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Kairana
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Kairana (Hindi pronunciation: [kɛːɾaːn̪aː]) is a city and a municipal board in Shamli district of the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. It is approximately 14 km (8.7 mi) from Shamli city.
Key Information
Demographics
[edit]As of 2011 Indian Census, Kairana had a total population of 89,000, of which 47,047 were males and 41,953 were females. Population within the age group of 0 to 6 years was 16,074. The total number of literates in Kairana was 34,441, which constituted 38.7% of the population with male literacy of 45.4% and female literacy of 31.2%. The effective literacy rate of 7+ population of Kairana was 47.2%, of which male literacy rate was 55.2% and female literacy rate was 38.2%. The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes population was 5,087 and 8 respectively. Kairana had 13951 households in 2011.[1]
As of the 2001[update] India census, Kairana had a population of 73,046. Male population is 38,849 and female population is 34,197. In Kairana, 21.7% of the population was in the age group of 0–6 years. In Kairana, the population of literates was 21,539, which constituted 29.5% of the total population. The effective literacy of population seven years and above was 37.6%.[4]
Migration
[edit]Kairana and Kandhla migration row (also known as Kairana exodus) refers to mass migration of Hindu families from Kairana and Kandhla in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh during the period 2014–16. Media sources have stated that the migration was due to threats of extortion from Mukim Kala, described as a "gangster." The National Human Rights Commission issued a notice to the Uttar Pradesh government regarding the migration from Kairana. Bharatiya Janata Party politician Hukum Singh released a list of 346 Hindu families which had migrated from Kairana. On 14 June, he released another list, this time containing the names of migrant families from Kandhla. Both these list and the subsequent response have received extensive media coverage . Several families have reportedly deserted the city due to extortion and loot by goons of gangsters like Mukim Kala. Many families have reportedly been forced to shift to nearby Haryana villages due to the terror. Locals said they were getting threats on phone and through letters. If one refuses to give protection money, he is killed by the henchmen. They have no option but to leave the city to save their lives.[5] However it was also reported that many migrated not because of communalism, but crime.[6]
National Human Rights Commission confirmed the exodus in an inquiry which also cited the influx of Muzaffarnagar Riot refugees as exacerbating the harmony in Kairana.[7]
Places of interest
[edit]There are many religious and natural attractions in and around Kairana. Of these, are mainly the Nagarpalika building and procession house, Devi Mandir and Talab, Nawab Talab,[8] Jain Mandir and Bagh, Imambara, Gaushala, Idgah and many shrines including Nogza Pir, Public Inter College Kairana, the Yamuna river at 6 km (3.7 mi).[citation needed]


Notable people
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Census of India: Kairana". www.censusindia.gov.in. Retrieved 25 December 2019.
- ^ "Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly (UPLA): Member info". www.upvidhansabhaproceedings.gov.in. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
- ^ a b "52nd REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONER FOR LINGUISTIC MINORITIES IN INDIA" (PDF). nclm.nic.in. Ministry of Minority Affairs. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
- ^ "Census of India 2011: Data from the 2011 Census, including cities, villages and towns (Provisional)". Census Commission of India. Archived from the original on 16 June 2004. Retrieved 1 November 2008.
- ^ "In Akhilesh Yadav's Uttar Pradesh, mobster forces Hindu exodus". No. Kairana exodus. India Today. 12 June 2016.
- ^ "A dangerous game". The Hindu. 22 June 2016.
- ^ Rai, Sandeep (22 September 2016). "Exodus of Hindu families from Kairana a reality, finds NHRC probe report". The Times of India. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
- ^ मुहम्मद उमर कैरानवी (2007). कैराना का नवाब तालाब. p. 22.
