Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
India

India Opens First Partition Museum 70 Years After The Bloody And Painful Event

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Aug, 2017 11:46 AM
    A new museum on the Partition of the Indian subcontinent opens this week, as the two South Asian giants India and Pakistan mark seven decades as independent nations.
     
     
    In the 70 years since India and Pakistan were created from the former British Empire, there has never been a venue focused on the stories and memorabilia of those who survived that chaotic and bloody chapter in history — until now.
     
     
    A new museum on the Partition of the Indian subcontinent opens this week, as the two South Asian giants mark seven decades as independent nations.
     
     
    “If you look at any other country in the world, they’ve all memorialized the experiences that have defined and shaped them. Yet this event that has so deeply shaped not only our subcontinent but millions of individuals who were impacted has had no museum or memorial 70 years later,” said Mallika Ahluwalia, CEO of the Partition Museum .
     
     
    The exhibitions, housed in the red-brick Town Hall building in the north Indian border city of Amritsar, include photographs, newspaper clippings and donated personal items meant to tell the story of how the region’s struggle for freedom from colonial rule turned into one of its most violent episodes, as communal clashes left hundreds of thousands of Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs dead and another 15 million displaced from their ancestral homes.
     
     
     
     
    An antique pocket watch that belonged to someone killed in mob violence in Pakistan. Woven fabrics from craftsmen of the time. A traditional rope cot carried by a refugee across the border. And many old black-and-white family snapshots.
     
     
    Screens show video interviews with the now-elderly survivors. The last of the museum’s 14 galleries is called the Gallery of Hope, where visitors are invited to scribble messages of love and peace on leaf-shaped papers before hanging them on a barbed-wire tree. The idea, Ahluwalia said, was to have visitors participate in the “greening” of the tree and to think of peace and reconciliation between the torn nations.
     
     
     
     
    While the bloody events of Partition became a foundational part of India’s history and identity, sparking countless works of art, literature and film, there has been no official expression of regret, and India’s leaders have been cautious in mentioning the communal violence that coincided with the country’s earliest days. There are no memorials to those who perished. On Tuesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi made no mention of Partition itself while regaling the country’s freedom fighters in his annual Independence Day speech to the nation.
     
     
    Sociologist Shiv Visvanathan suggested the topic has simply been too painful for many to dwell on, and that reconciliation would need to be two-sided to work. Even the museum, he said, should reflect realities on both sides.
     
     
    “If a nation-state becomes the repository of memory, it becomes a one-sided memory,” Visvanathan said. “We have to acknowledge the mutuality of violence. There is no one truth. No one victim.”
     
     
    The museum is located in the heart of Amritsar, best known for its famed Sikh Golden Temple, because the Punjabi city was one of the first points of arrival for millions of refugees to India.
     
     
    Dozens of people donated items to the museum, including 81-year-old Sohinder Nath Chopra, who included an autobiographical novel set in his old village near Gujranwala in Pakistan. His family had been warned by a Muslim cleric to flee the village as weaponized mobs went on killing sprees against Hindus and Sikhs in the newly declared Islamic republic.
     
     
     
     
    He was 12 years old as they crossed the border into India, and remembers “big arches welcoming the refugees.”
     
     
    “Hindi film songs were being played loudly,” Chopra told the Associated Press. “There were people standing on both sides, holding bread, vegetables, water. And everybody started crying.”
    " alt="" style="max-width:640px;" />

    MORE India ARTICLES

    54-Year-Old Ailing Delhi Woman Fights Off Men Trying To Snatch Chain, Kicks Their Bike

    54-Year-Old Ailing Delhi Woman Fights Off Men Trying To Snatch Chain, Kicks Their Bike
    When the men realised that they had been cornered, they fled from the spot leaving their motorcycle behind.

    54-Year-Old Ailing Delhi Woman Fights Off Men Trying To Snatch Chain, Kicks Their Bike

    Chhota Shakeel's Aide Nabbed, Was Planning To Kill Pakistani-Canadian Writer Tarek Fatah

    Chhota Shakeel's Aide Nabbed, Was Planning To Kill Pakistani-Canadian Writer Tarek Fatah
    NEW DELHI:  The Delhi Police Special Cell arrested an alleged aide of gangster Chhota Shakeel, who the police said was planning to target Pakistan-born Canadian writer Tarek Fatah. 

    Chhota Shakeel's Aide Nabbed, Was Planning To Kill Pakistani-Canadian Writer Tarek Fatah

    Depressed Ludhiana Industrialist Jagmeet Pal Singh Khurana Kills Wife, Son Before Committing Suicide

    Depressed Ludhiana Industrialist Jagmeet Pal Singh Khurana Kills Wife, Son Before Committing Suicide
    Jagmeet Pal Singh Khurana, 40, who owns a furnace unit at Focal Point besides an iron store at Millerganj, used his licensed gun. He allegedly shot at his wife Jaspreet Kaur alias Neetu (38), son Jashandeep Singh (18) and daughter Bisman (15).

    Depressed Ludhiana Industrialist Jagmeet Pal Singh Khurana Kills Wife, Son Before Committing Suicide

    4,000 Indian Students Seek US Visa For Higher Education

    4,000 Indian Students Seek US Visa For Higher Education
    Around 4,000 Indian students appeared for interviews on Thursday to secure the American visa to pursue higher education in the US, brushing aside fears of hate crimes in that country.

    4,000 Indian Students Seek US Visa For Higher Education

    Gurgaon Horror: After Being Gang Raped In Auto, Woman Travelled In Metro With Her Dead Baby

    Gurgaon Horror: After Being Gang Raped In Auto, Woman Travelled In Metro With Her Dead Baby
    Among the thousands of people who took the Yellow and Violet lines of Metro on the morning of May 30 was a who was travelling with a dead eight-month-old baby in her arms.

    Gurgaon Horror: After Being Gang Raped In Auto, Woman Travelled In Metro With Her Dead Baby

    15-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Gang-Raped In Bus In Tamil Nadu, 3 Arrested

    15-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Gang-Raped In Bus In Tamil Nadu, 3 Arrested
    A 15-year-old girl was allegedly raped by two drivers and a conductor in a bus near here, bringing back memories of the December 16, 2012 sensational gang-rape in which a 23-year-old woman paramedic was raped in a moving bus in New Delhi.

    15-Year-Old Girl Allegedly Gang-Raped In Bus In Tamil Nadu, 3 Arrested