يحاول ذهب - حر
Looking into the 'diseased' heart of the Hindi belt
August 16, 2025
|Mint Mumbai
Ghazala Wahab's new book captures the past and present realities of the region with nuance and attention to detail
What is wrong with the "Hindi heartland"? Like a lot of Bihari professionals living in Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru, I have often been asked variants of this question. A colleague once used the term "bimaru" ("diseased" in Hindi; BIMARU is the derogatory acronym used to describe Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh) while asking me why Biharis always voted along caste lines.
The episode reminded me, once again, of the extent to which my home state has been caricatured in popular imagination, a fate that it shares with Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Rajasthan, sometimes referred to as "the Hindi belt" for clarity. I would recommend Ghazala Wahab's new nonfiction book, The Hindi Heartland, to such people.
Across 500-odd well-researched, copiously reported pages, she has captured the past and present realities of these regions with the kind of nuance and attention to detail that serious readers deserve.
The book is divided into five sections, moving chronologically from the medieval past towards the contemporary moment. The first two sections are unfussy demonstrations of Wahab's methodology. Each begins with a condensed history involving the specific context being discussed (the first section is divided into chapters like "Society", "Economy", "Culture", and so on).
More often than not, Wahab is on point with her choice of history books. While discussing the Harappan period, she refers extensively to Tony Joseph's Early Indians. In a segment on the influence of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), we get A.G. Noorani (The Muslims of India) and Christophe Jaffrelot on the page. G.N. Devy is cited when we are being introduced to the linguistic diversity of the region, and Nandini Sundar when we're talking about the influence of the Naxalite movement in Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh. Urvashi Butalia is interviewed about her book
هذه القصة من طبعة August 16, 2025 من Mint Mumbai.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
Gen Alpha will make new rules for their workplace
Gen Alpha will expect hybrid workplaces, Al tools and 4-day weeks— offices unrecognizable to their parents’
3 mins
December 01, 2025
Mint Mumbai
EC extends electoral roll revision by a week to II Dec; final list on 14 Feb
The Election Commission on Sunday extended by one week the entire schedule of the ongoing special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in nine states and three Union territories amid allegations by opposition parties that the “tight timelines” were creating problems for people and ground-level poll officials.
2 mins
December 01, 2025
Mint Mumbai
THE PROBLEM IS NOT JUST ABOUT DYNASTIC POLITICS
These days Tejashvi Yadav is the target of intense trolling. Before him the Huda family in Haryana and Thackerays in Maharashtra got the same treatment. So, is the battle of victory and defeat in electoral politics a tussle between dynasts vs the rest? Absolutely not.
3 mins
December 01, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Green hydrogen: Fast fashion could help bump up demand
A boom in its use for clean synthetic inputs might make a difference
3 mins
December 01, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Let's be a bit more selective in using the word 'reforms'
Everybody should take a beat and think before uttering the word ‘reforms’ the next time. Glib usage, frequently in the wrong context, threatens to rob the word of its import.
3 mins
December 01, 2025
Mint Mumbai
As mid-cap alpha shrinks, should you consider passive strategies?
Advisers urge a balanced mix—add passives slowly and back strong, active managers, as mid-caps are still pricey
4 mins
December 01, 2025
Mint Mumbai
With $2.2 bn fund, ChrysCap has appetite for riskier bets
MD Saurabh Chatterjee details shift in global LP base, renewed focus on manufacturing
3 mins
December 01, 2025
Mint Mumbai
GDP growth of 8% plus: How to sustain this pace
Last quarter's economic expansion has cheered India but the challenge is to sustain a brisk rate for years to come. For private investment to chip in, revive infrastructure partnerships
2 mins
December 01, 2025
Mint Mumbai
INSIDE INDIA'S ATTEMPT TO TAME DEEPFAKES
Detection tools today are not universal or consistent across languages
5 mins
December 01, 2025
Mint Mumbai
APIs to innovation: Bulk drug makers ramp up CDMO bets
Once focused on low-margin active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), India’s bulk drug manufacturers are raising their ambitions, with several now investing heavily in research and development to win contract development and manufacturing work from global drugmakers.
2 mins
December 01, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