Kairana
View on GrokipediaGeography
Location and Administration
Kairana lies in Shamli district, Uttar Pradesh, India, at coordinates 29°23′38″N 77°12′01″E.[6] The town is situated approximately 14 kilometers southeast of Shamli, the district headquarters, at an elevation of 243 meters above sea level.[7] Kairana functions as the headquarters of Kairana tehsil, one of three tehsils in Shamli district alongside Shamli and Oon.[8] The tehsil encompasses an area of 655.24 square kilometers with a population of 586,254 recorded in the 2011 census.[9] Local governance in the town is managed by the Kairana Municipal Council, operating under the oversight of Shamli district administration.[10] Shamli district was established on September 28, 2011, by carving out territories including Kairana tehsil from Muzaffarnagar district, initially named Prabuddh Nagar before being renamed Shamli.[11]Physical Features and Climate
Kairana is situated on the flat alluvial plains of the Indo-Gangetic region in western Uttar Pradesh, featuring even topography conducive to extensive agriculture with fertile loamy soils derived from riverine deposits.[12] The average elevation is approximately 242 meters above sea level, contributing to a landscape dominated by low-lying, arable land without significant topographical variations or hills.[13] Proximity to rivers such as the Yamuna, located about 6 km away, and the Hindon influences local hydrology, with potential for seasonal flooding from overflow during monsoons, though the town itself is not directly on these waterways.[14] Irrigation relies heavily on groundwater extraction, with the Kairana block exhibiting high development rates due to the region's porous aquifers.[15] The climate is subtropical monsoon type, marked by extreme seasonal variations. Summers from April to June are intensely hot, with maximum temperatures frequently exceeding 40°C and occasionally reaching 45°C, accompanied by dry, dusty conditions.[8] The monsoon season spans June to September, delivering about 80% of the annual precipitation, which averages 869 mm, primarily through heavy downpours that support kharif crops but also pose flood risks from nearby rivers.[15] Winters from November to February are mild and dry, with minimum temperatures dropping to around 5°C at night, while spring transitions bring moderate warmth.[8] Overall annual temperatures range from an average high of about 33°C to a low of 22°C, with humidity peaking during the rainy season.[16]History
Ancient and Medieval Periods
Archaeological surveys have identified Harappan-era sites in Kairana, Shamli district, evidencing early settlements associated with the Indus Valley Civilization, dated roughly to 2600–1900 BCE.[17] These findings align with broader proto-historic occupation in the upper Doab region, where nearby excavations at Hulas, approximately 8 km north of Kairana, reveal similar Late Harappan phases characterized by pottery, structures, and artifacts indicative of agrarian communities transitioning from urban centers.[18] The post-Harappan period in the vicinity saw the emergence of Painted Grey Ware culture around 1200–600 BCE, linked to Iron Age developments and early Vedic societies, though specific artifacts or settlements directly attributable to Kairana remain undocumented in available records.[19] By the historical era, the area formed part of Madhya Desh, a core Vedic heartland encompassing Mahajanapadas like Panchala, fostering advancements in agriculture, iron technology, and urbanization under kingdoms such as the Mauryas (c. 322–185 BCE) and Guptas (c. 320–550 CE), but Kairana itself lacks distinct epigraphic or literary mentions from these phases.[20] Medieval records specific to Kairana are limited, with the town likely functioning as a minor rural outpost amid Rajput-dominated polities in the Doab prior to the 12th-century Islamic incursions by the Ghurids and Delhi Sultanate. The region's strategic position facilitated trade and agrarian expansion under these shifting overlords, yet no primary sources detail Kairana's role until later administrative integrations. Local traditions attribute early medieval settlement to Gurjar-Rajput clans, potentially influencing the town's nomenclature, though these claims rest on oral histories rather than corroborated texts.[21]Mughal Era and Colonial Rule
