The
Partition of India (Hindustani: हिन्दुस्तान की तक़्सीम,
Hindustān kī Taqsīm) was the partition of British India on the basis of religious
demographics that led to the creation, on August 14, 1947 and
August 15, 1947, respectively, of the sovereign states
of the Dominion of Pakistan
(later Islamic Republic
of Pakistan
and People's
Republic of Bangladesh
) and the Union of
India (later Republic of
India
).
The partition was promulgated in the
Indian Independence Act 1947
and resulted in the dissolution of the
British Indian Empire. The partition
displaced up to 12.5 million people in the former British Indian
Empire, with estimates of loss of life varying from several hundred
thousand to a million.
The
partition of India included the geographical division of the Bengal province
of British India into East Pakistan
and West
Bengal
(India), and the similar partition of the Punjab province into West Punjab
(later Punjab
and Islamabad
Capital Territory
) and East Punjab (later
Punjab
, Haryana
and Himachal
Pradesh
). The partition deal also included the
division of state assets, including the
British Indian Army, the
Indian Civil Service and other
administrative services, the
Indian railways, and the
central treasury.
In the aftermath of Partition, the
princely states of India, which had been left
by the Indian Independence Act 1947 to choose whether to accede to
India or Pakistan or to remain outside them, were all incorporated
into one or other of the new
dominions. The
question of the choice to be made in this connection by
Jammu and Kashmir led to
the
Indo-Pakistani War of
1947 and other
wars and conflicts
between India and Pakistan.
Pakistan and India
Two self governing countries legally came into existence at the
stroke of midnight on 15 August 1947.
The ceremonies for the
transfer of power were held a day earlier in Karachi
, at the time
the capital of the new state of
Pakistan, so that the last British Viceroy, Lord
Mountbatten of Burma, could attend both the ceremony in Karachi
and the ceremony in Delhi
.
However another reason for this arrangement was to avoid the
appearance that Pakistan was
seceding from
a
sovereign India. Therefore Pakistan
celebrates Independence Day on
August 14,
while India celebrates it on
August
15.
Another reason for Pakistan celebrating independence on August 14
is the adoption of new
standard time
in Pakistan after partition.
The new standard time of West Pakistan (modern 'Pakistan
') was behind
Indian standard time by 30
minutes and the new standard time of East
Pakistan (modern 'Bangladesh
') was ahead of Indian standard time by 30 minutes,
so technically on the stroke of midnight falling between August 14
and 15, when India became independent, it was still 11:30 p.m. on
14 August in West Pakistan.
Background
Late 19th and early 20th century

Train to Pakistan being given a warm
send-off.
New Delhi railway station, 1947
The
All India Muslim League
(AIML) was formed in Dhaka
in 1906 by
Muslims who were suspicious of the Hindu-majority Indian National Congress.
They complained that Muslim members did not have the same rights as
Hindu members. A number of different scenarios were proposed at
various times. Among the first to make the demand for a separate
state was the writer/philosopher
Allama
Iqbal, who, in his presidential address to the 1930 convention
of the Muslim League said that a separate nation for Muslims was
essential in an otherwise
Hindu-dominated
subcontinent.
The Sindh Assembly passed a resolution making it a demand in 1935.
Iqbal,
Jouhar and others then
worked hard to draft
Mohammad Ali
Jinnah, who had till then worked for Hindu-Muslim unity, to
lead the movement for this new nation. By 1930, Jinnah had begun to
despair of the fate of minority communities in a united India and
had begun to argue that mainstream parties such as the Congress, of
which he was once a member, were insensitive to Muslim
interests.
The 1932 communal award which seemed to threaten the position of
Muslims in Hindu-majority provinces catalysed the resurgence of the
Muslim League, with Jinnah as its leader. However, the League did
not do well in the 1937 provincial elections, demonstrating the
hold of the conservative and local forces at the time.Image:Brit
IndianEmpireReligions3.jpg|1909 Prevailing majority Religions for
different districts, Map of British Indian Empire.Image:Muslim
percent 1909.jpg|1909 Percentage of Muslims.Image:Hindu percent
1909.jpg |1909 Percentage of Hindus.Image:Sikhs buddhists jains
percent1909.jpg|1909 Percentage of Buddhists, Sikhs, and
Jains.Image:Prevailing languages impgazind1909.jpg|1909 Prevailing
(Aryan) Languages (Northern Region).Image:Population density
impgazind1909.jpg |1901 Population Density.
