Kids Corner

Above: During the Partition, a librarian divides the books between two piles.

Partition

The Partition & I:
Remembrance of Things Past

by I.J. SINGH

 

EDITOR:   Sixty-two years have gone by since the cataclysmic events of 1947 - the Partition of Punjab and the loss of half of the Sikh homeland to newly created Pakistan - led to the sectarian violence that took a toll of more and a million lives and sent millions more as refugees in either direction of the haphazardly carved India-Pakistan border.

Many of those who have personal memories and knowledge of those days are now, because of the passage of time, moving on. It has therefore become urgent that we record their stories for the benefit of future generations. 

Encouraged by the phenomenal response to our "1984 & I" project along the same lines, we at sikhchic.com once again turn to you, our readers, to share with us your memories, recollections, opinions and perspectives on 1947 and Partition. Please tell us how the Partition has touched your lives and how it has shaped your perspective on life. More importantly, please record the stories of aging parents, granparents, relatives, friends, colleagues, neighbours - and share them with us so that we in turn can publish them in these pages and, at the same time, create a permanent repository of the same.

We look forward to receiving your stories ... and photos. The following is the inaugural piece of our new series, "THE PARTITION & I".  

   

 

I want to put my finger on some defining epoch or time that shaped our sense of self.

When I look at Sikhs during the 19th and 20th centuries, a few pivotal moments come to mind.

From the Sikh point of view, two events were game-altering in the 19th century.

One was the rise of Ranjit Singh, who consolidated and ruled a large swath of northwest India for a shade less than 50 years with remarkable sagacity and justice.

The second half of the century saw the end of the Sikh Raj and its replacement by the British who reigned over the Sikh kingdoms for the next 100 years.

The twentieth century, too, gives us three periods of reckoning; two of them are seared in our being. The third, though vitally significant, the Singh Sabha period occupies much less of our attention.

The two that are a constant thorn in our side:

The middle of the twentieth century saw the end of the British Empire in 1947 and emergence of a "free and secular" India over the ashes of the Partition of the Sikh territories.

The second half of the last century saw the pogroms and orchestrated killings of Sikhs in the 1980's that spawned a new class of deniers of history - no different from those who deny the Holocaust or the genocide of Armenians in 1915.

Sikhs worldwide are now in the midst of marking 25 years of the politically engineered killings of Sikhs in 1984 and that decade.

But what happened to us in 1947?

It will be 62 years this August.

More than a generation has passed on, along with their memories and first person accounts. And true to our Indian tradition, we have not valued or preserved that past. Is it because we have so much history that it weighs on us likes unwanted tonnage and we don't know what to do with it?

But to a dwindling minority it still lives, fresh as the day it happened, and its repercussions are alive in Punjabis - Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims - the world over.

These two pivotal events of the 20th century - 1947 and 1984 - seemingly separate and distinct are, in fact, inseparably interlinked,. But let me come to their interconnection a little later in this story.

Officially, on August 14, 1947, Pakistan became independent of the British; a day later on August 15, India was proclaimed independent. (Pakistan was carved out of, inter alia, Western Punjab and Eastern Bengal. The latter became Bangladesh when it separated from Pakistan in 1971.)

In 1947, I was in grade school at the local Montessori in Lahore, the third of four children. The oldest was starting high school, the youngest was barely two.

Time plays tricks. As I sit down to recapture those days, I have to rely on my older siblings - a brother and a sister - to help sift the facts from the fiction of my childhood memories.

For a ten year old, these were exciting and heady times. Schools closed for several weeks. Some nights one could see flames and smoke rising from nearby localities. There were news of widespread riots and killings all around us. The nights reverberated with cries of "Allahu Akbar" from the adjoining neighborhood that was largely Muslim, followed dutifully by responding cries of "Bolay So Nihaal, Sat Sri Akal" from the Sikhs and Hindus holed up in our local gurdwara.

