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2 - The Partition Conundrum: Perspectives, Experiences and Ambiguities from qasbahs in India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2018

M. Raisur Rahman
Affiliation:
historian of South Asia interested in social and cultural history of modern India and South Asian Islam
Ali Usman Qasmi
Affiliation:
Lahore University of Management Sciences, Pakistan
Megan Eaton Robb
Affiliation:
Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies
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Summary

Writing about the impact of the partition of India, renowned Urdu writer Ismat Chughtai (1915–1991), born in qasbah Badaun, elaborates: ‘It wasn't only that the country was split in two – bodies and minds were also divided. Moral beliefs were tossed aside and humanity was in shreds … Families were torn apart. One brother was allotted to Hindustan, the other to Pakistan, the mother was in Hindustan, her offsprings were in Pakistan; the husband was in Hindustan, his wife was in Pakistan. The bonds of relationship were in tatters, and in the end many souls remained behind in Hindustan while their bodies started off for Pakistan.’

At least with regard to the qasbahs of the United Provinces (the state of Uttar Pradesh in independent India), this was a rather common story. Qasbahs or unique small towns that littered the state witnessed significant movement of people to Pakistan in the wake of the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947. Families were divided, several individuals departed to the newly created nation-state of Pakistan in search of greener pastures or to explore and experience the new homeland created ‘as a political idea.’ For whatever reasons, several people chose to remain at home in qasbahs. This suggests how opinions were divided in these areas with regard to the Muslim League-led demand for Pakistan. Qasbahs, like most towns and cities in North India, had individuals who were pro-Congress and anti-Congress, pro-Muslim League and anti-Muslim League. But the picture that emerged overall was one of great ambivalence and predicament. The pattern that emerges from qasbahs presents both critique and dilemma in regards to the very idea of Pakistan. It emerged as a shared pattern among the ashraf (well-born, Muslim gentry) families of UP in general and in qasbahs in particular from where members of families crossed borders to settle in Pakistan. Many, of course, chose to remain in the newly independent India. It was not unusual to see one brother leave while the other stayed behind. So what sets qasbahs apart from other towns and cities? For one, the emigration from qasbahs was not just limited to people moving to Pakistan. Both during and after the partition, several qasbati (of qasbah) individuals moved to larger towns and cities such as Delhi, Lucknow, Bombay, Allahabad and Aligarh, leaving behind divided families and communities.

Type
Chapter
Information
Muslims against the Muslim League
Critiques of the Idea of Pakistan
, pp. 65 - 81
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

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