1932–1942
In 1940, Jinnah made a statement at the
Lahore conference that seemed to call for
a separate Muslim 'nation'. However, the document was ambiguous and
opaque, and did not evoke a Muslim nation in a territorial sense.
This idea, though, was taken up by Muslims and particularly Hindus
in the next seven years, and given a more territorial element. All
Muslim political parties including the Khaksar Tehrik of Allama
Mashriqi opposed the partition of India Mashriqi was arrested on
March 19, 1940.
Hindu organisations such as the
Hindu
Mahasabha, though against the division of the country, were
also insisting on the same chasm between Hindus and Muslims.
In 1937 at
the 19th session of the Hindu Mahasabha held at Ahmedabad
, Veer Savarkar in his
presidential address asserted:

Rural Sikhs in a long ox-cart train
headed towards India.
Most of the Congress leaders were
secularists and resolutely opposed the division
of India on the lines of religion.
Mohandas Gandhi and
Allama Mashriqi believed that Hindus and
Muslims could and should live in amity. Gandhi opposed the
partition, saying,

An old Sikh man carrying his
wife.
Over 10 million people were uprooted from their homeland and
travelled on foot, bullock carts and trains to their promised new
home.
For years, Gandhi and his adherents struggled to keep Muslims in
the Congress Party (a major exit of many Muslim activists began in
the 1930s), in the process enraging both Hindu Nationalists and
Indian Muslim nationalists. (Gandhi was assassinated soon after
Partition by Hindu nationalist
Nathuram
Godse, who believed that Gandhi was appeasing Muslims at the
cost of Hindus.)
Politicians and community leaders on both
sides whipped up mutual suspicion and fear, culminating in dreadful
events such as the riots during the Muslim League's Direct Action Day of August 1946 in
Calcutta
, in which more than 5,000 people were killed and
many more injured. As public order broke down all across
northern India and Bengal
, the
pressure increased to seek a political partition of territories as
a way to avoid a full-scale civil war.
1942–1946

Viceroy Lord Mountbatten of Burma with
a countdown calendar to the Transfer of Power in the
background
Until
1946, the definition of Pakistan as demanded by the League was so
flexible that it could have been interpreted as a sovereign nation
Pakistan
, or as a
member of a confederated India.
Some historians believe Jinnah intended to use the threat of
partition as a bargaining chip in order to gain more independence
for the Muslim dominated provinces in the west from the Hindu
dominated center.
Other
historians claim that Jinnah's real vision was for a Pakistan that
extended into Hindu-majority areas of India, by demanding the
inclusion of the East of Punjab and
West of Bengal
, including
Assam
, a Hindu-majority country. Jinnah also fought
hard for the annexation of Kashmir
, a Muslim majority state with Hindu ruler; and the
accession of Hyderabad and Junagadh
, Hindu-majority states with Muslim
rulers.
The British colonial administration did not directly rule all of
"India". There were several different political arrangements in
existence: Provinces were ruled directly and the
Princely States with varying legal
arrangements, like
paramountcy.
The
British Colonial Administration
consisted of
Secretary of
State for India, the
India Office,
the
Governor-General of
India, and the
Indian Civil
Service. The British were in favour of keeping the area united.
The
1946 Cabinet
Mission was sent to try and reach a compromise between Congress
and the Muslim League. A compromise proposing a decentralized state
with much power given to local governments won initial acceptance,
but Nehru was unwilling to accept such a decentralized state and
Jinnah soon returned to demanding an independent Pakistan.
The Indian political parties were:
The Partition: 1947
Mountbatten Plan
The actual division between the two new dominions was done
according to what has come to be known as the
3 June Plan
or
Mountbatten Plan.
The
border between India and Pakistan was determined by a British
Government-commissioned report usually referred to as the Radcliffe Line after the London
lawyer, Sir
Cyril Radcliffe, who wrote
it. Pakistan came into being with two non-contiguous
enclaves,
East Pakistan (today
Bangladesh) and
West Pakistan,
separated geographically by India. India was formed out of the
majority Hindu regions of the colony, and Pakistan from the
majority Muslim areas.
On July
18, 1947, the British
Parliament
passed the Indian Independence Act that
finalized the partition arrangement. The
Government of India Act 1935
was adapted to provide a legal framework for the two new dominions.