Then a family friend and neighbour was waylaid on his to work by a mob and killed.

The local residents organized a night patrol of the area by volunteers. My father too, along with a small group, walked the streets in the middle of the night carrying a 3-foot kirpan - the only weapon in the house.

My father's convictions were so simple that no facts would budge them: He held that since Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs had been neighbours for so many generations - centuries - no political theories or partitions could sunder those ties for very long. The passions that fed hatred, he was sure, would wear out; the love that binds us all will remain. (Obviously, we hadn't heard of the Holocaust then and had also selectively overlooked early Sikh history.)

Over the weeks, most of our Sikh and Hindu neighbours abandoned their homes to move across the putative border that was to define the two nations.

Some days later, the milk vendor disappeared; now there was no milk in the house for four children. Two days later, a Muslim vendor appeared at the door and offered help. Our parents wondered if they could trust the man; could the milk be poisoned. They decided to put their trust in the Guru, and this Muslim supplied us milk for the remaining few days until we left.

Our supply of wheat flour finished. There was whole wheat in the house but no flour. So mother would be up at 3 or 4 in the morning to prepare coarse stone ground flour by hand. My sister, who was then 12, remembers helping her some mornings.

Fritters made of chick pea flour would do for "vegetables." Now, 60 years later, my sister makes them and remembers those days.

Six days after Pakistan and India were born as separate countries, the Muslim driver who used to take my sister and I to school every day came to our house and warned us of the foolishness of trying to stay and stick it out - indeed, he begged us to leave. He promised to arrange a truck to get us out.

Seven days after partition of the country, a truck appeared. It was covered so that passengers would not be visible. For us, where it took us would have to be simply a matter of trust. We were loaded on to it with no more baggage than we could hand-carry, and driven to Mughal Serai, the train station of Lahore.

August 22, 1947 was an unbearably hot sunny day. I had never seen so much army at a train station or so many desperate people waiting for a train for so long. Crowds milled about, in and around the platform and train tracks. We, too, were in the crowd, and my sister recalls that a passing train caught the corner of one of our bags and destroyed it as it thundered by.

Hours later, our waiting for Godot ended. We boarded the only train that stopped. People were hanging by the handles, riding the footboards and piled on rooftops of the cars.

We had entrained in the morning. Then the train sat on the tracks in the sweltering heat for much of the day, finally leaving in the evening. It crawled - perhaps one could have run faster.

Midway, it stopped on its tracks for hours.

There were human bodies scattered on both sides. We wondered if this is how life would end. Hours later, by about 10 at night, it had covered the 40 miles to Amritsar across the Indian border. It disgorged us all - famished and tired, with no place to go.

We were accommodated for the night in a tent at a refugee camp. My mother was able to get two rotis, promptly gave half to each of her children and proclaimed that she was not hungry.

The next day, my father reached a distant relative in Amritsar. He kindly put us up for a few days. And then we moved another 50 miles to Jalandhar.

While at Amritsar, father was able to arrange a police escort to take him to Lahore. He wanted to reclaim whatever he could from the home he had locked up and left behind.

But there was nothing to rescue; the house had been ransacked and occupied the day we abandoned it. We were lucky to have left when we did. That same night a mob had raided our locality and seized whatever they could lay their hands on. There was a hospitable Muslim family living in our house now.

Jalandhar was teeming with Hindu and Sikh refugees from Pakistan. Every day there were caravans of new arrivals, and everyday one saw cavalcades of Muslims being escorted by the army to trains that would take them to Pakistan.

History tells us that the refugee problem in Punjab in 1947 was larger than that in Europe after the Second World War.

Somehow we got a foothold in one part of a large house abandoned by a Muslim family that had crossed over to Pakistan. It was partially burnt; on one side, the roof had collapsed. But parts were intact enough to provide shelter to many families. We all shared a single hand pump that provided water. There was no hygienic code and no enforcement of it. The miracle is that none of us sickened or died.

