous. Beside Pedhaa, Dal Puri, Puwa etc. are also famous. In snacks bhuja (roasted gram, flat rice commonly known as chewra, peanut, maize, etc.) Thekua, Purukia etc. are prepared.

Clothing

The traditional dress of Bihari people includes the dhoti-mirjai (a modified form of the flowing jama)[40] or the kurta (replacing the older outfit of the dhoti and chapkan which is a robe fastened on the right)[41] for men and Ghagra-Choli for women but ghagra choli is limited to folk dances or celebrations and is considered the ancient or historical dress of women of Bihar. In everyday life women wear saree or Kameez-Salwar. The saree is worn in "Seedha Aanchal" style traditionally.[42] Nevertheless, Western shirts and trousers are becoming popular among the both rural and urban male population.[42] And Salwar-Kameez for women in urban Bihar. Jewelery such as rings for men and bangles for women are popular. However, there are some traditional Bihari jewelries like "Chhara", "Hansuli", "Kamarbandh", etc.[42]

Language and literature

Hindi and Urdu are the official languages of the state, whilst the majority of the people speak one of the Bihari languagesBhojpuri, Maithili, Magahi, Bajjika and Angika. Bhojpuri and Magahi are dialects of the Hindi Belt, thus they were absorbed under the Hindi dialect continuum and were ignored the status of an official state language. Bhojpuri is spoken throughout the Bhojpuri region . Maithili is used by the Maithils in the Mithila region. Along with the above-mentioned languages, Bihari Hindi is spoken as a local dialect of the Hindi language.

The number of speakers of the Bihari languages is difficult to count because of unreliable sources. In the urban region, most educated speakers of the language name Hindi as their language because this is what they use in formal contexts and believe it to be the appropriate response because of unawareness. The uneducated and the rural population of the region regards Hindi as the generic name for their language.[43]

Despite of the large number of speakers of Bihari languages, they have not been constitutionally recognized in India, except Maithili which is recognised under the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution of India. Hindi is the language used for educational and official matters in Bihar.[44] These languages was legally absorbed under the subordinate label of Hindi in the 1961 Census. Such state and national politics are creating conditions for language endangerment.[45] The first success for spreading Hindi occurred in Bihar in 1881, when Hindi displaced Urdu as the sole official language of the province. In this struggle between competing Hindi and Urdu, the potential claims of the three large mother tongues in the region – Bhojpuri, Maithili and Magahi were ignored. After independence Hindi was again given the sole official status through the Bihar Official Language Act, 1950.[46] Urdu became the second official language in the undivided State of Bihar on 16 August 1989. Bihar also produced several eminent Urdu writers including Sulaiman Nadvi, Manazir Ahsan Gilani, Abdul Qavi Desnavi, Paigham Afaqui, Jabir Husain, Sohail Azimabadi, Hussain Ul Haque, Dr. Shamim Hashimi,[47] Wahab Ashrafi[48] etc.

Bihar has produced a number of writers of Hindi, including Raja Radhika Raman Singh, Shiva Pujan Sahay, Divakar Prasad Vidyarthy, Ramdhari Singh 'Dinkar', Ram Briksh Benipuri, Phanishwar Nath 'Renu', Gopal Singh "Nepali" and Baba Nagarjun. Mahapandit Rahul Sankrityayan, the great writer and Buddhist scholar, was born in U.P. but spent his life in the land of Lord Buddha, i.e., Bihar. Hrishikesh Sulabh and Neeraj Singh (from Ara) are the prominent writer of the new generation. They are short story writer, playwright and theatre critic. Arun Kamal and Aalok Dhanwa are the well-known poets. Different regional languages also have produced some prominent poets and authors. Sharat Chandra Chattopadhyay, who is among the greatest writers in Bengali, resided for some time in Bihar. Upamanyu Chatterjee also hails from Patna in Bihar. Devaki Nandan Khatri, who rose to fame at the beginning of the 20th century on account of his novels such as Chandrakanta and Chandrakanta Santati, was born in Muzaffarpur, Bihar. Vidyapati Thakur is the most renowned poet of Maithili (c. 14–15th century). Satyapal Chandra[49] has written many English bestseller novels and he is one of India's emerging young writer.