Following partition, Pakistan was added as a new member of the
United Nations. The union formed from
the combination of the Hindu states assumed the name
India
which automatically granted it the seat of British India (a UN
member since 1945) as a
successor
state.
The 625
Princely States were given a
choice of which country to join.
Geography of the partition: the Radcliffe Line
The
Punjab — the region of the five rivers east of Indus
: Jhelum
, Chenab
, Ravi
, Beas, and Sutlej
— consists
of interfluvial doabs, or tracts of
land lying between two confluent rivers. These are the
Sind-Sagar doab (between Indus and Jhelum), the
Jech doab (Jhelum/Chenab), the
Rechna doab
(Chenab/Ravi), the
Bari doab (Ravi/Beas), and the
Bist doab (Beas/Sutlej) (see map). In early 1947, in the
months leading up to the deliberations of the Punjab Boundary
Commission, the main disputed areas appeared to be in the
Bari and
Bist doabs, although some areas in the
Rechna doab were claimed by the Congress and Sikhs. In the
Bari doab, the districts of Gurdaspur, Amritsar, Lahore,
and Montgomery (Sahiwal) were all disputed.
All districts (other than Amritsar, which was 46.5% Muslim) had
Muslim majorities; albeit, in Gurdaspur, the Muslim majority, at
51.1%, was slender. At a smaller area-scale, only three
tehsils (sub-units of a district) in
the
Bari doab had non-Muslim majorities. These were:
Pathankot (in the extreme north of Gurdaspur, which was not in
dispute), and Amritsar and Tarn Taran in Amritsar district. In
addition, there were four Muslim-majority tehsils east of
Beas-Sutlej (with two where Muslims outnumbered Hindus and Sikhs
together).

The claims (Congress/Sikh and Muslim)
and the Boundary Commission Award in the Punjab in relation to
Muslim percentage by Tehsils.
The unshaded regions are the princely states.
Before the Boundary Commission began formal hearings, governments
were set up for the East and the West Punjab regions. Their
territories were provisionally divided by "notional division" based
on simple district majorities. In both the Punjab and Bengal, the
Boundary Commission consisted of two Muslim and two non-Muslim
judges with Sir
Cyril Radcliffe as a
common chairman.
The mission of the Punjab commission was worded generally as: "To
demarcate the boundaries of the two parts of the Punjab, on the
basis of ascertaining the contiguous majority areas of Muslims and
non-Muslims. In doing so, it will take into account other
factors."
Each side (the Muslims and the Congress/Sikhs) presented its claim
through counsel with no liberty to bargain. The judges too had no
mandate to compromise and on all major issues they "divided two and
two, leaving Sir Cyril Radcliffe the invidious task of making the
actual decisions."

The communities in the disputed
regions of the Upper
Bari Doab in 1947.
Independence and population exchanges
Massive population exchanges
occurred between the two newly-formed states in the months
immediately following Partition. Once the lines were established,
about 14.5 million people crossed the borders to what they hoped
was the relative safety of religious majority. Based on 1951 Census
of displaced persons, 7,226,000 Muslims went to Pakistan from India
while 7,249,000 Hindus and
Sikhs moved to
India from Pakistan immediately after partition.
About 11.2 million or 78% of the population transfer took place in
the west, with
Punjab accounting for
most of it; 5.3 million Muslims moved from India to West Punjab in
Pakistan, 3.4 million Hindus and Sikhs moved from Pakistan to East
Punjab in India; elsewhere in the west 1.2 million moved in each
direction to and from Sind.

A crowd of Muslims at the Old Fort
(Purana Qila) in Delhi, which had been converted into a vast camp
for Muslim refugees waiting to be transported to Pakistan.
Manchester Guardian, 27 September 1947.
The newly formed governments were completely unequipped to deal
with migrations of such staggering magnitude, and massive violence
and slaughter occurred on both sides of the border. Estimates of
the number of deaths range around roughly 500,000, with low
estimates at 200,000 and high estimates at 1,000,000.
Punjab
The Indian state of Punjab was created in 1947, when the Partition
of India split the former Raj province of Punjab between India and
Pakistan. The mostly Muslim western part of the province became
Pakistan's Punjab Province; the mostly Sikh and Hindu eastern part
became India's Punjab state. Many Hindus and Sikhs lived in the
west, and many Muslims lived in the east, and so the partition saw
many people displaced and much intercommunal violence.
