Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
International

Indians In Britain Relive Partition With Pain

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Jul, 2019 08:06 PM

    Hitherto, the thousands of Indians who had migrated to Britain in the wake of the partition of the sub-continent had lived in silence, perhaps wanting to bury the ghosts of the past as they sought to make a new life.


    Two years ago, award-winning journalist and broadcaster Kavita Puri produced a three-part series, "Partition Voices" for BBC Radio 4 that won the Royal Historical Society's Radio and Podcast Award and its overall Public History Prize. She has now converted this into a similarly-titled book "to remember the time before separation so the next generations understand that there were Hindus in Lahore, and Muslims in Amritsar".


    "Hindus who tied rakhis on the wrist of their Muslim brothers, and Muslims who brought laddoos to their Hindu friends to celebrate Diwali. Friends and strangers who transcended hatred to commit acts of kindness and humanity during the worst of times.


    "It cannot just be the stories of hate and violence which are passed down. Even though every story told to me was shattering. I felt hopeful. Hopeful that people wanted these stories of compassion to be recognised, and that the visceral pull of the place of your birth, and that of your ancestors - the love of your land - remains so strong. Hopeful that these are the stories that will survive too," Puri writes in "Partition Voices" (Bloomsbury/pp 2832/Rs 499).


    To this end, London-based journalist Poonam Joshi in her book "Arms to Fight, Arms to Protest: Women Speak Out About Conflict" has this quote from her mother, Nirmal, who fled her home in Punjab and ended up in England:


    "Partition can be summarised in great detail or in one sentence. But I still feel great distress that what happened shouldn't have happened. I think we should talk. We should talk about it very openly - we should know what happened at that time. And there is no distress in talking about that. It did not happen to one or two people. It happened on a large-scale... it became a part of history... and it is no crime to be a refugee."


    A similar strain runs through the 23 chapters of the book, divided into three parts - End of Empire, Partition and Legacy.


    Take the story of Gurbaksh Garcha, "smartly dressed in a Nehru waistcoat", exuding gentleness and calm, "a calm that must have been tested many times during his time as Mayor of Lewisham, navigating the local politics".


    "Gurbaksh's home was in a picturesque village amid the fertile plains of the Punjab... It was a harmonious and tight-knot community. Religious difference was barely thought about. They never imagined one day they would separate from each other," Puri writes.


    "Just before partition, Gurbaksh noticed posters going up around the village inciting bloodshed against the Muslims his family had lived alongside for decades. They said that anyone demanding India should be split to create Pakistan would 'get kabristan'."


    And then the mayhem started - and he too fled, to land up in England in 1958.


    "But this story is not one Gurbaksh has ever talked of. It is too painful to recount. His children never asked. And anyway, he did not want to expose them to things he had witnessed.


    "He is still angry at the way and manner of the British withdrawal. Gurbaksh calls himself an agnostic Sikh. He feels his faith in humanity has been shaken, that human beings are fragile. How little it takes to turn them into beasts," Puri writes.


    But then, it's not only the migrants who feel the pain. There is, for instance, the reverend Canon Michael Roden from Hitchin (now Canon Chancellor of Bristol Cathedral).


    "In his church, by the pews...stands a modest memorial. It shows a map of British India with a red line marking the 1947 division. A single A4 typed sheet of paper on a music stand explains that, in the absence of a national memorial, this makeshift one, in his fourteenth-century church, will act as a surrogate to commemorate the millions who died and were displaced. Around the sign, candles are lit in remembrance," Puri writes.


    At the end, the sentence reads: "We have screened the most beautiful part of this church to symbolize terrible loss of life, loss of mutual trust and loss of access to holy sites at the time of partition."


    "The partition generation remembers a time which was not always perfect, but when people lived alongside one another, celebrated each other's festivals, were part of one another's happiness and sorrows. They shared culture, food, language and traditions. A time before division, borders, partition. That is what they choose to remember too, after seventy long years," Puri concludes.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Chief Justice of Pakistan Notice Of Encroachment Over Property Of Hindu Community In Sindh

    Chief Justice of Pakistan Notice Of Encroachment Over Property Of Hindu Community In Sindh
    Pakistan’s Chief Justice Saqib Nisar has taken cognizance of alleged illegal encroachments of the properties of Hindus after a protesting woman professor appealed to him, saying the minority community was facing the “worst lawlessness and mismanagement” in the country.

    Chief Justice of Pakistan Notice Of Encroachment Over Property Of Hindu Community In Sindh

    India Elected To UN Human Rights Council With Most Number Of Votes

    India Elected To UN Human Rights Council With Most Number Of Votes
    India was elected to the United Nations’ top human rights body on Friday for a period of three years beginning January 1, 2019, getting 188 votes in the Asia-Pacific category.

    India Elected To UN Human Rights Council With Most Number Of Votes

    Pakistan High Court Judge Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui Sacked Over Remarks Against ISI

    The Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) had recommended to remove Justice Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui, who was facing a case of alleged misconduct over his speech targeting the Inter-Services Intelligence 

    Pakistan High Court Judge Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui Sacked Over Remarks Against ISI

    C-Section Births Doubled Globally Since 2000

    C-Section Births Doubled Globally Since 2000
    While C-section is a life-saving intervention for women and newborns, it is not without risk for mother and child, and is also associated with complications in future births.

    C-Section Births Doubled Globally Since 2000

    Oxford Student Lulu Jemimah Gets Marries HERSELF In Mock Ceremony To Get Parents Off Her Back

    "I got married on my 32nd birthday to the one person I am certain will take care of me," writes Lulu Jemimah

    Oxford Student Lulu Jemimah Gets Marries HERSELF In Mock Ceremony To Get Parents Off Her Back

    ‘It's Fine If Husband Wants To Bring Crown Home’: Indra Nooyi's Advice

    ‘It's Fine If Husband Wants To Bring Crown Home’: Indra Nooyi's Advice
    Asked if she would like to join US President Donald Trump's cabinet now that she has stepped down as Pepsi CEO, Ms Nooyi said, "Me and politics don't mix at all. I am too outspoken, I am not diplomatic. I don't even know what diplomacy is. I would cause a third World War. Don't do it".

    ‘It's Fine If Husband Wants To Bring Crown Home’: Indra Nooyi's Advice