There was no school for us but our parents were anxious that we do not morph into street urchins. There was not much for me to do all day except play around in the streets. So my parents organized reading and study times that they supervised. There was no electricity in the house, so we studied by the light of a kerosene lamp - sometimes an adventure, often a pain.

I remember the taste of World War II surplus dried onions and powdered eggs that often were our meals. And I remember my mother turning over her portion of milk to her children with the lame excuse that she could not digest it.

Keeping the kids busy and out of trouble was next only to keeping them fed and clean. My older brother, then in his teens, was sent to volunteer at a "refugee camp," a city of tents to spend his days in service of those who were needier.

One day at that camp, he came across an old man who had finally made the escape from Gujranwala. It was our maternal grandfather. My brother brought him home. Later an aunt made it across the border with two small children in tow and joined us.

Some months later, an uncle, who had been given up for lost and perhaps dead, arrived from parts of Pakistani territory that have always remained somewhat lawless. He had apparently been severely injured and thrown out of a train on his way out of Pakistan. Some kind people, possibly Muslim, took care of him, treated him and sent him along later, still recuperating from his many wounds.

One memory of my Jalandhar days will always haunt me. One day I was hanging around outside our ramshackle house in the middle of the day. It was near the railroad tracks and I heard the staccato sounds of explosions. Not knowing anything - but curious - I wandered off towards the tracks.

A train of Muslim refugees lay still on the tracks surrounded by a crowd of armed Hindus and Sikhs who were busily killing any Muslim they could, in and out of that train.

This, I learned, was in retaliation of the rumoured murder of a train load of Sikh and Hindu refugees who were on their way to India a day or two earlier from Pakistan.

So I ran home and at the street corner saw a Sikh washing a blood-stained dagger.

Such were the days.

Now, every August 15th, I cringe when I hear respected political leaders of India proclaiming that India's freedom was won by Mahatma Gandhi in a peaceful, bloodless revolution.

One evening in Jalandhar, we heard that Gandhi had been shot dead by a Hindu, Nathuram Godse.

We all rail against the perils of bureaucracy, but it was the Indian bureaucracy that saved us. Luckily for us, our father had worked for the Punjab Public Service Commission in Lahore for many years. We knew that when the government reorganized in the Indian Punjab, there would be a reconstituted Public Service Commission, and we would be somewhat flush again.

That's exactly what happened. In 1948, Simla - the ‘hill-station' town that used to be India's summer capital under the British - became the seat of the Punjab government, and we moved there.

Eleven years later, when Punjab and PEPSU ("Patiala and East Punjab States Union") combined into a single state, the Public Service Commission relocated to Patiala.

On arriving in Patiala, father was honoured by the local gurdwara for his father's contributions 36 years earlier. This must have been a most gratifying moment for my father in his new homeland.

In 1922, when father was 14, my grandfather was the stationmaster at Nankana Sahib (now in Pakistan), the birthplace of Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism. Sikhs had launched a massive non-violent struggle to free the place from its British-appointed corrupt caretakers. Many Sikhs were killed, injured or arrested.

After a prolonged and traumatic morcha (struggle), Sikhs prevailed, the British government conceded, and even Gandhi, who later won accolades for his non-violent ways, admittedly learned the meaning of courage and power of peaceful protest.

History tells us that in 1922 my grandfather provided the Sikhs with succour and comfort for which the British promptly shipped him to Moga after the imbroglio.

I often wonder! How did our whole family get across the troubled land in 1947 and how did my relatives ever find each other? How did so many come through seemingly so unscathed? It seems no less than a miracle.

What sustained my parents through these perilous times? Now I see that it was their abiding faith in God and Guru. This too shall pass, they knew; it was "chardi kalaa" at work.

I also wonder why, in all these years, there has been so little conversation of it all in our lives. There are no records and few relics or reminders; many of those with memories have passed on.