Lahore
and Amritsar
were at the center of the problem, the British were
not sure where to place them - make them part of India or
Pakistan. The British decided to give Lahore to Pakistan,
whilst Amritsar became part of India. Areas in west Punjab such as
Lahore, Rawalpindi, Multan, Gujart, had a large Sikh population and
many of the residents were attacked or killed by radical Muslims.
On the
other side in East Punjab cities such as Amritsar, Ludhiana
, and Gurdaspur
had a majority Muslim population in which many of
them were wiped out by Sikh guerrillas who launched an all out war
against the Muslims.
Bengal
The
province of Bengal
was divided
into the two separate entities of West Bengal
belonging to India, and East
Bengal belonging to Pakistan. East Bengal was
renamed East Pakistan in 1955, and
later became the independent nation of Bangladesh
after the Bangladesh Liberation War of
1971.
While
Muslim majority districts of Murshidabad
was given to India, Hindu majority district
Khulna
and the
Buddhist majority Chittagong
division was given to Pakistan by the
award.
Sindh
Hindu
Sindhis were expected to stay in Sindh
following
Partition, as there were good relations between Hindu and Muslim
Sindhis. At the time of
Partition there were 1,400,000 Hindu Sindhis, though most were
concentrated in the cities such as Hyderabad
, Karachi
, Shikarpur, and Sukkur
.
However,
because of an uncertain future in a Muslim country, a sense of
better opportunities in India, and most of all a sudden influx of
Muslim refugees from Gujarat
, Uttar
Pradesh
, Bihar
, Rajputana (Rajasthan
) and other parts of India, many Sindhi Hindus
decided to leave for India.
Problems were further aggravated when incidents of violence
instigated by Indian Muslim refugees broke out in Karachi and
Hyderabad. According to the census of India 1951, nearly 776,000
Sindhi Hindus moved into India. Unlike the
Punjabi Hindus and Sikhs, Sindhi Hindus did
not have to witness any massive scale rioting; however, their
entire province had gone to Pakistan thus they felt like a homeless
community. Despite this migration, a significant Sindhi Hindu
population still resides in Pakistan's Sindh province where they
number at around 2.28 million as per Pakistan's 1998 census while
the Sindhi Hindus in India as per 2001 census of India were at 2.57
million.
Kashmir conflict
The
Princely state
of Kashmir and Jammu had a majority Muslim population in the
Kashmir valley and a majority Hindu
population in
Jammu and sparse population
elsewhere. The Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir acceded to India at
the outbreak of violence. This
Kashmir
conflict lead to the
1947 war between
India and Pakistan in that region.
Perspectives
The Partition was a highly controversial arrangement, and remains a
cause of much tension on the subcontinent today. The British
Viceroy,
Lord
Mountbatten of Burma has not only been accused of rushing the
process through, but also is alleged to have influenced the
Radcliffe Line in India's favour
since everyone agreed India would be a more desirable country for
most. However, the commission took so long to decide on a final
boundary that the two nations were granted their independence even
before there was a defined boundary between them. Even then, the
members were so distraught at their handiwork (and its results)
that they refused compensation for their time on the
commission.
Some critics allege that British haste led to the cruelties of the
Partition. Because independence was declared
prior to the
actual Partition, it was up to the new governments of India and
Pakistan to keep public order. No large population movements were
contemplated; the plan called for safeguards for minorities on both
sides of the new border. It was an impossible task, at which both
states failed. There was a complete breakdown of law and order;
many died in riots, massacre, or just from the hardships of their
flight to safety. What ensued was one of the largest population
movements in recorded history. According to Richard Symonds
However, some argue that the British were forced to expedite the
Partition by events on the ground. Law and order had broken down
many times before Partition, with much bloodshed on both sides. A
massive civil war was looming by the time Mountbatten became
Viceroy. After World War II, Britain had limited resources, perhaps
insufficient to the task of keeping order. Another view point is
that while Mountbatten may have been too hasty he had no real
options left and achieved the best he could under difficult
circumstances. Historian Lawrence James concurs that in 1947
Mountbatten was left with no option but to cut and run. The
alternative seemed to be involvement in a potentially bloody civil
war from which it would be difficult to get out.
Conservative elements in England
consider the partition of India to be the moment
that the British Empire ceased to be
a world power, following Curzon's
dictum that "While we hold on to India, we are a first-rate
power. If we lose India, we will decline to a third-rate
power."
