Bengal's Social Harmony: End Political Hate
Apr 29, 2026 - By Ashutosh Roy Culture & HeritageCurrent AffairsPoliticsRegional UpdatesSocial IssuesSocietyWest Bengal Politics
The Erosion of Bengal’s Social Harmony: Identity Politics and the Price of Power
Nonetheless, it is a shame that we are to discuss about the decline of Bengal’s Social Harmony today. Bengal has long been a land where the sound of the Dhaak during Durga Puja and the aroma of Biriyani during Eid blended into a singular cultural fabric.
This state once took pride in a unique syncretism where participation in festivals transcended the barriers of class, caste, and religion. However, as we navigate the Bengal Elections 2026, this legacy is under a dark shadow. We cam surprisingly notice that even the fish-eating identity has come the key political debate.
Bengal’s Social Harmony is at stake today. Moreover, the naked intrusion of politics has begun to tear at the roots of our unity.
Instead of fostering the inclusive spirit of Rabindranath Tagore and Kazi Nazrul Islam, the current ruling dispensation has turned the state into a laboratory for identity politics. The goal is simple yet dangerous: to reap electoral benefits by carving the electorate into narrow, competing silos.
How Has Identity Politics Caused Problems in West Bengal?
| Year | Problem Area | Description | Evidence / Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021–2026 | Persistent political violence | Regular pre- and post-election clashes linked to | Repeated need for central forces and security assurances identity mobilisation |
| 2021–2026 | Social fragmentation | Shift from class-based politics to identity blocs (“us vs them”) | Elections reframed as identity battles as rather than governance debates |
| 2021–2026 | Democratic trust deficit | Declining trust in | Legal disputes, protests, and allegations of disenfranchisement electoral fairness and institutions due to identity-driven controversies |
Why is Bengal’s Social Harmony Under Threat?
Though, for decades, the state’s strength lay in its shared cultural practices. From the rural festivities of Poush Mela to the harvest celebrations of Nabanna, Bengal lived by the philosophy of festivals for all. Today, that harmony is being replaced by a calculated effort to create clientele rather than citizens.
The government’s decision to provide direct grants, be it the Imam Allowance or the massive donations to Durga Puja clubs, is a clear departure from the spirit of the Indian Constitution.
The administration is no longer a neutral arbiter. Instead, it has become a participant in religious polarization. By funding religious intermediaries, the ruling party is indirectly creating a vote bank that depends on state largesse rather than genuine development.
Is Financial Appeasement a Sustainable Policy?
- The Imam Allowance Trap: Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee initiated allowances for Imams to secure her core vote bank. When the courts intervened, the administration bypassed the law by routing funds through the Waqf Board.
- The Balancing Act: This move sparked immediate resentment. To pacify the other side, the government started allowances for Hindu priests.
- The Tiger’s Back: As the saying goes, He who rides a tiger is afraid to dismount. After all, you cannot balance every segment of society with cash doles indefinitely. Hence, this policy has created a competitive sense of entitlement that fuels communal friction.
West Bengal Government Allowances for Religious Groups
| Scheme / Allowance | Religious Group Beneficiaries | Details of Benefit | Start Dateand Latest Update |
|---|---|---|---|
| Imam Honorarium Scheme | Muslim Imams | Rs. 2,500/month (initial proposal via Wakf Board) | April 2012 Later challenged in court (2013 HC ruling) |
| Muezzin Honorarium Scheme | Mosque Muezzins | Rs. 1,000/month (initial phase) | 2012 (after Imam scheme) Clubbed with Imam scheme; legally contested |
| Priests (Purohit) Honorarium | Hindu Priests | Monthly allowance (amount revised over time) | Around 2018–2021 (phased introduction) Rs. 2,000/month after 2026 hike |
| Combined Honorarium (Imams, Muezzins, Purohits) | Muslim & Hindu religious leaders | Rs. 1,500 ->2,000/month (after 500 hike) | Pre-2023 (existing scheme expanded) Increased on 15 March 2026 |
| Approval of New Beneficiaries | Purohits & Muezzins | Expansion of scheme coverage | All fresh applications approved (2026) |
How is Identity Politics Dividing the Soil of Bengal?
The damage has extended even beyond the Hindu-Muslim binary. Accordingly, we are witnessing the fragmentation of the Bengali identity into smaller, ethnic, and regional pieces.
Today, the Matuas, Rajbangshis, and Kurmis are all pushing to prioritize their specific identities over their shared statehood.
While these communities remained deprived for years, the current government offers symbolic rather than structural responses.
Instead of real empowerment, these groups are given specific boards or promises of recognition just before the elections.
This strategy ensures that Bengal remains divided, making it easier for the ruling dispensation to manage its clusters of voters.
The Great Divide: Kolkata vs. North Bengal
A glaring example of this neglect is the North Bengal region. For years, the rulers in Kolkata have failed to reach the hearts of the tribal classes in the North. While the government boasts of building Uttarkanya (the mini-secretariat) with its glittering blue and white paint, the building remains a hollow shell.
Real power still resides at Nabanna in Kolkata. This centralizing tendency, governing the entire state from a single building in the South, has led to a deep sense of alienation.
We must remember that the Delhi-centric Congress lost its grip on India because it ignored local issues.
If the ruling party in Bengal continues to ignore the heartbeat of the North, the state will eventually fragment into regional parties, virtually dividing the land into smaller, disconnected pieces.
What are the Key Pillars of Bengal’s Social Harmony?