I know that many suffered much, much more during 1947 and have moving and eventful stories to tell. I hope they will and soon.

I think of T.S. Eliot who reminds us of the cunning passages and contrived corridors of history that deceives us by vanities.

In less than 20 years, penniless Punjabi and Sikh refugees from Pakistan had transformed their new homeland into the most prosperous state in India. They fathered the "Green revolution" that fed much of India, so that the annual famines that characterized the country occurred no more.

I look back and see that such momentous events - the partition of a country, widespread killings, transfer of millions across artificially created political borders and a refugee problem, the likes of which had not been see in recent history - are matters that deserve more than a footnote in history.

It would have served the nation far, far better to minimize the glorification and institutionalization of Gandhi (Mahatma), Nehru, Patel et al who engineered and oversaw these events instead of purposefully addressing the needs and stoic suffering of millions.

When I look back I see that these matters never became pivotal to a national conversation.

The largely uprooted minority of Sikhs felt even less welcome and more diminished by the legal framework of a new nation that lumped them - in a classic reversal and betrayal - with Hinduism, thus denying them their own identity.

Over the years, Indian politicians have continued to play the card of divisive politics - pitting Indians against each other - based on religion, language, culture, etc.

It seems to me that, with the exception of the recent years of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's ascendancy, since 1947, Sikhs have felt progressively more alienated from the political entity that is India.

Perhaps that's where one should look for the genesis of the troubles of 1984. I await with baited breath a political theorist with the grand vision to successfully trace the strands of history that connect 1984 to its roots in 1947, and even further back to the events of 1922-25 that suborned a religion to the judiciary of a nominally secular state.

It has now become so difficult to answer when people ask me where I am from.

My first few formative years were spent in what is now Pakistan; the next thirteen years in India (Simla and Amritsar), and I have spent nearly 50 years in the United States. Most people appear perplexed - and rightly so - if I answer "New York."

"You can't go home again," said Thomas Wolfe, and the line often reverberates in my head. Yet, before the end of my days I would like to see the streets where I ran around and the house where I was born.

 

ijsingh99@gmail.com

August 3, 2009

Conversation about this article

1: Harinder (Bangalore, India), August 03, 2009, 2:34 PM.

1947 and 1984 are important time marks in the journey of Sikhs on this planet. I guess we need a full-fledged study to tell us what lesson there are to be derived from these two monumental tragedies. 1947 and 1984 must not be allowed to be repeated, whatever it takes.

2: Gurjender Singh (Maryland, U.S.A.), August 05, 2009, 7:22 AM.

After partition, my parents could not find any place in Punjab and Delhi. They found a home in Uttar Pardesh and settled there. When we were young, our teachers would taunt us: "Oh, Sardar ji, you did not find a place in Punjab to live?" No wonder ... 1984 followed in due course!

3: Raj (U.K.), August 09, 2009, 11:23 AM.

1984 was the logical follow-up of 1947. The rulers, the same from 1947 onwards, saw that the Sikhs had forgotten Partition. So, they could easily be dealt another onslaught. Those who forget their past invite their future in the same way.

4: Judy Kaur (Canada), January 04, 2010, 4:56 PM.

