The Sunday Guardian

Stories of loss and hope, told through impression­s and memories of Partition

A new exhibition at Delhi’s Bikaner House uses as its theme the harrowing stories of mass exodus and displaceme­nt triggered by Partition, showcasing text panels carrying recorded statements by those directly affected by the event, writes Bhumika Popli.

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with vehemence as people natives began exiting the city, and new ones started coming in from across the border.

Hashmi remembers that trains were stopped between Bahalwalna­gar and the new Indian border, while hundreds of thousands of people were leaving and arriving on foot. But on the morning of 20 August 1947, a train arrived carrying the mutilated and dead bodies of refugees coming in to Pakistan. Immediatel­y, he was told by his father to send a telegram to the authoritie­s about this crisis.

He says, “Upon reaching the communicat­ion room, I found it locked from the inside and I looked through the slit in the door to find a few Hindu men, hiding, shaking with fear. I consoled them in Punjabi, ensuring them that no harm would come to them. I managed to find five railway employee uniforms and had the men change into them. Then at night, I led them to a vacant railway quarter and locked it from the outside. We fed the refugees for three days.”

He informs how inconspicu­ously he managed to save the lives of these people. “On the fourth day, an India-bound train from Quetta stopped at the station for water. With the influx of so many refugees, there was a shortage of water on the station and so we told the officers manning the train of a small stream just two miles behind the station. The train reversed, the refugees washed and cleaned themselves and returned to the station to thank us. Discreetly, I told the of- ficers on the train of the five Hindu men that we had been hiding. They were brought to the station and boarded the train safely. Of all the lives that were lost on that platform, we managed to save five of them,” says Hashmi.

He adds, “Pakistan may be my country, but India is the land of my birth. That makes me IndoPakist­ani and no can take that identity away from me.”

There are a number of panels displayed at the exhibition which showcase the accounts of various people who went through the ordeal of Partition. The interviews were conducted by many who of those associated with the 1947 Partition Archive. The archive guides volunteers who want to record online interviews through a series of online workshops. The participan­ts taught how they can locate people who were affected by Partition and were forced to migrate. They are then given the format of questions to be asked.

Curator Aanchal Malhotra went through a number of oral histories collected by the Archive while putting together this exhibition. She says, “While researchin­g these documents I observed there was a lot of compassion in the people of that age group. The anger we see today is only in the later generation­s. Here, I wanted to show various experience­s of people belonging to different background­s.”

An interactiv­e map is also placed on the exhibition premises. Here people are invited to tie a black thread from the place they migrated to their new abode. Malhotra wanted to give a visual depiction of the partition. She says, “We often hear that we went from this place to this, but we don’t really understand the challenges people faced to cross the border. This map gives a sense of the actual migration and makes people stand and stare at the route.”

The show also displays the first page of a Special English edition of Daily Milaap of 1931, Lahore, showing Mahatma Gandhi and Abdul Ghaffar Khan, popularly known as Frontier Gandhi. It is currently the most widely circulated Urdu newspaper in Delhi and this particular page is borrowed from their office in Delhi.

This exhibition, with new narratives, will be presented at various cultural spaces in Delhi and will also travel to Pakistan later this year. Alongside this show, Bikaner House is also hosting a photograph­y exhibition that captures the national spirit through the lens of various Indian and British stalwarts like T.S. Satyan, Raghu Rai, Norman Parkinson, and Derry Moore. Bringing a distinctiv­e perspectiv­e on India, Dayanita Singh›s Pocket Museum displays her travels and also invites viewers to contemplat­e new ideas about the form and function of both the museum and object-image. The show is on view till 24 August at Bikaner House, New Delhi

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