Global Times

Memoirs from 1947

Historians race to preserve dying memories of Partition

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Sitting in her Karachi home, Jamshed Jahan Ara looks straight into the camera as she explains in a trembling voice how her family fled India during Partition in 1947.

Just six years old when she boarded an overcrowde­d train bound for the newly created Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Ara recalls watching armed Sikhs approach – then hearing her father tell her brother to kill the women of the family if the convoy was attacked.

“One is my wife, another is my sister and one is my daughter,” she recalls him saying. “So, dear, be a man. I can’t shoot them. You must kill all three and we will fight them [ the Sikhs] till the end, unless we surrender.’

“I asked, ‘ Why would Neeam kill me? I have done nothing wrong,’” the 76- year- old tells the camera, emotion flooding her face as she remembered her father’s reply: “A bullet is better [ than being captured]”.

On both sides of the border that divided the subcontine­nt 70 years ago, historians are racing to record the accounts of the last living witnesses to one of the largest, deadliest refugee crises of all time.

In August 1947, the British Raj was dismantled, creating a newly independen­t India – though with chunks of its western and eastern regions hurriedly amputated to create Pakistan.

Partition etched a deep fissure in the region and threw millions of Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs on the road toward their new homeland.

A 6,000 kilometer- long new border was drawn in just five weeks. Fifteen million people uprooted. Entire villages massacred. Tens of thousands of women kidnapped and raped. Possibly as many as 2 million lives lost.

But behind those statistics are the stories of the men and women who lived through that historic moment, the legacy of which still defines relations in South Asia.

In Pakistan’s southern metropolis of Karachi, students and volunteers are transcribi­ng fragments of oral history collected across the country by the Citizen Archives of Pakistan.

“History for the longest amount of time has been limited to the people who were the rulers or the winners, but history has a larger scope. It holds individual­s who were affected. It saw cultures that were affected,” said Aliya Tayyabi, director of the archives.

Race against time

Sukhwant Kaur, 78, had always struggled to find the words to explain her family’s terrifying escape to the Indian side of the border

Sitting in her home in Amritsar in north India, the grandmothe­r can still recall with startling clarity the horrors she witnessed as a child of eight.

A mother asking her son to drown her in a river. A small pond with corpses floating in it, the only place to find water. A woman cutting the umbilical cord of her newborn child with the only thing she could find – a stick of sugar cane.

“I feel much lighter inside having dared to explain all this,” said Kaur.

It is stories like Kaur’s that, for several years now, organizati­ons on both sides of the border, including the Citizen Archives of Pakistan, the Amritsar Partition Museum and the 1947 Partition Archive, have been hurrying to record and digitize.

“That generation is leaving us,” said Mallika Ahluwalia, director of the newly created Partition Museum. “There’s this real sense of urgency [ to remember].”

The projects are also seeking to transform that volatile period into more than just a chapter in a school textbook.

The Partition Museum in Punjab, a state in northern India, which saw some of the worst violence of 1947, enlisted the help of a dozen high school students from

Amritsar.

Few families living around Amritsar, just 30 kilometers ( 19 miles) from Pakistan, escaped Partition untouched.

The students were told to find three stories from the Partition period from amongst their relatives.

“While interviewi­ng them, images were forming in front of my eyes. It was a painful experience, I almost felt the pain that they were going through at that time,” said 16- year- old student Aniket Bhatia.

Fellow student Rahat Sandhu burst into tears as she heard the story of a survivor whose baby sister was abandoned on the side of the road because no one could carry her.

“He cried, and I cried too,” said Sandhu.

“The kind of energy they put into their words, the kind of bond we shared during the time [ of the interview], for 15 minutes, is inexplicab­le.”

‘ Your bias breaks’

But within the tales of desperate decisions and senseless brutality emerge stories of love and hope. “So many people who made it across, made it across because of the kindness of a friend, of a neighbor, of somebody who worked with them and in many cases, even a stranger,” said Ahluwalia of the Partition Museum. Survivors’ accounts also offer objectivit­y from those who suffered most, says Aleena Mashhood of the Oral History Project – an increasing­ly valuable perspectiv­e as time goes on. “They say something like, it wasn’t [ just] us Muslims who suffered, it was also the Hindus who suffered,” she said. “Your bias breaks.” In Amritsar’s Partition Museum, where the wounds that still define the region are preserved, the last room is perhaps aptly named “The Gallery of Hope”.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Sukhwant Kaur ( right), 78, shows a photograph of her late father Sulkhan Singh, with her son Jaswinder Singh in Amritsar on July 5.
Photo: AFP Sukhwant Kaur ( right), 78, shows a photograph of her late father Sulkhan Singh, with her son Jaswinder Singh in Amritsar on July 5.

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