Delhi Punjabi refugees
An estimated 25 million Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs (1947-present)
crossed the newly drawn borders to reach their new homelands. These
estimates are based on comparisons of decadal censuses from 1941
and 1951 with adjustments for normal population growth in the areas
of migration. In northern India - undivided Punjab and North
Western Frontier Province (NWFP) - nearly 12 million were forced to
move from as early as March 1947 following the Rawalpindi
violence.
Delhi received the largest number of refugees for a single city -
the population of Delhi grew rapidly in 1947 from under 1 million
(917.939) to a little less than 2 million (1.744.072) between the
period 1941-1951. The refugees were housed in various historical
and military locations such as the Old Fort Purana Qila), Red Fort
(Red Fort), and military barracks in Kingsway (around the present
Delhi university). The latter became the site of one of the largest
refugee camps in northern India with more than 35,000 refugees at
any given time besides Kurukshetra camp near Panipat.
The camp sites were later converted into permanent housing through
extensive building projects undertaken by the Government of India
from 1948 onwards. A number of housing colonies in Delhi came up
around this period like Lajpat Nagar, Rajinder Nagar, Nizamuddin,
Punjabi Bagh, Rehgar Pura, Jungpura and Kingsway.
A number of schemes such as the provision of education, employment
opportunities, easy loans to start businesses, were provided for
the refugees at all-India level. The Delhi refugees, however, were
able to make use of these facilities much better than their
counterparts elsewhere.
Refugees settled in India
Many Sikhs and Hindu Punjabis settled in the Indian parts of Punjab
and Delhi.
Hindus migrating from East Pakistan (now
Bangladesh
) settled across Eastern
India and Northeastern India,
many ending up in close-by states like West Bengal
, Assam
, and
Tripura
. Some migrants were sent to the Andaman
islands
.
Hindu Sindhis found themselves without a homeland. The
responsibility of rehabilitating them was borne by their
government. Refugee camps were set up for Hindu Sindhis. However,
non-Sindhi Hindus received little help from the Government of
India, and many never received compensation of any sort from the
Indian Government.
Many refugees overcame the trauma of poverty, though the loss of a
homeland has had a deeper and lasting effect on their Sindhi
culture.
In late
2004, the Sindhi diaspora vociferously
opposed a Public Interest
Litigation in the Supreme Court of India
which asked the Government of India to delete the word
"Sindh
" from the
Indian National Anthem
(written by Rabindranath Tagore
prior to the partition) on the grounds that it infringed upon the
sovereignty of Pakistan.
Refugees settled in Pakistan
In the aftermath of partition, a huge population exchange occurred
between the two newly-formed states. About 14.5 million people
crossed the borders, including 7,226,000 Muslims came to Pakistan
from India while 7,249,000 Hindus and Sikhs moved to India from
Pakistan.
About 5.5 million settled in Punjab
Pakistan
and around
1.5 million settled in Sindh.
Most of
those refugees who settled in Punjab Pakistan they came from
Indian
Punjab
, Haryana
, Himachal
Pradesh
, Jammu and Kashmir
and Rajasthan
. Most of those refugees who arrived in Sindh
came from northern and central urban centers of India, Uttar Pradesh
, Bihar
, Madhya
Pradesh
, Gujarat
and Rajasthan via Wahga and Munabao
border, however a limited number of muhajirs also
arrived by air and on ships. People who wished to go to India from all
over Sindh awaited their departure to India by ship at the Swaminarayan temple in
Karachi
and were visited by Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of
Pakistan.
The
majority of Urdu speaking refugees who migrated after the
independence were settled in the port city of Karachi
in southern Sindh and in the cities of Hyderabad
, Sukkur
, Nawabshah
and Mirpurkhas
. As well the above many Urdu-speakers settled
in the cities of Punjab
mainly in Lahore
, Multan
, Bahawalpur
and Rawalpindi
. the number of migrants in Sindh was placed at over
540,000 of whom two-third were urban. In case of Karachi,
from a population of around 400,000 in 1947, it turned into more
than 1.3 million in 1953.
Former
President of Pakistan, General
Pervez Musharraf, was born in the
Nagar Vali Haveli in Daryaganj,
Delhi
, India. Several previous Pakistani leaders
were also born in regions that are in India.
Pakistan's first
prime minister, Liaquat Ali Khan
was born in Karnal
(now in
Haryana
).
