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Census data on Muslim family size can help counter myths

Details of the 2011 census last week showed that the average size of a Muslim household is shrinking faster than that of the Hindu counterpart, indicating both communities are headed in the right direction

Updated on: May 24, 2016 09:45 PM IST
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In an ideal world, Indians should not be quibbling about the details of people following various religions. But the times are such that some numbers are useful in getting a better understanding of the country to dispel propaganda, lies and half-truths. Details of the 2011 Census revealed last week showed that India’s average household size was 4.45 members, down from 4.67 a decade ago.

Muslims offer prayers  near the Taj Mahal in Agra (Reuters Photo)
Muslims offer prayers near the Taj Mahal in Agra (Reuters Photo)

The size of an average Muslim household fell to 5.15 from 5.61 over the previous decade. Notably the reduction was sharper at 11.1% for Muslim households headed by men while for families headed by women it was 4.47%. The average size of Hindu families declined by 5 % over the decade. Such data should help us counter myths being propagated to create perceptions that fan social tensions.

Read | Don’t push the Indian Muslim over the edge

The old slogan, “Small families are happy families” should ring better in a developing country that has seen a population explosion. The fact that the average size of a Muslim household is shrinking faster than that of the Hindu counterpart indicates that both communities are headed in the right direction and are increasingly on comparable ground.

Read | The challenges of being Muslim in India

Given that Muslim personal law allows polygamy, casual banter and malicious propaganda by Right-wing hardliners have sometimes raised concerns about the growth of the nation’s Muslim population.

Census data for 2011 showed last year that Hindus made up 79.8% of the population, down 0.7 percentage points over the decade, while Muslims were 14.2% of the country, up 0.8 percentage points. Last week’s data puts the issue in a clearer context because absolute numbers are not everything. Over time, a better balance seems to be emerging.

 
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