Bengali Hindus in Myanmar

Bengali Hindus gather for Durga Puja festival in Rangoon, c.1941-42

The history of the Bengali Hindus in Myanmar dates back to the Middle Ages, when the Arakanese kings brought Brahmins from Bengal as astrologers and Doms as cleaners of the pagoda compounds in Arakan.[1] After the annexation of Burmese kingdom by the British, the Bengali Hindus arrived in British Burma in various capacities. A large section came as white collared executives in the administration, while a smaller proportion came as labourers in various projects. By the 1920s, the Bengali Hindus constituted a thriving community in the urban centres like Rangoon, Mandalay, Mawlamyine, Bassein and Sittwe. Starting with the anti-Indian movements in the late 1930s, the Bengali Hindus began to leave British Burma in hundreds. After the independence and especially the 1962 coup, large numbers of Bengali Hindus left for India.

At present, the Bengali Hindu population is concentrated in the cities of Yangon and Sittwe and in some of the semi-urban and rural areas of Rakhine State. The estimated population quoted in various source range between 10,000 and 56,000. The Bengali Hindus are not recognized as full citizens as per the 1982 law, but are entitled to hold the ID Card for National Verification.

  1. ^ Bhattacharya, Swapna (22–23 November 2005). Islam in Arakan: An interpretation from the Indian perspective: History and the Present. Arakan Historical Conference. Bangkok. p. 20. Archived from the original on 1 September 2017. Retrieved 9 September 2017.