The Gulf Trap: Mithila’s Concrete Dreams and Empty Homes
How Bihar’s last migration frontier traded feudalism for remittances—and still lost For two centuries, Bihar has exported its people. Bhojpuri speakers went to Fiji as indentured laborers. Magahi speakers walked to Calcutta’s jute mills. But Mithila—the ancient Maithili-speaking heartland, trapped by floods and feudal lords—was the last to join the caravan. Now it has embraced Gulf migration with the desperation of a drowning man. Remittances constitute ~35% of Bihar’s GSDP. Sixty-five percent of households have at least one migrant. In Darbhanga and Madhubani villages, concrete houses rise from flood-prone soil, paid for by sons in Dubai who haven’t been seen in three years. The sugar mills remain closed. The roads remain broken. The young men remain absent. A river drowns the field each year, The landlord’s boat, the only steer. The son departs for Dubai’s heat, The village crumbles, incomplete. This is Mithila’s paradox: prosperity without development, houses without hous...