I was born much after the Partition. So for me these events were just part of history. I had heard vague rumblings of how horrific it had been but it didn't really touch my life and I always believed the worst of it was over. However, I had never imagined in my worst nightmares that I would live to see the events of 1984 - even at a distance. I have been struggling for a long time to come to terms with what has happened. After much reflection and study of recent history, it has dawned on me that the Sikhs have made active choices over these events. Freedom was offered to them twice in the 30's and 40's by the British but despite advice to the contrary from the British and Muslims, they CHOSE to remain in India. The insurgency movement of the 80's, however inopportune, provided them with a second chance to get this freedom. Again, it wasn't supported by the majority of them, especially the so-called 'intellectuals' and elite - hence it failed. Again, they CHOSE. But why? Is it perhaps that despite heated arguments to the contrary, most Sikhs do see themselves as Hindus ... that is certainly part of their past ... and they are reluctant to walk away? Interesting, but also dismaying, especially since over the last few years I have learned that my family origins might have been from Muslims. Now that 1984 has occurred and the Hindus have shown their true colors, Islam is no longer 'demonized' amongst the Sikhs. More and more people are recognizing the Muslim connections in the past as well. How refreshing! Unfortunately, their numbers are not sufficient to break the mould and I fear that there will surely be another 1984 before the Sikhs finally learn 'their lesson' - that, or they will revert back to their Hindu origins. How sad! What a waste of life! Like Jesus who walked away from the Jews to the Gentiles, perhaps the Gurus should have taken their religion to a more worthy people ...

5: Haroon (Sahiwal, Pakistan), February 02, 2010, 12:14 AM.

I am from Sahiwal (many of you are familiar with its old name, Montgomery) and have a very close Sardar friend in Australia. We were together in the University Of New South Wales from 1990 to 1991. My wife and I call his mother and father Biji and Darji, as we feel we are family. I have relatives in Australia but I feel more comfortable staying with him during my stays in Sydney. My side of the story is that I was born in Sahiwal after the partition, so I've been collecting my stories which I heard from my father and aunts. Our native home was in Tehseel Batala, Fatay Ghar Choorian, where there is a village called Badu waal Kalaa. My grandfather, a Resaldaar Major, was spending his happy life in his village where he constructed a new house in a garden next to the railway track and mostly government officials used to stay with him instead of at guest houses. My father's younger brother, who is living in Sahiwal nowadays, was studying in Islamiya College, Lahore, in those days whereas my father was a very famous kabbadi player representing the Gurdaspur team, alongwith one of his best friends, a Sardar (I forget his name). They were so close to each other that while playing against each other and both being very good players, they would give favours by not catching each other ... which was not appreciated by either the Muslims or the Sikhs. That was the time when there were rumours of partition and the situation was slowly getting heated. Life was normal and happy when all of a sudden, riots started from nowhere. Luckily my aunts (father's sisters) were in Lahore for the Eid holidays with their aunt and my father was alone with his father in Badu Waal Kalaa. One Hindu Maharaja announced that none of the Muslims will cross the border alive and my father also heard many stories of neighbouring villages where girls jumped into wells to save themselves from being mutilated. In the meanwhile, the Indian Army came to our house and offered my grandfather to escort him to a destination in Pakistan, under their supervision. When my grandfather was leaving home, he looked at his son as if he was seeing his son for the last time. This had disturbed my father a lot and he took his horse and followed the army jeep. After a kilometer away from village, he found out his father without one arm lying in the field with blood everywhere. He rushed to them and as soon as the soldiers opened fire on my father, my grandfather shouted and begged him to run away to take care of his sisters, being the eldest son. My father fled but could not go back. He tried to return several times but couldn't because of the gunfire. This process took 30 minutes (very heavy moments) and ultimately my grandfather passed away. My father could see nothing but revenge. Someone told him that the Hindu Mahraja was there in a guest house monitoring all this bloodshed, so he raided his guesthouse and killed him and brought his dead body to bury in his courtyard. For this process our servant Muloo helped him. The very next day this news was spread everywhere and police was very sure that it would have been done by my father only. So they caught him early morning and took him to the police station where he was ordered to be killed immediately. As soon as he smelled this and being a tall and very strong man, he climbed the high wall and ran away. Later on, he reached Sialkot after 3 months of partition with the help of his Sardar friend who escorted him to the border where he told my father that do not worry, you will come back once this storm has blown over and I will not allow anyone to take your house and this never happened. My father died in 1993 in an accident with an unfulfilled wish to see his home town one more time.

6: Bhupinder Singh Goraya (Patiala, Punjab), February 07, 2010, 10:00 AM.

