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The Great Partition

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THE GREAT PARTITION
Yasmin Khan
was born in London and educated at St Peter's College and St Antony's College, Oxford. She has familial links to both India and Pakistan, and has lived in Delhi as well as having travelled widely on the subcontinent. Previously a history lecturer at the University of Edinburgh, she currently holds a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship and teaches politics in the Faculty of History and Social Sciences at Royal Holloway, University of London. She has contributed to a global strategic consultancy on Indian and Pakistani political developments, and was consultant editor on ‘India Britain 2020’, a report commissioned by the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office about the future of bilateral relations in 2005.

 

 

 

THE GREAT PARTITION
THE MAKING OF INDIA AND PAKISTAN
YASMIN KHAN

 

 

 

YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS

 

NEW HAVEN AND LONDON
Copyright © 2007 Yale University
First printed in paperback 2008
All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part, in any form (beyond that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press) without written permission from the publishers.
For information about this and other Yale University Press publications, please contact:

 

U.S. Office: http://[email protected]  yalebooks.com

 

Europe Office: [email protected]  www.yaleup.co.uk
Set in Minion by J&L Composition, Filey, North Yorkshire

 

Printed in the Great Britain by MPG Books Ltd, Bodmin, Cornwall
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Khan, Yasmin, 1977–
 The great Partition: the making of India and Pakistan/Yasmin Khan.
  p. cm.
 Includes bibliographical references and index.
 ISBN 978–0–300–12078–3 (alk. paper)
 1. India—History—Partition, 1947. 2. Nationalism—India—History.
 3. Nationalism—Pakistan—History. I. Title.
 DS480.842.K49 2007
 954.04'2—dc22
2007006713
 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
 ISBN 978–0–300–14333–1 (pbk)
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
For Javed Khan, in memory
Contents
Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
List of Illustrations
List of Maps
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Glossary
Timeline of Major Events, 1945–1950
Introduction: The Plan
  1 In the Shadow of War
  2 Changing Regime
  3 The Unravelling Raj
  4 The Collapse of Trust
  5 From Breakdown to Breakdown
  6 Untangling Two Nations
  7 Blood on the Tracks
  8 Leprous Daybreak
  9 Bitter Legacies
  10 Divided Families
  Epilogue
  Notes
  Select Bibliography
  Index
Illustrations
1. Communist delegates marching during the Punjab Provincial Delegates Conference, 1945 © Sunil Janah, 1945, 2007. From the web archive at members.aol.com/sjanah (email: [email protected]).
2. Royal Indian Navy mutineers, Bombay, 1946 © Nehru Memorial Museum and Library.
3. Muslim League leader Mohammed Ali Jinnah holding a press conference, Bombay, January 1946. Photograph by Margaret Bourke-White © Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images.
4. People in Bombay lining up to vote in the general elections, 1946 © Sunil Janah, 1946, 2007 ([email protected], members.aol.com/sjanah).
5. A co-educational zoology class at Aligarh Muslim University, May 1946. Photograph by Margaret Bourke-White © Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images.
6. Lord Pethick-Lawrence, member of the British Cabinet Mission delegation, looking over papers, 1946 © NMML.
7. A peace procession after the riots in Calcutta, 1946 © Sunil Janah, 1946, 2007 ([email protected], members.aol.com/sjanah).
8. Villagers in boats fleeing under cover of darkness from their burning villages during riots in Noakhali, an eastern district of undivided Bengal, 1946–7 © Sunil Janah, 1947, 2007 ([email protected], members.aol.com/sjanah).
9. Crowds look on during Gandhi's visit to encourage Hindu–Muslim unity in Noakhali © NMML.
10. Muslims and Hindus attempt to promote peace by jointly flying the flags of the Muslim League and the Indian National Congress, Calcutta, 1946 © Sunil Janah, 1946, 2007 ([email protected], members.aol.com/sjanah).
11. Nehru and Gandhi with refugees from West Pakistan at Haridwar, India, 1947 © NMML.
12. Nehru votes for Partition at the Congress Working Committee Meeting, 1947 © NMML.
13. Meeting of the Indian leaders with Mountbatten at which the plan to partition the subcontinent was agreed, Delhi, 2 June 1947 © NMML.
14. ‘A Happy Ending Indeed!’, cartoon from
Hitavada
, 15 August 1947 © NMML.
15. The departure of British troops, 1947 © NMML.
16. Muslim refugees on the roof of a train near New Delhi, 19 September 1947 © Associated Press/PA Photos.
17. ‘Battles Ahead’, cartoon from the
National Herald
, 15 August 1957 © NMML.
18. Refugees at a shelter near the border between West Bengal and the newly created East Pakistan, 1947 © Sunil Janah, 1947, 2007 ([email protected], members.aol.com/sjanah).
19. Men near the Indo-Pakistani border in Punjab placing bodies in a mass grave using a bulldozer, October 1947. Photograph by Margaret Bourke-White © Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images.
20. Nehru addressing the crowds the day after Independence Day 1947, Delhi © NMML.
21. Lady Mountbatten touring riot devastation at Multan, Punjab © NMML.
22. News of Gandhi's assassination reaches Calcutta, 1948 © Sunil Janah, 1948, 2007 ([email protected], members.aol.com/sjanah).
23. Nehru at a refugee township in Ludhiana, Punjab, 1949 © NMML.
24. Jinnah's sister Fatima Jinnah surrounded by women during their weekly Saturday meeting making clothes for refugees at the Government House, Karachi, December 1947. Photograph by Margaret Bourke-White © Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images.
25. Refugee children at Kurukshetra camp with Nehru and Lady Mountbatten February, 1949 © NMML.
Maps
1 India before Partition
2 India and Pakistan after Partition
3 The Radcliffe Line in Punjab
4 The Radcliffe Line in Bengal
Acknowledgements
I was born in London two generations after the events described in this book. Nonetheless people sometimes ask about my own ‘Partition story’. Both my grandfathers were bit-players in the story of Partition as it unfolded in the subcontinent and both had their own lives profoundly shaped by the ending of the British empire. One was stationed as a British officer in an Indian Army tank regiment. He stayed in the subcontinent during the postcolonial transition and saw at first hand, from a base in Punjab, the creation of the two new states of India and Pakistan. At the same time, not far away, my other grandfather who was born in North India was supporting the Muslim League. He campaigned as a candidate in the 1946 provincial elections and moved part of his family to Pakistan after the new state was created.
Neither of them, I suspect, would have agreed very much, if at all, with my interpretation of events here. Their walk-on parts in the Partition story, though, and the stories that grew up around them, encouraged my interest in history, and provoked my curiosity about the origins of modern India and Pakistan – two states which are supposedly so different and yet have such recently intertwined roots. I am very grateful to friends and family in India, Pakistan and Britain who lived through the Partition of 1947 and who shared their thoughts with me. The subtext to this book is a will for peaceful rapprochement in South Asia and I very much hope it will be read in this light.
My debts have been building up for many years now. I was fortunate to start studying history under the careful eye of Lawrence Goldman at St Peter's College, Oxford. Judith Brown and Ian Talbot both guided this work through earlier incarnations and have been consistently generous since. At my way stations over the past decade – Oxford University, the University of Edinburgh and Royal Holloway, University of London – my thanks to: Sarah Ansari, Henry Mayr-Harting, Henrietta Leyser, Peter Carey, Roger and Patricia Jeffery, Anna-Maria Misra, Francis Robinson, Crispin Bates, Imre Bangha, David Washbrook and John Darwin. Alpa Shah is both friend and honest critic and helped improve the manuscript. Markus Daechsel, likewise, and his own book has left an imprint on my thinking about 1947. Heather McCallum at Yale has been a source of encouragement and constructive ideas and my thanks to Yale for the care with which the book has been produced.
The National History Center seminar on the subject of decolonisation held in Washington DC in the summer of 2006 enabled me to see things from new angles; I am grateful to Wm Roger Louis, Pillarisetti Sudhir and the other conveners and participants. Colleagues in the politics department at Royal Holloway have been entirely supportive. Lance Brennan and Professor Anthony Epstein both generously shared previously unpublished documents and Sunil Janah's photographs add much to the text. Benjamin Zachariah, Shabnum Tejani, Andrew Whitehead, William Gould and Kaushik Bhaumik provided comments and discussion at critical moments. My research would not have been possible without the support of the Arts and Humanities Research Council and the British Academy which have sustained me throughout my graduate years and beyond. Countless expert librarians and archivists made research a more pleasurable experience; particular thanks to Teen Murti Bhavan, Delhi, and the Indian Institute, Oxford.
For hospitality and companionship in Karachi, Lahore, Delhi, Lucknow, Oxford, Edinburgh and London, my thanks to: Jan-Peter Hartung, the Wright family, Ram Advani, Dr and Begum Siddiqui, Umbreen Daechsel, Seema Ansari and family, Pippa Virdee, Alexander Morrison, Timothy Phillips, Anthony Bale, Orlanda Ruthven, Rebecca Loncraine, Saleema Waraich, Swati Roy, Naomi Foxwood, Blanche Rugginz, Amy Longrigg, Henry Longbottom, and Melody and Nat Hansen. Most important of all, my mother, Finola Khan, and brother, Jamie Khan. And, at last, I can finally record my gratitude to Ben Wright – for everything else.
Although I have tried to acknowledge sources faithfully, every chapter bears the hallmark of a broader debate among numerous researchers and academics. This may be a starting point for further reading about 1947: suggestions for this are provided in the bibliography, particularly on the experience of Partition in Bengal which deserves a volume of its own. Errors of fact and omission are, needless to say, my own.
Abbreviations