The
7-year longest-serving Governor and martial law administrator of
Pakistan's largest province, Balochistan
, General Rahimuddin
Khan, was born in the pre-dominantly Pathan city of Kaimganj
, which now lies in Uttar Pradesh
. General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, who came to power
in a military coup in 1977, was born
in Jalandhar
, East Punjab. The
families of all four men opted for Pakistan at the time of
Partition.
Image:Old-muslim-couple1947.jpg|An aged and abandoned Muslim couple
and their grand children sitting by the roadside on this arduous
journey. "The old man is dying of exhaustion. The caravan has gone
on," wrote Bourke-White.
Image:Two-men-carrying-woman1947.jpg|Two Muslim men (in a rural
refugee train headed towards Pakistan) carrying an old woman in a
makeshift
doli or palanquin. 1947.
Image:Young-refugee-delhi1947.jpg|"With the tragic legacy of an
uncertain future, a young refugee sits on the walls of Purana Qila,
transformed into a vast refugee camp in Delhi." Margaret
Bourke-White, 1947
Image:Refugeetrain1.jpg|A refugee train on its way to Punjab,
Pakistan
Image:Train-to-pakistan-delhi1947.jpg|Train to Pakistan steaming
out of New Delhi Railway Station, 1947.
Artistic depictions of the Partition
In addition to the enormous historical literature on the Partition,
there is also an extensive body of artistic work (novels, short
stories, poetry, films, plays, paintings, etc.) that deals
imaginatively with the pain and horror of the event.
See also
References
- Revised Statute from The UK Statute Law Database:
Indian Independence Act 1947 (c.30) at opsi.gov.uk
- Alastair Lamb, Kashmir: A Disputed Legacy, 1846-1990,
Roxford Books 1991, ISBN 0-907129-06-4
- Nasim Yousaf: Hidden Facts Behind British India’s Freedom: A
Scholarly Look into Allama Mashraqi and Quaid-e-Azam’s Political
Conflict
- V.D.Savarkar, Samagra Savarkar Wangmaya Hindu Rasthra Darshan
(Collected works of V.D.Savarkar) Vol VI, Maharashtra Prantik
Hindusabha, Poona, 1963, p 296
- Wolpert, Stanley. A New History of India.
- Thomas RGC, Nations, States, and Secession: Lessons from the
Former Yugoslavia, Mediterranean Quarterly, Volume 5 Number 4 Fall
1994, pp. 40–65, Duke University Press
- Death toll in the partition
- K. Z. Islam, 2002, The Punjab Boundary Award,
Inretrospect
- Partitioning India over lunch, Memoirs of a British
civil servant Christopher Beaumont
- Stanley Wolpert, 2006, Shameful Flight: The Last Years of the
British Empire in India, Oxford University Press, ISBN
0-19-515198-4
- Richard Symonds, 1950, The Making of Pakistan, London, ASIN
B0000CHMB1, p 74
- "Once in office, Mountbatten quickly became aware if Britain
were to avoid involvement in a civil war, which seemed increasingly
likely, there was no alternative to partition and a hasty exit from
India" Lawrence J. Butler, 2002, Britain and Empire: Adjusting
to a Post-Imperial World, p 72
- Lawrence J. Butler, 2002, Britain and Empire: Adjusting to
a Post-Imperial World, p 72
- Ronald Hyam, Britain's Declining Empire: The Road to
Decolonisation, 1918-1968, page 113; Cambridge University
Press, ISBN 0521866499, 2007
- Lawrence James, Rise and Fall of the British
Empire
- Census of India, 1941 and 1951.
- Page 52
Further reading
- Popularizations:
- Collins, Larry and Dominique Lapierre: Freedom at
Midnight. London: Collins, 1975. ISBN 0-00-638851-5
- Zubrzycki, John. (2006) The Last Nizam: An Indian Prince in
the Australian Outback. Pan Macmillan, Australia. ISBN
978-0-3304-2321-2.
- Memoir:
- Academic textbooks and monographs:
- Ansari, Sarah. 2005. Life after Partition: Migration,
Community and Strife in Sindh: 1947—1962. Oxford, UK: Oxford
University Press. 256 pages. ISBN 019597834X.
- Butalia, Urvashi. 1998. The Other Side of Silence: Voices
from the Partition of India. Durham, NC: Duke University
Press. 308 pages. ISBN 0822324946
- Chatterji, Joya. 2002. Bengal Divided: Hindu Communalism
and Partition, 1932—1947. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge
University Press. 323 pages. ISBN 0521523281.