During the Mughal period, Kairana emerged as a significant pargana, an administrative unit handling local revenue collection, judicial affairs, and governance under the imperial sarkar system. The town gained prominence as the seat of Shaikh Hasan, titled Muqarrab Khan by Emperor Jahangir (r. 1605–1627), who originally served as a court physician treating ailments such as Akbar's, leveraging family ties as childhood associates of Prince Salim (later Jahangir).[22] As a Shaikhzada—a lineage claiming descent from early Arab Muslim settlers—Hasan's clan secured revenue-free land grants (madad-i-ma'ash) for religious and service endowments, fostering alliances with other Shaikhzada families across the empire and bolstering local influence in western Uttar Pradesh. Muqarrab Khan retired to Kairana circa 1628 under Shah Jahan, erecting monuments that underscored the town's role as a Shaikhzada stronghold amid Mughal patronage of such intermediaries for administrative stability.[23] In the colonial era, following the East India Company's consolidation after the Second Anglo-Maratha War (1803–1805), Kairana integrated into Muzaffarnagar district under the North-Western Provinces, later the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh (1902). British revenue policy imposed the Mahalwari system from the 1820s, assessing taxes collectively on village lands (mahals) rather than individuals, yielding fixed demands on Kairana's agrarian base of wheat, sugarcane, and cotton cultivation, with assessments periodically revised via surveys to maximize yields amid soil fertility from Yamuna silt.[24][25] The 1857 rebellion saw local residents in Kairana and surrounding areas join widespread resistance in Rohilkhand, disrupting British control through skirmishes and support for rebel forces before suppression restored order, prompting stricter martial law and revenue recalibrations to curb zamindar autonomy.[8] Post-1858, under direct Crown rule, emphasis shifted to canal irrigation expansions like the Upper Ganges Canal (completed 1854, extended post-revolt) and railway links, embedding Kairana's economy in export-oriented agriculture while maintaining pargana-era village hierarchies for efficient extraction.[24]Post-Independence Developments
Following India's independence in 1947, Kairana continued as a tehsil within Muzaffarnagar district of the United Provinces, which was redesignated as Uttar Pradesh on January 24, 1950, to reflect its expanded linguistic and cultural identity encompassing Hindi-speaking regions. Local governance persisted through established structures, including the Municipal Board of Kairana, which enacted bylaws under the U.P. Municipalities Act, 1916, as early as March 1949 to regulate urban services and taxation. Rural modernization efforts in the 1950s and 1960s emphasized agricultural extension and community development programs, with the Kairana development block established in 1959 to support improved farming techniques, irrigation, and infrastructure in surrounding villages. The area's economy, dominated by sugarcane cultivation, aligned with Uttar Pradesh's broader expansion of the sugar sector during the 1960s to 1980s, driven by increased milling capacity and state incentives that positioned the state as India's second-largest sugar producer by the 1980s, though local processing relied on nearby facilities in Muzaffarnagar.[24][26] Significant administrative reconfiguration occurred in September 2011, when Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati announced the creation of a new district from Muzaffarnagar, incorporating the tehsils of Shamli and Kairana, initially named Prabuddh Nagar with headquarters at Shamli; it was renamed Shamli district in July 2012 to honor local historical nomenclature. This division enhanced local governance efficiency, with Kairana retaining its tehsil status and serving as a key sub-divisional hub for revenue, judicial, and developmental administration. Concurrently, the 2008 delimitation of parliamentary constituencies established the Kairana Lok Sabha seat, encompassing the town and surrounding areas to better represent regional demographics and electoral dynamics.[27]Demographics
Population Statistics
As per the 2011 Census of India, the town of Kairana, administered as a nagar palika parishad, had a total population of 89,000, comprising 47,047 males and 41,953 females.[2] [1] The sex ratio stood at 892 females per 1,000 males, lower than the Uttar Pradesh state average of 912.[2] Children aged 0-6 years numbered 12,371, representing 13.9% of the total population, with a child sex ratio of 861.[2] The town's population grew from 73,011 in the 2001 Census to 89,000 in 2011, reflecting a decadal growth rate of 21.9%, which exceeded the state average of 20.2% for urban areas during that period.[28] [2] Kairana spans an area of approximately 7.11 km², yielding a population density of 12,518 persons per km² in 2011.[29] There were 13,951 households in the town at the time of the census.[1] The 2021 Census of India was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, leaving no official update beyond 2011; projections based on prior growth trends estimate Kairana's 2025 population at around 127,000.[2] Kairana forms part of Kairana Tehsil in Muzaffarnagar district (now Shamli district post-2012 bifurcation), which recorded a tehsil-wide population of 586,254 in 2011, with the town accounting for about 15% of that figure and urban areas comprising 28.9% overall.[30] [31]| Census Year | Population | Decadal Growth Rate (%) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 | 73,011 | - | [28] |
| 2011 | 89,000 | 21.9 | [2] |
Religious and Caste Composition
According to the 2011 Census of India, Kairana town's population of 89,000 was religiously composed of approximately 81.66% Muslims and 18.34% Hindus, with Hindus numbering 16,320 and other religious groups constituting a negligible share.[1][2] The Muslim population is predominantly Sunni, reflecting the broader demographic pattern among Muslims in western Uttar Pradesh where Hanafi Sunni Islam prevails without significant sectarian minorities reported in local data.[1] Among Hindus, Jats form the dominant caste group, comprising a substantial portion of the minority community in this region of Uttar Pradesh known for Jat agricultural influence.[32] The Muslim community includes diverse occupational and ethnic subgroups such as Gujjars (a significant presence across religious lines in the area) and Ansaris (weavers), alongside other artisan and trading castes typical of urban Muslim settlements in the Upper Doab.[21] Scheduled Castes account for about 5.7% of the total population, primarily integrated within Hindu demographics, while Scheduled Tribes are minimal at 0.01%.[1]Historical Population Shifts
According to the 2001 census, Kairana town had a total population of 73,046, which increased to 89,000 by the 2011 census, reflecting a decadal growth rate of approximately 21.9%.[2] Detailed religious composition data for the town prior to 2011 is not publicly detailed in census summaries, limiting direct longitudinal comparisons at the town level. However, the 2011 census recorded Hindus at 18.34% (16,320 individuals), Muslims at 80.74% (71,908 individuals), Jains at 0.62%, and Christians at 0.22%, indicating a strong Muslim majority in the urban core.[1][2] In the surrounding Kairana tehsil, census data provides a clearer trend: the Hindu share declined from 49.54% in 2001 to 45.38% (266,061 individuals) in 2011, while the Muslim share rose from 48.79% to 52.94% (310,336 individuals).[33][30] This shift aligns with broader patterns in Uttar Pradesh, where the number of Muslim-majority towns increased from 101 in 1981 to 231 in 2011, driven by differential growth rates.[34] Nationally, between 2001 and 2011, the Muslim population grew at 24.6% decadal rate compared to 16.8% for Hindus, attributable primarily to higher total fertility rates among Muslims (2.6 children per woman versus 2.1 for Hindus in the preceding period).[35] Pre-2001 religious breakdowns for Kairana town or tehsil are sparse in accessible census records, with data gaps complicating verification of claims regarding earlier balances or post-1980s tipping points toward 80-85% Muslim composition.[36] Local electoral rolls or administrative records sometimes cited in discussions show inconsistencies with census figures, underscoring challenges in sensitive demographic areas where under-reporting or migration may affect accuracy, though census enumerations remain the primary empirical benchmark.[33] Overall, verifiable census trends confirm Muslim population expansion outpacing Hindus in Kairana, consistent with fertility-driven dynamics observed across western Uttar Pradesh pockets.[37]Economy and Infrastructure
Economic Activities
The economy of Kairana centers on agriculture, which dominates occupational structure in the Kairana tehsil, with sugarcane as the primary crop due to the region's fertile alluvial soils and irrigation from canals.[38] Other key crops include wheat, rice, and pulses, supporting both subsistence and commercial farming across approximately 80% of cultivable land in the surrounding Shamli district.[8][39] Sugarcane processing is facilitated by nearby sugar mills in Shamli, Un, and Thanabhawan, which process output from local farmers, though mills have periodically faced payment delays to growers exceeding ₹13,000 crore statewide as of 2019.[40] According to 2011 Census data for Kairana tehsil, agriculture employs the majority of the 144,244 main workers, including 47,363 cultivators (32.8%) and 42,596 agricultural laborers (29.5%), underscoring reliance on farming amid limited diversification.[30] Household industries account for 4,963 workers (3.4%), involving small-scale activities like food processing or textiles, while other sectors such as brick kilns provide seasonal migrant labor opportunities.[30][41] Agro-based industries, including sugar refining, contribute to local value addition but remain secondary to primary production, with economic challenges like crop payment arrears affecting farmer incomes.[38][40]Infrastructure and Urban Development
Kairana, a nagar panchayat in Shamli district, relies primarily on road transport for connectivity, with no operational railway station within the town limits; the nearest stations are in Shamli and Gujran Balwa, approximately 10 km away.[42] Local bus services connect Kairana to regional destinations, including Uttar Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation routes to cities like Muzaffarnagar and Saharanpur.[43] Road infrastructure includes the Kairana-Khatauli road, which underwent widening and strengthening over a 14.9 km stretch (km 33 to 47.9) as a major district road project completed by 2016.[44] Enhanced connectivity to National Highway 44 (NH-44) is supported by ongoing upgradation of a highway link from Panipat through Kairana and Shamli, improving access to Delhi and Haryana.[45] Utilities in Kairana have seen targeted improvements under Uttar Pradesh state initiatives post-2017, including electrification aligned with the national Saubhagya scheme, which achieved near-universal household coverage across the state by 2019, though local supply reliability remains challenged by regional grid constraints.[46] Water supply efforts incorporate the Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM), with progress in providing tap connections to institutions like anganwadis in Kairana block, aiming for functional household taps delivering 55 liters per capita daily by 2024, supplemented by rural piped schemes from Uttar Pradesh Jal Nigam.[47] Sanitation advanced significantly with the completion in 2024 of a 15 million liters per day (MLD) sewage treatment plant (STP) and interception and diversion (I&D) network at a cost of Rs. 78 crore under the Namami Gange programme, addressing untreated discharge into the Yamuna using a design-build-operate-transfer model.[48][49] Urban development focuses on basic amenities amid limited expansion plans, with the Uttar Pradesh government's post-2017 push for rural-urban infrastructure including road upgrades and utility projects to support population growth, though Kairana lacks designation as a smart city or major township under state policies.[50] These efforts prioritize sewerage and water to mitigate environmental risks from the town's proximity to the Yamuna, with the recent STP enhancing wastewater management capacity beyond prior open drainage systems.[51]Culture and Heritage
Kirana Gharana of Hindustani Music
The Kirana Gharana emerged from the musical traditions of Kairana, a town in Uttar Pradesh's Muzaffarnagar district, tracing its roots to 19th-century forebears like Ustad Bande Ali Khan and Ustad Rehman Baksh before coalescing into a distinct style under Ustad Abdul Karim Khan (1872–1937).[52][53] Abdul Karim Khan, born on November 11, 1872, in Kairana, received initial training from his uncle Ustad Fateh Ali Khan and later from Ustad Alladiya Khan of the Jaipur-Atrauli Gharana, blending influences to emphasize emotional depth and swara purity.[54][55] He migrated to Baroda in 1901 and later to Maharashtra, where he popularized the gharana through performances and teaching, establishing it as a major school by the early 20th century.[56] Stylistically, the Kirana Gharana prioritizes a meditative, gradual unfolding of ragas with slow tempos in the alap and vistaar sections, focusing on the precise enunciation of swaras over rapid rhythmic play.[57] Its hallmark is intricate taan patterns, including bol-taans and sargam taans that weave solfege notations into complex, ornamental sequences, often prioritizing melodic elaboration above layakari (rhythmic variations).[58][59] This approach fosters emotional restraint and clarity, contrasting with more flamboyant gharanas like Agra or Gwalior, and draws from Abdul Karim Khan's synthesis of beenkar (instrumental) precision with vocal expressiveness.[60] Key exponents include Abdul Karim Khan's direct disciples such as Krishnarao Phulekar and Narayanrao Vyas, who transmitted the style southward.[61] The second generation featured luminaries like Sawai Gandharva, Gangubai Hangal, and Pandit Bhimsen Joshi, who expanded its reach through recordings and concerts from the 1930s onward, with Joshi's 1940s–2000s career exemplifying the gharana's enduring emphasis on raga purity amid broader commercialization of classical music.[61] Contemporary practitioners, including Joshi's disciples like Falguni Pathak (instrumental) and vocalists from the ITC Sangeet Research Academy lineage, maintain these traits, though some adaptations incorporate faster tempos for modern audiences.[57]Religious and Cultural Sites
Kairana's religious landscape is dominated by Islamic sites, including the Eidgah, an open-air enclosure used for congregational Eid prayers by the Muslim community. Local mosques such as Jama Masjid and Shamsi Masjid serve daily worship needs.[62] Sufi dargahs, shrines honoring revered saints, draw pilgrims seeking spiritual blessings, underscoring the town's historical ties to Islamic mysticism.[63] One notable example is the Dargah of Sheikh Jalaluddin Chishti, associated with Chishti Sufi traditions.[64] Among cultural sites, Nawab Talab stands out as a historic reservoir constructed during the Mughal era, featuring a central platform that once held a pavilion visited by Emperor Jahangir.[23] Jahangir referenced the site in his memoirs Tuzuk-i-Jahangiri, praising its gardens and waters as a noble's retreat. The talab remains a local landmark, though its surrounding structures have largely deteriorated.[65] Hindu temples, such as those dedicated to Devi, exist but are less prominently documented in historical records compared to Islamic structures.[66]Local Traditions and Festivals
Kairana's traditions feature celebrations of major Hindu and Muslim festivals, with local residents observing these events amid a history of communal harmony in observances. Hindu inhabitants mark Diwali through the lighting of diyas, fireworks displays, and sharing of sweets, as seen in community gatherings documented in 2025. Holi involves the application of colored powders and water, accompanied by folk songs and dances typical of western Uttar Pradesh.[67] Muslim residents primarily celebrate Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha with congregational prayers at the town's historic Eidgah, followed by feasting on traditional dishes like sheer khurma and qurbani meat, respectively; these events occur peacefully under local security arrangements, as reported in statewide coverage including Shamli district. Muharram processions, though not uniquely detailed for Kairana, align with regional Shia mourning rituals involving tazias and recitations, observed during the Islamic lunar month.[68][69] The annual Kairana village mela serves as a prominent local custom, blending agricultural and cultural elements with stalls selling handicrafts, amusement rides, folk music performances, and street food, drawing participants from surrounding areas in late 2024 and anticipated for 2025. This fair reflects syncretic practices, as locals have noted joint participation in various festivals despite demographic shifts. Wedding customs among the Jat communities, both Hindu and Muslim, incorporate regional Uttar Pradesh elements such as mehndi ceremonies and baraat processions, though specific Kairana variations remain undocumented in primary sources.[70][71]Politics and Controversies
Political Landscape
Kairana's political dynamics are shaped by its position within Shamli district, where the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Samajwadi Party (SP) dominate electoral contests, often along lines of community mobilization involving Jats, Muslims, and other backward classes. The Kairana Assembly constituency, one of 403 in Uttar Pradesh, forms a key segment of the Kairana Lok Sabha constituency and has seen SP consolidate control in recent state polls. In the 2017 Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, SP's Nahid Hasan secured victory with a significant margin amid 209,134 valid votes cast from 300,659 electors.[72] Hasan defended the seat in 2022, polling 131,035 votes to defeat BJP's Mriganka Singh by 25,887 votes, underscoring SP's organizational strength in the urban core of Kairana town.[73][74] At the parliamentary level, the Kairana Lok Sabha constituency—encompassing five assembly segments including Kairana, Gangoh, Thana Bhawan, Shamli, and Nakur—exhibits greater volatility. BJP's Hukum Singh won the seat in 2014, capitalizing on a wave favoring the party nationally, but his death in 2018 triggered a bypoll where SP's Tabassum Hasan prevailed, marking a temporary reversal for BJP in the region.[75] BJP rebounded in 2019 with Pradeep Choudhary's victory and retained it in 2024, as Pradeep Kumar garnered 528,013 votes in a contest against SP's Iqra Hasan, reflecting BJP's appeal in rural Jat-dominated areas offsetting SP's urban Muslim base.[76][77] Campaigns frequently highlight governance, infrastructure, and security, with SP drawing on familial legacies—such as the Hasan family's repeated candidacies—and alliances with backward caste groups, while BJP stresses law enforcement and development initiatives under state leadership.[78] Voter turnout in assembly segments varies, with Kairana recording around 4,780 votes from sample booths in recent parliamentary trends, indicative of competitive participation.[79] This bipolar rivalry has intensified since the 2014 shift toward BJP dominance in western Uttar Pradesh, though SP's bypoll and assembly successes demonstrate resilience in localized pockets.[80]Migration and Demographic Change Controversy
In June 2016, Hukum Singh, the Bharatiya Janata Party Member of Parliament representing Kairana, publicly released a list documenting 346 Hindu families who had reportedly fled the town due to extortion demands and threats from criminal gangs, primarily those associated with Muslim gangsters such as Mukim Kala.[81][5] Singh attributed the migrations to a pattern of violence, including murders and intimidation, claiming that over a dozen individuals had been killed in related incidents between 2012 and 2016, with families often selling properties at undervalued prices to escape.[82] He linked these events to a broader breakdown in law enforcement, arguing that unchecked criminal elements had created an environment of fear specifically targeting Hindu residents.[83] A subsequent investigation by the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) in September 2016 verified elements of Singh's claims, confirming that approximately 250 Hindu families had indeed migrated from Kairana, with many departures driven by fears of extortion and violence rather than purely economic factors.