To understand what we are losing, we must look at the history of this land. However, Bengal’s social fabric was built on four major pillars that are now being chipped away:
| Aspect | Description | Current Status |
| Cultural Syncretism | Blending of food, music, and festivals in rural areas. | Threatened by political ownership of festivals. |
| Historical Legacy | Teachings of Tagore and Vidyasagar emphasizing unity. | Overshadowed by modern divisive slogans. |
| Diverse Coexistence | Harmonious living of different linguistic/religious groups. | Strained by us vs. them political narratives. |
| Political Discourse | Parties campaigning on the platform of secularism. | Reduced to a facade while practicing communal math. |
Is the Legacy of the Renaissance Forgotten?
In addition, we are the heirs of the Bengal Renaissance. Moreover, this is the soil enriched by the intellect of Vidyasagar, the soul of Rabindranath, the poetry of Michael Madhusudan Dutt, and the vision of Satyajit Ray.
However, these icons never looked at Bengal through the lens of a vote bank. Rather, they looked at it as a civilization.
Unfortunately, the Bengal Elections 2026 have brought our social harmony to a rock bottom. On the other hand, identity politics has taken the driver’s seat, and the administration seems content to watch the secular fabric burn if it means staying in power.
United we stand, divided we fall. This is not just a proverb; it is a warning for the people of Bengal.
The Way Forward: Can We Restore the Harmony?
The people of Bengal must realize that deliberate divisive politics strikes at the very root of our existence. We must stop encouraging the allowance culture that treats citizens like clients.
True development does not come from a 30% hike in Puja grants or a monthly stipend for religious heads; it comes from schools, hospitals, and jobs that are accessible to everyone regardless of their creed.
Why We Must Act Now:
- Stop Identity Politics: We must refuse to be categorized as just Matuas or Minorities during election cycles.
- Demand Diligence: Demand that the government shows due diligence to local issues in North Bengal and the Jangalmahal, rather than symbolic gestures.
- Protect the Secular Fabric: And, Remind the administration that the Constitution does not encourage the religious participation of the Government.
However, Bengal’s Social Harmony is our most precious asset. Conversely, if we let it slip away for the sake of a few electoral cycles, we will be leaving a fractured and bitter land for the next generation.
Rather, let us take an oath today to reject identity-based divisions and reclaim the inclusive Bengal that our forefathers envisioned.
Does the current trend of identity-based grants actually help the marginalized, or does it just keep them dependent on the ruling party?
10 Key Takeaways
- Political Intrusion: Naked political interference is currently threatening the historical foundations of Bengal’s Social Harmony.
- Identity Politics: Consequently, the ruling dispensation is prioritizing identity-based voting blocs over the state’s traditional syncretic culture.
- Appeasement Risks: Financial grants like the Imam Allowance and Durga Puja donations are criticized as tools for creating a political clientele.
- Constitutional Boundaries: Although, critics argue the government’s direct involvement in religious funding contradicts the secular spirit of the Indian Constitution.
- Fragmented Identities: New political focus on groups like the Matua, Rajbangshi, and Kurmi communities is replacing broader state unity with narrow silos.
- Regional Neglect: The Kolkata-centric governance from Nabanna has led to significant alienation and deprivation in the North Bengal region.
- Symbolic Governance: While buildings like Uttarkanya offer a glittering facade, they lack the functional power to address local tribal and rural issues.
- Competitive Polarization: Appeasement policies have triggered a tiger-riding effect, where balancing one community’s allowance necessitates another’s.
- Electoral Consequences: The Bengal Elections 2026 represent a critical tipping point where identity politics has moved into the driver’s seat.
- A Call for Unity: Restoring the legacy of the Bengal Renaissance is essential to prevent the state from falling into further social and regional division.
People Also Ask (PAA)
What are the main threats to Bengal’s Social Harmony in 2026?
The primary threats are viewed as competitive communalism and identity fragmentation. Critics argue that the ruling dispensation’s focus on religious stipends (like the Imam and Priest allowances) and the emergence of identity-specific political parties (such as the AJUP or Matua-centric campaigns) are replacing the state’s traditional inclusive identity with a siloed one.
How is identity politics affecting the 2026 Assembly elections?
Identity politics has moved from the periphery to the center stage. Major political players are no longer just debating development; they are battling over:
- Cultural Symbols: Debates over food habits (e.g., the fish-eating identity) and religious festivals.
- Ethnic Sub-groups: Intense focus on the Matua, Rajbangshi, and Kurmi votes, with parties promising specific boards and reservations to secure these clientele bases.
- The Outsider Narrative: Using the “Bengali vs. Bahiragoto (Outsider)” rhetoric to frame political opponents as threats to local culture.
Is the Allowance Culture harming social cohesion?
Many observers believe it is. While the government frames financial grants to religious heads and clubs as “social welfare,” critics label it as appeasement politics. This has led to:
- Resentment: Competitive demands for similar grants from different communities.
- Dependency: A shift from demanding long-term infrastructure and jobs to short-term cash doles.
- Legal Friction: Constant back-and-forth in the courts regarding the secular nature of state spending.
Why is North Bengal demanding more attention?
The feeling of Kolkata-centric deprivation has hit a boiling point. Voters in North Bengal often feel that the glittering Nabanna and the underutilized Uttarkanya do not address their core issues, such as:
- Lack of industrial growth compared to South Bengal.
- The unique linguistic and tribal identities of the hills and plains being ignored by the “Kolkata elite.”
- Persistent migration due to a lack of local tea garden and industrial jobs.
What is the stance of the opposition on Bengal’s Social Harmony?
- The BJP focuses on anti-appeasement and a broader Hindutva framework, though they are also engaging in their own version of identity politics with the Matua and tribal communities.
- The Left Front has attempted to pivot the conversation back to Livelihood over Identity, using the slogan No Mandir-Masjid, Bengal needs Employment.
- Newer Parties (like Humayun Kabir’s AJUP) are specifically targeting minority representation, which critics fear may further split the vote along communal lines.