 

 AICC
 All India Congress Committee
 AIHM
 All India Hindu Mahasabha
 CPI
 Communist Party of India
CWMG  
The Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi  
(New Delhi: Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India, 1958–)
 FNR
 Fortnightly Reports
 ICS
 Indian Civil Service
 INA
 Indian National Army
 IOR
 India Office Records
JP  
Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah Papers  
, ed. Z.H. Zaidi (Islamabad: National Archives of Pakistan, 1993–)
 NAI
 National Archives of India, New Delhi
 NMML
 Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, New Delhi
 NWFP
 North West Frontier Province
 R&R
 Relief and Rehabilitation
 RSS
 Rashtriya Swayam Sevak Sangh
SPC  
Sardar Patel's Correspondence, 1945–50  
, ed. D. Das (Ahmedabad: Navajivan, 1971)
SWGBP  
Selected Works of Govind Ballabh Pant  
, ed. B.R. Nanda (New Delhi and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993–)
SWJN  
Selected works of Jawaharlal Nehru  
, ed. S. Gopal, series 1 (New Delhi: Orient Longman, 1972–1982), series 2 (New Delhi: Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund; distributed by Oxford University Press, 1984–)
TOP  
Constitutional Relations between Britain and India. The Transfer of Power, 1942–7  
BOOK: The Great Partition
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