[5] The NHRC team cross-checked Singh's list against local records and interviews, finding that while not all cases involved explicit communal targeting, a significant portion correlated with activities of local gangs demanding protection money, leading to corroborated instances of families relocating to nearby areas like Muzaffarnagar or Delhi.[5] The report also noted a parallel influx of 25,000 to 30,000 Muslim residents from other regions, exacerbating a demographic shift that had altered Kairana's composition from a more balanced Hindu-Muslim mix in prior decades to one where Muslims constituted over 80% of the population by the mid-2010s.[83] This combination of outward Hindu migration and inward Muslim settlement was presented as contributing to a perceived inversion, though official 2011 census data for the town did not disaggregate religion at a granular level to quantify pre-2016 baselines precisely.[83] Counterarguments from local officials and opposition figures, including the Samajwadi Party-led state government at the time, emphasized economic motivations over communal violence, asserting that many departures predated 2012 and were linked to job opportunities in urban centers rather than gang threats.[84] The National Commission for Minorities (NCM) echoed this in October 2016, stating no evidence of large-scale communal exodus and highlighting that Kairana had long been Muslim-majority, with migrations affecting both communities amid general poverty and lack of development.[85] However, the NHRC findings challenged purely economic explanations by documenting specific cases of intimidation, including families who left after refusing extortion payments, and noted that while higher Muslim birth rates played a role in demographic trends, the verified outflows aligned temporally with spikes in reported cognizable crimes, such as murders and robberies, in the area from 2012 onward.[5][21] Singh himself later clarified in 2017 that the issue was not inherently communal but rooted in criminality, though the initial controversy highlighted tensions between law enforcement failures and demographic pressures.[86]Criminality and Law Enforcement Issues
Kairana has experienced elevated levels of organized crime, particularly murders and extortion, during the 2010s, driven by local gangs operating in the region. The Mukim Kala gang, led by gangster Mukim Kala, was implicated in at least 47 cases involving robbery, murder, dacoity, extortion, and arms violations, contributing to widespread fear among residents and businesses. In 2014, gang member Furqan allegedly murdered trader Vinod Gupta in broad daylight after Gupta refused an extortion demand, an incident that intensified local insecurity and prompted reports of family migrations. Similar activities by gangs such as the Kagga gang, which established Kairana as a base after leader Kagga's death in a 2011 police encounter, involved turf wars, kidnappings, and highway robberies linked to control over sugarcane factories and extortion rackets.[5][87][88] A 2016 National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) investigation confirmed that fear of such criminal elements led to the exodus of Hindu families from Kairana, documenting instances where extortion demands and threats forced relocations, though it cautioned against overly communal interpretations of the migration. The probe highlighted testimonies of taunts and intimidation by youth from the majority community, alongside verified departures due to criminal pressures rather than solely economic factors. Prior to 2017, law enforcement responses were criticized for delays attributed to political appeasement of influential families, allowing gangs to proliferate unchecked.[5][4] Following the 2017 change in Uttar Pradesh state leadership, police intensified operations against Kairana's gangs, conducting encounters that neutralized key figures, including six alleged criminals killed and 32 injured by April 2018, alongside arrests of over 80 gang members. The Uttar Pradesh Police's crackdown dismantled much of the Mukim Kala network through targeted actions, such as the 2017 arrest of Furqan and encounters eliminating successors like Sabir of the Kagga gang in January 2018. In February 2021, authorities invoked the Gangster Act against former MP Tabassum Hasan, her son and MLA Nahid Hasan, and 38 associates, citing organized criminal activities, reflecting ongoing efforts to curb political-criminal nexuses.[89][90][91] By late 2021, Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath visited Kairana to reaffirm a zero-tolerance policy, promising enhanced security and crediting police encounters with restoring order, which locals reported as reducing extortion and murders compared to the pre-2017 peak. These measures, including systematic arrests and neutralization of hardened criminals, have been linked to a decline in gang dominance, though isolated incidents persist amid broader state-wide encounter statistics exceeding 15,000 since 2017.[92][93]Notable People
Musicians and Artists
Ustad Abdul Karim Khan (1872–1937), born on November 11, 1872, in Kairana, Uttar Pradesh, is recognized as the founder of the Kirana Gharana in Hindustani classical music, emphasizing emotional depth through slow elaboration of ragas and precise swara rendition.[94][95] Trained initially by his father Kale Khan and uncles Abdullah Khan and Nanhe Khan—all musicians from Kairana—he innovated by blending Agra and Gwalior gharana styles with personal expressiveness, influencing generations despite limited recordings due to his era's technology constraints.[96][97] Ustad Abdul Wahid Khan (1880–1941), also born in Kairana, was Abdul Karim Khan's elder brother and a key figure in the same gharana, known for his rigorous adherence to traditional dhrupad-ang singing and complex taan patterns, which contrasted yet complemented his brother's more lyrical approach.[96] He trained under family elders and performed extensively in princely courts, preserving the gharana's roots amid its spread beyond Kairana, though his orthodox style limited popular appeal compared to disciples like Sawai Gandharva.[52] Earlier musicians from Kairana include Bande Ali Khan, a been (rudra veena) player active in the 19th century, whose instrumental lineage contributed to the gharana's foundational techniques, and sarangi maestro Haider Ali Khan, whose bowing precision influenced vocal phrasings in the tradition.[98] These figures, part of extended musical families, underscore Kairana's role as a cradle for Hindustani instrumental and vocal arts before the gharana formalized in the early 20th century.[99] Contemporary descendants like vocalists Karim Niyazi and Zafar Hussein, tracing direct lineage to these pioneers, continue local performances but remain lesser-known outside regional circles, highlighting the gharana's migration from Kairana amid 20th-century urbanization.[96] No prominent visual artists or non-musical figures from Kairana have achieved national recognition in available records, with the town's cultural output predominantly tied to this musical heritage.[3]Political Figures
Hukum Singh (1938–2018) was a veteran Bharatiya Janata Party politician closely tied to Kairana, where he served as Member of Parliament from 2014 until his death.[100] He won seven terms as a Member of the Legislative Assembly in Uttar Pradesh, beginning his career with the Indian National Congress in 1974 before switching affiliations, and held ministerial positions in the state government.[101] Singh, an agriculturist educated at Allahabad University, represented the Kairana constituency in the Lok Sabha after defeating incumbent Begum Tabassum Hasan in the 2014 general election.[100] The Hasan family, prominent in Kairana's political landscape, has fielded multiple Samajwadi Party affiliates as parliamentary representatives. Chaudhary Munawwar Hasan, born in Kairana in 1964, served as MP from the constituency in 2004, focusing on local agricultural and developmental issues during his tenure.[102] His wife, Begum Tabassum Hasan, succeeded in the 2009 Lok Sabha election and reclaimed the seat in the 2018 bypoll as a Rashtriya Lok Dal nominee backed by opposition alliances, marking her as one of few Muslim women MPs from Uttar Pradesh in recent decades.[103] Their daughter, Iqra Munawwar Hasan, born in 1994, won the Kairana seat in the 2024 general election for the Samajwadi Party, defeating the Bharatiya Janata Party candidate by 69,116 votes and becoming the youngest MP from the area at age 29.[104] [77] Tabassum Hasan and her son Nahid Hasan, a Samajwadi Party MLA from Kairana, faced legal scrutiny when booked under the Uttar Pradesh Gangsters and Anti-Social Activities (Prevention) Act in February 2021, along with 38 others, amid allegations tied to family-linked criminal cases in the region.[91] The family's electoral dominance reflects entrenched local influence, with Munawwar and Tabassum's combined parliamentary stints spanning over a decade.[102]Scholars and Others
Rahmatullah Kairanawi (1818–1891) was a Muslim scholar born in Kairana, Uttar Pradesh, who authored Izhar ul-Haqq ("The Truth Revealed") in Arabic in 1864 as a response to Christian missionary critiques of Islam during British rule in India.[105] The multi-volume work systematically examines alleged contradictions and alterations in the Bible, arguing for the superiority of Islamic scriptures.[106] It followed his public debate with German missionary Karl Gottlieb Pfander in Agra on April 10–11, 1854, where Kairanawi defended Islamic positions against Pfander's attacks on the Quran.[107] Shabab Kiranwi (1926–1982), born Nazir Ahmed in Kairana, Muzaffarnagar district, Uttar Pradesh, was an Urdu poet who began writing verses at age 15 and later worked as a screenwriter, lyricist, novelist, and film director after migrating to Pakistan post-1947 partition.[108] He directed commercially successful films including Aina (1977), noted for its social themes, and contributed to Pakistani cinema's early development.[109]References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nawab_Talab_Kairana_Uttar_Pradesh_front_side.jpg

