The Borneo Post

Indian, Pakistani siblings reunite 75 years after Partition

- By Abhaya Srivastava with Zain Zaman Janjua in Faisalabad, Pakistan

I am from India and he is from Pakistan, but we have so much love for each other. We hugged and cried so much when we met for the first time. The countries can keep on fighting. We don’t care about IndiaPakis­tan politics.

— Sika Khan

BHATINDA, India: Tears of joy rolled down his wizened cheeks when Indian Sika Khan met his Pakistani brother for the first time since being separated by Partition in 1947.

Sikh labourer Sika was just six months old when he and his elder brother Sadiq Khan were torn apart as Britain split the subcontine­nt at the end of colonial rule.

This year marks the 75th anniversar­y of Partition, during which sectarian bloodshed killed possibly more than one million people, families like Sika’s were cleaved apart and two independen­t nations – Pakistan and India – were created.

Sika’s father and sister were killed in communal massacres, but Sadiq, just 10 years old, managed to flee to Pakistan.

“My mother could not bear the trauma and jumped into the river and killed herself,” Sika said at his simple brick house in Bhatinda, a district in the western Indian state of Punjab, which bore the brunt of Partition violence.

“I was left at the mercy of villagers and some relatives who brought me up.”

Ever since he was a child, Sika yearned to find out about his brother, the only surviving member of his family. But he failed to make headway until a doctor in the neighbourh­ood offered to help three years ago.

After numerous phone calls and the assistance of Pakistani YouTuber Nasir Dhillon, Sika was able to be reunited with Sadiq.

The brothers finally met in January at Kartarpur corridor, a rare, visa-free crossing that allows Indian Sikh pilgrims to visit a temple in Pakistan.

The corridor, which opened in 2019, has become a symbol of unity and reconcilia­tion for separated families, despite the lingering hostilitie­s between the two nations.

“I am from India and he is from Pakistan, but we have so much love for each other,” said Sika, clutching a faded and framed family photograph.

“We hugged and cried so much when we met for the first time. The countries can keep on fighting. We don’t care about India-Pakistan politics.”

Trains full of corpses

Pakistani farmer and real estate agent Dhillon, 38, a Muslim, says he has helped reunite about 300 families through his YouTube channel together with his friend Bhupinder Singh, a Pakistani Sikh.

“This is not my source of income. It’s my inner affection and passion,” Dhillon told AFP. “I feel like these stories are my own stories or stories of my grandparen­ts, so helping these elders I feel like I am fulfilling the wishes of my own grandparen­ts.”

He said he was deeply moved by the Khan brothers and did everything possible to ensure their reunion.

“When they were reunited at the Kartarpur, not only me but some 600 people at the compound wept so much seeing the brothers being reunited,” he told AFP in Faisalabad, Pakistan.

Millions of Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims are believed to have fled when British administra­tors began dismantlin­g their empire in 1947.

One million people are estimated to have been killed, though some put the toll at double this figure. Hindus and Sikhs fled to India, while Muslims fled in the opposite direction.

Tens of thousands of women and girls were raped and trains carrying refugees between the two new nations arrived full of corpses.

Love transcends

The legacy of Partition has endured to this day, resulting in a bitter rivalry between the nuclear-armed neighbours despite their cultural and linguistic links.

However, there is hope of love transcendi­ng boundaries. For Sikhs Baldev and Gurmukh Singh, there was no hesitation in embracing their half-sister Mumtaz Bibi, who was raised Muslim in Pakistan.

As an infant, she was found alongside her dead mother during the riots and was adopted by a Muslim couple. Their father, assuming his wife and daughter were dead, married his wife’s sister, as was the norm.

The Singh brothers learned their sister was alive with the help of Dhillon’s channel and a chance phone call to a shopkeeper in Pakistan.

The siblings finally met in the Kartarpur corridor earlier this year, breaking down at being able to see each other for the first time in their lives.

“Our happiness knew no bounds when we saw her for the first time,” Baldev Singh, 65, told AFP. “So what if our sister is a Muslim? The same blood flows through her veins.”

Mumtaz Bibi was equally ecstatic when an AFP team met her in the city of Sheikhupur­a in Pakistan’s Punjab province.

“When I heard (about my brothers), I thought God is willing it. It is God’s will, and one has to bow before his will and then he blessed me, and I found my brothers,” she said.

“Finding those separated brings happiness. My separation has ended, so I am so content.”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? This handout picture taken on Jan 12 this year, and received as a courtesy of Pakistan’s Youtuber Nasir Dhillon shows Sika (right) embracing his elder brother Sadiq from Pakistan near the IndiaPakis­tan border at the Kartarpur corridor.
— AFP photo This handout picture taken on Jan 12 this year, and received as a courtesy of Pakistan’s Youtuber Nasir Dhillon shows Sika (right) embracing his elder brother Sadiq from Pakistan near the IndiaPakis­tan border at the Kartarpur corridor.
 ?? ?? Sika shows his elder brother Sadiq picture during an interview with AFP at a village in Bathinda. — AFP photo
Sika shows his elder brother Sadiq picture during an interview with AFP at a village in Bathinda. — AFP photo
 ?? ?? Sika (centre) talks to his elder brother Sadiq in Pakistan, via a mobile video call. — AFP photo
Sika (centre) talks to his elder brother Sadiq in Pakistan, via a mobile video call. — AFP photo

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