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It was the year 1947. After the freedom struggle spanning over a hundred years, India had been freed of colonialism.
The Indian Independence Act was to replace The Parliament of the United Kingdom that stipulated the governance of British would come to an end in the country on 15 August. The Act also stipulated that the country would be split into two sovereign nation-states, as the Union of India and the Dominion of Pakistan.
Sir Cyril Radcliffe, a barrister by profession, was commissioned by the British to examine the territories that needed to be allocated for both countries. He was appointed as the Chairman of Boundary Commission that was to mark a border line – a line that would split one country into two independent nations.
Sir Cyril Radcliffe arrived in India on 8 July, with the onerous task of drawing his pen across the country.
Neither had he visited India before, nor did he have adequate understanding of the sociopolitical culture of the country.
Then why did he agree to take it up, one may wonder.
The line has since then written and rewritten history. Today, we remember the line for its cross border firing, or the ceremonial lowering of flags by jawans from either side of the divide. But the Radcliffe line has been on director Ram Madhvani’s mind for the last 10-15 years.
Director of the national award winning aviation-thriller Neerja, Madhvani returned to screen with a nine-minute short film where he explores the plausible scenario of Radcliffe regretting the line he drew. The film, Madhvani said, was inspired by WH Auden’s poem on Partition, which is a sharp and sarcastic account of Radcliffe’s time in India.
Read the full poem here.
In the film, Madhvani imagines a conversation between Radcliffe and his wife, after he comes across Auden’s poem published in a newspaper in 1966.
Set in a typical English drawing room of the 1960s, the nearly-blind Radcliffe, played by Martin Bishop, asks his wife Antonia, played by Leda Hodgson, to read the poem. Antonia skips a few lines of criticism while reading Auden aloud, but Radcliffe catches on to the skipped part, and tells her the pain has not lessened even after two decades.
When asked if we have forgotten history, the director said:
The provinces of Sindh and Balochistan, with a Muslim-majority population, were assigned completely to Pakistan. However, both Punjab and Bengal proved to be tricky as they did not have an “overwhelming” majority of either Hindus or Muslims.
Therefore, the Radcliffe Line partitioned Bengal into West Bengal which was assigned to India and East Bengal to Pakistan. With Punjab too, the eastern part remained with India, while western Punjab was handed over to Pakistan.
When veteran journalist Kuldip Nayar met Radcliffe at his Bond Street home in London, Radcliffe told him that he did not have any regrets at the time of partition.
However, he was sorry that one million lives were lost due to the line, recounted the journalist to The Quint.
Would Radcliffe do it differently today?
(This story was first published on 7 July 2017. It is being reposted from The Quint’s archives to mark the day the Radcliffe Line was declared as the boundary between India and Pakistan, after the Partition of India)
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