India’s largest province, Uttar Pradesh is going for elections. It considers itself to be the heartland. It sends largest number of legislators. Despite continuing to be a constitutionally secular country, majoritarianism is a hegemonic force now, even while its demography comprises a huge chunk of Muslim communities. Historically, a segment of UP Muslims was in positions of strength and power, economically, more specifically in landholding, as well as politically. It has got some of the most influential theological seminaries and has been the centre of many reformist, revivalist, intellectual movements. This is also a province that is the site of some of the biggest issues of Hindu-Muslim contentions, viz., Ayodhya, Kashi, Mathura. In a late-colonial era, this was one of the nerve-centres of Muslim separatism, even though, it was not going to be a part of the Muslim homeland that a segment was asking for and eventually got it with the backing of colonial power. Such contentions continue to rankle and impact contemporary social relations and politics, so far as Hindu-Muslim engagement is concerned.