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The Partition of the subcontinent remains a traumatic experience for its victims and continues to poison relations between India and Pakistan, Hindus and Muslims. But its toxicity is also due to several misconceptions that persist and the inability to see the issue in a wider, contemporary perspective, says British historian Yasmin Khan.
Khan, also an associate professor of history at Oxford University further said:
“Disentangling both (the demand for Pakistan and the violence that accompanied Partition) is difficult but important,” maintains Khan, whose debut work “The Great Partition: The Making of India and Pakistan” (2007) makes a compelling case that while there was both wide support – and opposition – to Partition, virtually no one had any understanding of what it would entail or what its results would be.
The author, who was in India to attend the Jaipur Literature Festival, also notes that the leaders on both sides were shocked by the level of violence and tried to take steps to curb it, but it was also important to remember that they were human and faced many pressures that prevented them from reaching a compromise, despite several opportunities.
“The Cabinet Mission Plan (of 1945, recommending a loose confederation) was one,” she said.
Khan says it is important that Partition should be seen in the “broader” international context of the late 1940s. The Second World War had ended recently, and most of Europe was in ruins, with colonial powers themselves having sustained heavy damage and expenses. There were refugees all over Europe and Asia – as well as a large number of returning, demobilised soldiers.
This was the milieu in which moves towards decolonisation were initiated, but colonial powers like Britain in the case of India were themselves weakened and in a hurry to transfer power, she said.
The situation in Palestine, also ruled by the British and
seeing similar tensions between two religious communities, had many
“commonalities” with the situation in the subcontinent, she said.
In this context, she notes that since there has been extensive literature and advanced scholarship on partition, South Asian scholarship could lead the way for the understanding of more regions that underwent decolonisation, with varying results and outcomes.
Khan, who has written “The Raj at War: A People’s
History of India’s Second World War” (2015) – an extensive account of the
effect of the conflict on the Indian “home front”, as the country
faced a total war and its manifold demands, as well as the political
implications of radicalisation and a growing communal divide including among the
armed forces – also argues that war had a major role in the partition as
well as in the violence that followed.
(Vikas Datta can be contacted at vikas.d@ians.in. This article was published in special arrangement with IANS.)
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Published: 24 Feb 2016,05:31 PM IST