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The writer is a former caretaker finance minister and served as vice-president at the World Bank

The title of this article is taken from India's British-adopted way of speaking and dealing with what they saw as the problems posed by the area's Muslim population. When the British arrived in what became their largest colony in the empire that they built in the eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries, they initially came as traders to the eastern part of the sub-continent.

Most of the trading the British were interested in was done by Hindu merchants. Delicate Indian silks and other hand-woven fabrics were popular with the residents of London and other large cities in Britain. Muslims were not traders and very few were weavers. Upper-class Muslims had ruled India not only as emperors, with Delhi as their capital, but also as princes governing hundreds of states scattered around the area.

To bring this class of Indians under their control, the Brit

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