Castes and ethnic groups

Bihar's major ethnic group is Indo-Aryan including Bhojpuris, Maithils and Magahis.[50] Bihari society follows a very rigid caste system, which influences daily life and politics.[51]

The 2011 Census of India indicated that Scheduled Castes constituted 16% of Bihar's 10.4 crores population.[52][53] The census identified 21 of 23 Dalit sub-castes as Mahadalits.[54] The Mahadalit community consists of the following sub-castes: Bantar, Bauri, Bhogta, Bhuiya, Chaupal, Dabgar, Dom (Dhangad), Ghasi, Halalkhor, Hari (Mehtar, Bhangi), Kanjar, Kurariar, Lalbegi, Musahar, Nat, Pan (Swasi), Rajwar, Turi, Dhobi, Chamar and Dusadh[55] The Paswan caste was initially left out of the Mahadalit category, to the consternation of Ram Vilas Paswan.[56][57]Adivasis (Scheduled Tribes) constituted around 1.3% of the Bihari population.[58][59][60] They include the Gond, Santhal and Tharu communities.[61][62] There are about 130 Extremely Backward Castes (EBCs) in Bihar.[63][64]

Castes of Bihar[65][66][67][68][69][70][71][72][73]
Caste Population (%) Notes
OBC/EBC 51% Yadavs - 14%
Kurmis - 4%
Kushwaha(Koeri)- 8%
(EBCs - 26%[63][74][75][76][77] -includes,[78][79][80] Teli-3.2%))
Mahadalits*+ Dalits(SCs) 16%[81][82] includes Dusadh- 5%, Musahar- 2.8%[83]
Muslims 16.9%[84] includes (Ashrafi) Sayyid, Sheikh Mughal Pathan castes[85][86]
Forward caste 15% [87] Bhumihar-6%
Brahmin -5%[88]
Rajputs - 3%
Kayastha -1%
Adivasis(STs) 1.3% [89][90]
Others 0.4% includes Christians, Sikhs, Jains

Religion

According to the 2011 census, 82.7% of Bihar's population practiced Hinduism, while 16.9% followed Islam.[91]

Religion Population
Hindu 82.7
Muslim 16.9
Others 0.4

Bihari diaspora

Nepal, Pakistan and Bangladesh

A few Bihari people moved towards Madhesh of Nepal for job opportunity. The first Bihari settlement in Nepal started since the 18th century due to similar language and lifestyle to that of Madhesi people of Nepal and many Bihari people got assembled in existing indigenous Madheshi social groups. In 1947, at the time of Partition, many Muslim Biharis moved to what was then East Bengal adjacent to their Bihar province in eastern India.

However, when East Pakistan became the independent state of Bangladesh in December 1971, the Biharis were left behind as the Pakistani army and civilians evacuated and the Bihari population in Bangladesh found themselves unwelcomed in both countries. Pakistan feared a mass influx of Biharis could destabilise a fragile and culturally mixed population, and Bangladeshis scorned the Biharis for having supported and sided with the West Pakistan during the war.

With little or no legal negotiation about offering the Biharis Pakistani citizenship or safe conduit back home to their native Bihar in India, the Biharis (called "stranded Pakistanis" by some Bangladeshi politicians) have remained stateless for 33 years. The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has not addressed the plight of the Biharis. An estimated 600,000 Biharis live in 66 camps in 13 regions across Bangladesh, and an equal number have acquired Bangladeshi citizenship. In 1990, a small number of Biharis were allowed to immigrate to Pakistan.

Pakistan has reiterated that as the successor state of East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), as well as having greater cultural and linguistic similarities with Bengalis, Bangladesh should accept the Biharis as full citizens. Pakistani politicians and government officials have refused to accept these nearly 300,000 stranded Pakistanis of Bihari origin due to inability to absorb such a large number of immigrants at the moment.

In May 2008, a Bangladeshi court ruled that Biharis who were either minors in 1971 or born after 1971 are Bangladeshi citizens and have the right to vote.[92][93] As a result of the ruling, an estimated 150,000 of the 300,000 Biharis living in Bangladesh are eligible for Bangladeshi citizenship.[93] Although the court ruling explicitly said that the Biharis are eligible to register to vote in the December 2008 elections, the Election Commission closed its rolls in August 2008 without enrolling them.[94]

Mauritius and South Africa

A large number of people from Bihar travelled to various parts of the world in the 19th century to serve as indentured labour on sugarcane and rubber plantations in Mauritius, and Natal, South Africa.

A majority of Indo-Mauritians are Bihari Mauritians.[95] Most of the Mauritian Prime Ministers were Indo-Mauritians of Bihari descent.[96]

Bihari sub-nationalism

Bihari sub-nationalism is a sentiment which unites people speaking Bihari languages.

According to social scientist Dr. Shaibal Gupta, the beating of students from Bihar in Mumbai in October 2008, has consolidated Bihari sub-nationalism.[97]

Bihar Movement

Bihar Movement was a movement initiated by students in the Indian state of Bihar in 1974 and led by the veteran Gandhian Socialist Jayaprakash Narayan against misrule of and corruption in the government. By 1975 it had attracted a mass following amongst all sections of the population in Bihar and in some other states. It is also called "total revolution". It led to giving up of surnames by many Biharis in the 1970s.

Discrimination

During recent times, the people from Bihar have been the major victims of discrimination, often resulting in violence directed against them and even their social outcasting at times.

The uneven economic development in India has resulted in mass migration of Bihari workers and middle-class professionals to seek work in more developed states of India like Maharashtra, Delhi, Haryana and Punjab. The free movement of Indians to settle and work anywhere inside the Indian Union has been guaranteed by the constitution of India.[98] Bihari settler communities living in other states have been subjected to a growing degree of xenophobia,[99][100] racial discrimination,[101][102] prejudice[103][104][105] and violence.[39] Biharis are often looked down upon in Delhi[106] and their accent is ridiculed.[107] In 2000 and 2003, anti-Bihari violence led to the deaths of up to 200 people[39] and created 10,000 internal refugees. Again in 2008, anti-Bihari violence in Maharashtra, notably in Nashik, Mumbai, and Pune, created a record 40,000 to 60,000 internal refugees.[108][109][110]

See also

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  84. "Bihar elections among factors in religious data of Census 2011 release".
  85. "Bihar polls: People made me cry a lot, says BJP’s ‘pucca Musalman’ | The Indian Express". indianexpress.com. Retrieved 2017-02-17.
  86. "Will the Muslim militia polarise community on caste lines in Bihar's Imamganj?".
  87. "Is Nitish Kumar working on a new Bihar poll strategy that excludes Laloo and Mulayam?".
  88. "Brahmins In India".
  89. "Bihar brings all Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes' families under National Food Security Act".
  90. "Nitish banks on caste calculations, Muslims".
  91. "Population by religion community - 2011". Census of India, 2011. The Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Archived from the original on 2015-08-25.
  92. "Court rules that young Biharis are Bangladesh citizens". Reuters. 19 May 2008.
  93. 1 2 "Citizenship for Bihari refugees". BBC News. 19 May 2008.
  94. "Bangladesh fails to register its Urdu-speaking citizens as voters". Indo-Asian News Service. Yahoo! News. 16 August 2008.
  95. "Mauritians will be able to track Bihar roots more easily". Thaindian News. IANS. 2008-02-19. Retrieved 2013-07-18.
  96. The Indian Diaspora. Pinkpigeonpress.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-18.
  97. Ahmad Faizan, "Bihar violence: Raj the gainer", The times of India, Pune, 27 October 2008, pp. 6
  98. Constitution of India-Part III, Article 19, Fundamental Rights, Government of India, 1950
  99. ‘Outsiders’ must be welcomed, but Manipur is not alone in such isolationist excesses. In neighbouring Assam, six migrant workers have been killed in two attacks this year, and as many as 88 were killed, and 33 injured in 12 such incidents in 2007. Indeed, waves of xenophobic violence have swept across Assam repeatedly since 1979, variously targeting Bangladeshis, Bengalis, Biharis and Marwaris."
  100. A clash of cultures, "In the rest of India people tut-tuted this latest exhibition of the Sena's xenophobia ...the media led the charge holding opinion polls and debates.."
  101. Vir Sanghvi, The Bhaiyya Effect, Hindustan Times, 27 September 2008 "The roots of Raj Thackeray's attack on the Bhaiyyas lie in India's economic transformation. Through a combination of poor planning and worse politics, Bihar and UP have been left out of the economic revolution. When people from those states travel outside to find work, those who have benefited from the recent prosperity treat them with the kind of snobbery and disdain with which the British treated Indians when we went to England to find employment in the 1950s. Then, we were seen as losers from a place that would never manage to prosper. But, of course, Indians ignored the racism and rose to the top of the economic pyramid."
  102. CNN-IBN, State of neglect: Deluged Bihar falls off Govt map, 28 Aug 2008, "Does it hurt when Goa minister Ravi Naik said that people of Bihar are coming across and bringing poverty, when Raj Thackeray said that the people of Bihar must get out of Maharashtra? When racism and prejudice is directed against the people of Bihar, does it hurt and one feel that there is something that one must do for the state?"
  103. M., A. (2001-07-21). "Calcutta Diary". Economic and Political Weekly. 36 (29): 2730–2731. JSTOR 4410875. How come Bihar has such a negative image in the rest of the country? Fingers will be pointed at the obscurantism characterizing the state, but are things any better in Rajasthan? Bihar is supposed to be riven by caste dissensions; can it however hold a candle in this regard to Tamil Nadu? Feudalism and social oppression are hallmarks of Bihar's daily existence; what about Madhya Pradesh, Orissa and Chhattisgarh though? ... According to some snooty people Biharis are by and large crude. Some others would prefer to say that the people of Bihar are rooted to the soil and hate to hide their natural instincts behind pretensions; they cannot be any cruder than those populating the backwaters of Punjab.
  104. It's Bal Thakrey's turn now, says 'Ek Bihari Sau Beemari', Maharastra CM assures of action against him in reply | eWeekdays.com Archived 4 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Shiv Sena Supremo Balasahab Thakrey has come hard once again on Biharis. Bal Thakrey, in his latest article in Samna has written that Bihari's are like dieses. He said that Ek Bihari, Sau Bimari. Do Bihari Ladai ki taiyari, Teen Bihari train hamari and paanch Bihari to sarkar hamaari. Earlier it was Raj Thakrey and his party Maharashtra Nav Nirman Sena who had launched an agitation against the North Indians. But this time it's Bal Thakrey who has asked Biharis and Bihari Politician to improve their behavior."
  105. Biharis are an affliction, says Bal Thackeray" Shiv Sena chief Bal Thackeray, in an attempt to overtake his estranged nephew Raj Thackeray's campaign against people from north India, termed Biharis as an affliction, and said they were unwanted in all other parts of the country. The ageing leader warned that the so-called Bihari leaders, by accusing people of Mumbai of harbouring "anti-national sentiments, were attempting to again breathe fire into the anti-north Indian feelings in Maharashtra." They must realize this would only put their brethren here at the receiving end, he added."
  106. India struggles to tame its heart of darkness "Biharis are often looked down upon in Delhi, and blamed for rising crime – the city's chief minister Sheila Dikshit publicly wonders how to turn back the tide."
  107. MAYANK RASU, Musings of a Bihari, The Hindu, "Biharis" have now usurped the place of "Sardarjis" as a favourite butt of jokes. It is not just the jokes; there are other ways of embarrassing them too. Making fun of the Bihari accent and projecting it as the most rustic one is one of them."
  108. AMSU against influx of Biharis to Manipur "In the wake of the ongoing violence in Assam, the All Manipur Students' Union on Wednesday appealed to the state government to curb the influx of Biharis into the state."
  109. "10,000 Hindi-speakers relocated in Assam amid separatist attacks. | Europe Intelligence Wire (November, 2003)". Accessmylibrary.com. 2003-11-27. Retrieved 2013-09-12.
  110. Print Article: Hundreds flee ethnic violence "Hundreds of Hindi speakers in India's north-eastern state of Assam have started fleeing ethnic violence which has claimed 29 lives in the past week, they and officials said yesterday.... With police reporting another six people killed by mobs and separatist rebels overnight, a sense of panic began to spread through members of the Hindi-speaking community, many of whom hail from the eastern state of Bihar."

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