Well, I did not see the Partition of 1947 but it is discussed almost everyday in our homes. After partition "we", who came from what is now in Pakistan have to listen to ridiculous comments about our refuge from there. I don't know what was the fault of our forefathers, but people still call us refugees.

7: Darshan Kaur (Canada), February 08, 2010, 4:28 AM.

Bhupinder Singh ji: you should ignore and forgive their ignorant comments ... in Punjab and the rest of the world, there is only one panth! United we stand, divided we fall ... we must realize this, otherwise 1947 and 1984 will repeat themselves. We need to remove from power negligent and corrupt Sikh leaders ... all of those who have failed us and taken Punjab into socio-economic ruin as they 'suck up' to their Hindu masters!

8: Prem Kishore Saint (Yorba Linda, California, U.S.A.), May 06, 2010, 12:03 PM.

Some insightful and heart rendering narratives of an event several of us were caught in 1947. I was 12 years old, in a boarding school in Gujranwala, West Punjab, and due to threats of riots, our school was closed early. I traveled by train to Jammu, in the Jammu & Kashmir State to be with an uncle and his family. We waited for the situation to settle down so as to return to my boarding school. But then the partition came and we were scattered like leaves in the wind. After staying with another uncle in Bihar, my brother and I moved to Kenya in 1949 where our father had been teaching since 1946.

9: Dil Sooz (U.S.A.), June 24, 2010, 3:58 AM.

My late father, who lived to ripe age of 99 years and passed away 4 years ago, would often reflect on events of the 1947 Partition. He believed and I do too, that the founder of Sikhism was a great Muslim Sufi saint. Even now there is more religious and cultural similarities between Sikhism and Sufism than any other two faiths. It does not mean to exclude other faith traditions who have much in common as well. My father always maintained that the diversity of beliefs was used as a pretext to divide and rule by the British, as they did all over their empire. My father remembered the horrifying and elating experiences of the partition days. He saw (helplessly as he was on a distant hill) Sikh and Hindu women jumping into a river to save their lives in our ancestral town of Mansehra (now in the NWFP province of Pakistan). He also saw trains of Muslim refugees from now Indian Punjab filled with dead bodies. One of my late cousins recalled that a chieftain of our political rival family in Mansehra had a rifle on his shoulder and walked in front of a long line of Hindu and Sikh women and children in the main bazaar of the town and took them to safety. No one dared to challenge him. Similarly, when my father came upon two Hindus sitting on a narrow ledge of a rooftop and a Muslim lynch crowd gathered below to kill them, he rescued them single-handedly by using his presence of mind. He said to them to get down and gave them protection in the name of our Pathan tribe. When they got down, to divert the anger of the crowd, he slapped each of them and asked them to proclaim "Kalima" or declaration of being a Muslim convert. They did as told. The mob said to my father these guys have proclaimed kalima under duress and don't mean it. My father said to them only Allah (God) knows what is in a man's heart. Do you claim to be Allah? They were dumb-founded. So my father took these guys home and then put them on a caravan to India. Later on, they wrote to my father that had he not slapped them and did what he did, they would have been killed that day. There is so much to say. May be some other time.

10: Dogra (London, United Kingdom), July 29, 2010, 8:13 AM.

Thanks for the article. Partition was an abomination against humanity. People of all faiths living together as fellow human beings, until the fascists, primarily the Muslim league, but also the Hindu Mahasabha, believed in the evil of the two-nation theory, and communal poison was spread.

11: I.J. Singh (New York, U.S.A..), September 19, 2011, 9:18 AM.

Correcting an error for the record. I amentioned Mughal Serai as the train station in Lahore. That is incorrect. The correct name for the station was Mughalpura. Readers' comments are much appreciated.

12: Jamil Mirza (Lahore, Punjab), February 09, 2012, 1:35 PM.

Interesting article and comments on it. Atrocities were committed on both sides.

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Remembrance of Things Past "









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