- Gilmartin, David. 1988. Empire and Islam: Punjab and the
Making of Pakistan. Berkeley: University of California Press.
258 pages. ISBN 0520062493.
- Gossman, Partricia. 1999. Riots and Victims: Violence and
the Construction of Communal Identity Among Bengali Muslims,
1905-1947. Westview Press. 224 pages. ISBN 0813336252
- Hansen, Anders Bjørn. 2004. "Partition and Genocide:
Manifestation of Violence in Punjab 1937-1947", India Research
Press. ISBN 9788187943259.
- .
- Ikram, S. M. 1995. Indian Muslims and Partition of
India. Delhi: Atlantic. ISBN 8171563740
- Kaur, Ravinder. 2007. "Since 1947: Partition Narratives among
Punjabi Migrants of Delhi". Oxford University Press. ISBN
9780195683776.
- .
- Page, David, Anita Inder Singh, Penderel Moon, G. D. Khosla,
and Mushirul Hasan. 2001. The Partition Omnibus: Prelude to
Partition/the Origins of the Partition of India 1936-1947/Divide
and Quit/Stern Reckoning. Oxford University Press. ISBN
0195658507
- Pandey, Gyanendra. 2002. Remembering Partition:: Violence,
Nationalism and History in India. Cambride, UK: Cambridge
University Press. 232 pages. ISBN 0521002508
- Raza, Hashim S. 1989. Mountbatten and the partition of
India. New Delhi: Atlantic. ISBN 81-7156-059-8
- Shaikh, Farzana. 1989. Community and Consensus in Islam:
Muslim Representation in Colonial India, 1860—1947. Cambridge,
UK: Cambridge University Press. 272 pages. ISBN 0521363284.
- Talbot, Ian and Gurharpal Singh (eds). 1999. Region and
Partition: Bengal, Punjab and the Partition of the
Subcontinent. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
420 pages. ISBN 0195790510.
- Talbot, Ian. 2002. Khizr Tiwana: The Punjab Unionist Party
and the Partition of India. Oxford and New York: Oxford
University Press. 216 pages. ISBN 0195795512.
- Talbot, Ian. 2006. Divided Cities: Partition and Its
Aftermath in Lahore and Amritsar. Oxford and Karachi: Oxford
University Press. 350 pages. ISBN 0195472268.
- Wolpert, Stanley. 2006. Shameful Flight: The Last Years of
the British Empire in India. Oxford and New York: Oxford
University Press. 272 pages. ISBN 0195151984.
- J. Butler, Lawrence. 2002. Britain and Empire: Adjusting to
a Post-Imperial World. London: I.B.Tauris. 256 pages. ISBN
186064449X
- Khosla, G. D. Stern reckoning : a survey of the events
leading up to and following the partition of India New Delhi:
Oxford University Press:358 pages Published: February 1990 ISBN
0195624173
- Articles:
- Review by Chudhry Manzoor Ahmed Marxist MP in
Pakistani Parliament book by Lal Khan 'Partition can it be
undone?'
- Gilmartin, David. 1998. "Partition, Pakistan, and South Asian
History: In Search of a Narrative." The Journal of Asian
Studies, 57(4):1068-1095.
- Jeffrey, Robin. 1974. "The Punjab Boundary Force and the Problem of
Order, August 1947" - Modern Asian Studies
8(4):491-520.
- Kaur Ravinder. 2007. "India and Pakistan: Partition Lessons". Open
Democracy.
- Kaur, Ravinder. 2006. "The Last Journey: Social Class in the
Partition of India". Economic and Political Weekly, June 2006.
www.epw.org.in
- Mookerjea-Leonard, Debali. 2005. "Divided Homelands, Hostile
Homes: Partition, Women and Homelessness". Journal of
Commonwealth Literature, 40(2):141-154.
- Morris-Jones. 1983. "Thirty-Six Years Later: The Mixed Legacies
of Mountbatten's Transfer of Power". International Affairs
(Royal Institute of International Affairs),
59(4):621-628.
- Spear, Percival. 1958. "Britain's Transfer of Power in India."
Pacific Affairs, 31(2):173-180.
- Talbot, Ian. 1994. "Planning for Pakistan: The Planning
Committee of the All-India Muslim League, 1943-46". Modern
Asian Studies, 28(4):875-889.
- Visaria, Pravin M. 1969. "Migration Between India and Pakistan,
1951-61" Demography, 6(3):323-334.
External links
- Bibliographies:
- Other links: