Bengali Hindu diaspora

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The Bengali Hindu diaspora is the worldwide population of the Bengali Hindus of Indian and Bangladeshi origin.

In the modern era, the migration of the Bengali Hindus began during the British colonial era. The Bengali Hindu migrants to Assam were mostly government officials, doctors, lawyers, and teachers by profession. They also settled in parts of the present-day Indian states of Bihar and Jharkhand, which were at the time included in the Presidency of Bengal. After the partition of India and subsequent communal violence in East Pakistan and Bangladesh (such as during the 1971 Bangladesh genocide), millions of Bengali Hindu refugees migrated to Assam, Bihar, Jharkhand, Tripura, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Uttarakhand and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Over the years, professionals have migrated from Kolkata to cities like New Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore and Pune, as well as overseas.

Indian diaspora

Assam

The Barak Valley comprising the present districts of Cachar, Karimganj and Hailakandi is contiguous to Sylhet (Bengal plains), where the Bengali Hindus, according to historian J.B. Bhattacharjee, had settled well before the colonial period, influencing the culture of Dimasa Kacaharis.[1] Bhattacharjee describes that the Dimasa kings spoke Bengali and the inscriptions and coins written were in Bengali script.[1] Migrations to Cachar increased after the British annexation of the region.[1] The Bengali Hindus settled in Brahmaputra Valley largely during the colonial period as professionals. After the Partition and especially after the genocide of 1950, Bengali Hindus of Sylhet immigrated to the Barak Valley. Later on during the 1971 Bangladesh genocide, thousands of Bengali Hindus took refuge in Assam. The Bengali Hindu organizations estimate that there are approximately 6.5 million Bengali Hindus in the state.[2] However different sources have varied estimation of Bengali Hindu population in Assam.

Number of Bengali Hindus residing in Assam (2010-2019)
Source/claimed by Population
Claimed by Assam marriage board.[3] 3,000,000
Confusion, hope run high among Assam's Hindu Bengalis.[4] 5,000,000
Claimed KMSS leader Akhil Gogoi.[5] 10,000,000
Claimed AASU chief adviser Samujjal Bhattacharya.[5] 7,000,000-7,200,000
BJP government estimation.[6] 6,000,000
2016 Assam election assembly results.[7] 6,000,000
Claimed by NDTV[8] 5,620,000
Claimed by Assam Bengali Hindu organization (ABHO).[2][9] 6,500,000-7,200,000
Claimed by The All Assam Bengali Hindu Association (AABHA)[10] 7,802,000
Claimed by Times of India[11] 7,500,000
Claimed by Daily O News[12] 7,000,000
Claimed by The Wire[13] 5,900,000-7,500,000
Claimed by The News Web [8] 7,500,000
Claimed by The Hindu [14] 7,801,250

Tripura

The non-tribal population of Tripura, the mostly Bengali-speaking Hindus and Muslims, constitutes more than two-thirds of the state's population. The resident and the migrant Bengali population benefitted from the culture and language of the royal house of Tripura thanks to embracement of Hinduism and adoption of Bengali as the state language by the Maharajahs of Tripura much before Indian independence.[15] After the Partition of India and Tripura's accession to the Dominion of India, thousands of Bengali Hindus from eastern Bengal took refuge in Tripura. The influx of the Bengali Hindus increased during the Bangladesh Liberation War, when of Bengali Hindus were massacred in Bangladesh by the Pakistani occupation army. At present there are around 2.2 million Bengali Hindus in Tripura, making them the largest ethnic group in the state, constituting over 60% of the total population.[16]

Worldwide diaspora

See also

References

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