
Syllabus: GS1/Population
Context
- The concept of being a ‘foreigner or videshi’ typically reserved for international migrants, is increasingly used by internal migrants in India to describe their experience of cultural displacement.
Defining Diaspora
- The term ‘diaspora’ has become central in policy and academic discussions after the High-Level Committee on the Indian Diaspora published its report in 2001–02.
- It has been defined through national borders, and evokes images of overseas communities — Punjabis in Canada, Tamils in Malaysia, Gujaratis in East Africa etc.
- It was then estimated at over 20 million and is now pegged at over 30 million.
- In India, words like pravasi and videshi apply not only to international migrants but also to those moving across states. For example:
- Migrants from Odisha working in Surat often refer to their workplace as videsh, because they’ve crossed into a vastly different cultural zone.
- In Madurai, Tamil Nadu, over 60,000 people speak Gujarati, despite the Census recording virtually no Gujarati migrants, suggesting long-standing settlement and cultural retention.
Scale of Internal Diasporas
- According to a recent study, the number of Indians living in culturally distinct zones within India exceeds 100 million — more than triple the size of India’s international diaspora (based on language Census data, excluding border districts).
- Key Findings:
- Most Dispersed Groups: Punjabi, Malayalam, and Tamil speakers (over 10% dispersed), followed by Telugu and Gujarati.
- Largest Group: Hindi speakers (including Bhojpuri and Marwari) dominate numerically but are less dispersed relative to size.
- Least Dispersed: Marathi, Kannada, and Bengali speakers.
- Urban Spread: A third of the internal diaspora resides in India’s ten largest cities.
| Aspect | Internal Diaspora | Internal Migration |
| Nature | Long-term settlement in distinct cultural zones | Temporary or cyclical movement |
| Identity | Maintains distinct language, customs, associations | May assimilate or remain transient |
| Policy status | Largely overlooked, not formally recognised | Addressed in labor laws, welfare schemes |
| Perception | Often feel like videshi in own country | Seen as peripheral/seasonal migrants |
Why Recognise Internal Diasporas?
- Cultural Preservation and Identity: Internal diasporas maintain distinct languages, customs, and festivals even after generations of settlement in new regions.
- Community Building and Social Capital: Diasporic groups often form associations (e.g., Bengali Associations, Marathi Mandals, Gujarati Samaj) that foster solidarity, mutual aid, and cultural continuity.
- These networks can support education, entrepreneurship, and civic engagement.
- Policy Relevance: Recognizing internal diasporas helps tailor welfare schemes, urban planning, and language education policies.
- Economic Contributions: Many internal diasporas are rooted in trade and business migration, contributing to regional economies (e.g., Odia workers in Surat’s textile industry).
- Social Integration with Diversity: Diasporas enrich host regions with culinary, artistic, and linguistic diversity, fostering multicultural urban spaces.
Challenges of Internal Diasporas
- Cultural Alienation: Migrants often feel excluded due to linguistic and cultural barriers.
- Discrimination & Stereotypes: Host communities may marginalise diasporic groups.
- Political Ambiguity: Unlike international diaspora, internal diasporas lack formal recognition in policy.
- Data Gaps: Census/PLFS capture recent migration but miss long-settled diasporic communities.
- Identity Struggles: Younger generations face assimilation pressures and risk losing linguistic/cultural roots.
- Urban Strain: Large diasporic clusters in cities may add to housing, infrastructure, and service pressures.
Conclusion & Way Forward
- India’s diasporic reality is not confined to 30 million abroad, but extends to 100+ million within its borders.
- Limiting diaspora to national boundaries overlooks the cultural and economic role of internal diasporas.
- They shape India’s food, language, art, and commerce, enriching both host communities and national identity.
- Policy must embrace a borderless understanding of diaspora, recognising that being videshi can mean crossing state boundaries as much as international ones.
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