Kindness in the time of Partition
by Saaz Aggarwal
It is common knowledge that the 1947 Partition of the Indian
subcontinent was a time of extreme violence between the Hindus and Muslims. In
Punjab, men even killed their own daughters and wives, believing that they were
protecting them from a fate worse than death. Every family experienced loss of
life and limb, rape, abduction, separation and various forms of trauma.
Even as desperation and inflamed emotions led to a maniacal
frenzy of vicious destruction, other, softer, human emotions continued to
manifest, all along the new border as well as the areas in which riots and conflict
prevailed.
In my ten years of interviewing Sindhi Partition survivors,
one of the things that has struck me most is the many examples of kindness and
affection between the communities. The Sindh story is different for many
reasons, most significant of which is that Sindh was never partitioned. Sindh
also saw less violence. A turning point took place on 6 January 1948, when a
pogrom was conducted. Of the many who were saved by members of the other
community who went out of their way to help and protect them, at risk to their
own lives, here are a few.
Kartar’s story:
I was born in 1934, in the village Taib in Larkano district,
a small village belonging to the Jaisinghani families. We were zamindars. The
Bhutto family’s lands adjoined our village and we had frequent disputes over
water, which was sometimes scarce, but there was friendship and congeniality
between us too. The houses were made of brick – there was no concept of cement
or concrete in those days. We were well off, had a horse-driven cart with seats
for four, and a motorcycle, and employed a number of farmers who lived on the
land and tilled it. The house was large and our rooms were upstairs. Downstairs
was the autaak, a big room where the menfolk gathered. Their food was served to
them there. In Taib, we ate our meals sitting on cots. Women sat separately in
their section of the house. We had kitchen, bathroom, and toilets inside the
house. During the hot weather, we slept in the angan, the courtyard.
My father Jessaram Jaisinghani studied in Shikarpur and then
worked as a teacher in Dharamsabha High School. My mother and we children were
taken to live with him in Shikarpur when I was six years old. I had my primary
education in Shikarpur.
We spent our holidays in Karachi and on 14 August 1947 when
Pakistan was born, that is where we were. We had been thinking about migrating
to India but were still there on the fateful day of 6 January 1948.
That morning, my elder brother Nand was to take our chachi
to the city. Our neighbours on the ground floor were Muslims who had migrated
from Bihar a few months earlier. They must have known something was going to
happen, because they rushed to Nand and begged him not to leave the house that
day. They invited us to come and hide in their house where they would protect
us from harm. We were grateful, but what could we do? How could we go and stay
with people we hardly knew, who were of the other community?
These Muhajirs – as the migrants to Pakistan during
Partition are known as – understood our dilemma. They came to our house, hung
curtains on the windows and hoisted the Muslim League flag in the balcony. They
assured us that if a mob came they would point to the balcony and say that no Hindu
lived in the house. The mob came twice, but our kind neighbours saved us.
That day I saw terrible things that I will never forget.
People were being butchered in the streets. The Muhajirs told everyone who came
that there were only Muslims in the building and nobody disturbed us.
We left Karachi for good, sailing to Okha port in
Saurashtra. From Viramgam, we got into the Bombay train. But it was 30 January
1948, the day Gandhi was assassinated. Our train was terminated at Ahmedabad
station and everything was at a standstill. We stayed for one week on Platform
Number One. There were curfews. After some days, we moved to a sesame oil mill
which had been converted into a camp for refugees.
My father rented a house on the outskirts of Ahmedabad and
joined Mahatma Gandhi High School as a teacher. We had to walk twelve miles
every day to the school. It was a hard time but we never felt a sense of
poverty since we were always aware that we belonged to a noble, zamindar
family. As the years went by, our lives improved. My father became the
widely-respected principal of the school. I became an engineer and worked in
the corporate world. None of us ever forgot the Muhajirs who saved us on that
terrible day.
Triveni’s story:
Before marriage, my mother was Saraswati Ramchand Malkani.
The family lived in Malkani Ghitti, Hyderabad, Sindh. They were landlords,
wealthy for seven generations, owners of bunnyoon and buildings. In c1941 they
moved to live in Karachi, in Malkani Mansion on Bunder Road, opposite a Muslim cemetery.
Saraswati was the youngest of three sisters. Her father,
Ramchand, had died when she was just forty days old. The head of the family was
his brother Dr Sahijram. My mama Gurbaksh went to London to study and became a barrister,
and the other mama Ajit Singh was given charge of the family lands, a holding
of more than 3000 acres.
When Partition came, Malkani Mansion was attacked by a mob.
They ransacked the doctor’s clinic on the ground floor. As they climbed to the
next floor, loot maar kayoon – they pillaged the houses on the first
floor, then attacked the second floor.
On the third floor they met a Muslim who stopped them,
saying that there were no Hindus on the fourth floor. When they refused to
believe him, he swore on the holy Quran, insisting that there were no Hindus upstairs.
It was this false promise, made on the Holy Quran, that saved my mother and her
family. If it hadn’t been for that Muslim, I would not be here today.
Motilal’s poem
The experience of the 6 January 1948 Karachi pogrom is also
beautifully depicted in this poem by Motilal Jotwani, a child when the incident
took place. His father was a teacher in Karachi and they rented two rooms in a
building belonging to a devout Muslim. He was huddled that day along with other
members of the family in a small storeroom of the house, old enough to imagine
the consequences although his younger brother and sister were not. Allahdino –
which means ‘given by god’ – let the rioters take what they wanted, and then
spent the rest of the day singing songs of Kabir with the author’s father.
Cities Ran Amuck
by Motilal Jotwani
Streets
roared: “Allah-o-Akbar!”
“Har
har Mahadev!”
In
Karachi, on 6 January 1948,
huddled
in a store room,
we
waited with bated breath.
The
world, it seemed,
would
come to a sudden end.
“Hand
over the kafirs in your house,”
the
rioters demanded.
God’s
good man, God himself,
Allhadino
lied to them:
“The
people you are looking for
sailed
to Bombay yesterday.”
Allahdino
was an ordinary man,
Sindhi
and Sanskrit dino in his Muslim name.
Allahdino
lied once again:
“The
poor creatures migrated to India,
leaving
behind their precious belongings.
Do
you want those instead?”
And we waited with
bated breath …
The number of individual positive acts between members of
the two communities during Partition far outnumbers the violence. While the
repercussions of the latter were inestimably higher, inestimably more damaging
– the support and kindness received from members of the other community must be
memorialized too.
A visit to a Hindu village in present-day Pakistan
I spent a week in Sindh with my
family when my first book on Sindh was launched at the Karachi Literature
Festival in February 2013. On our last day we were driven into rural Sindh on a
special visit to the Hemrajani family in the hamlet of Tando Ahmed Khan, close
to the well-known Thano Bula Khan in Jamshoro District, an area that continues
to have a large population of Hindus.
At Tando Ahmed Khan, we enjoyed devotional music and Sindhi hospitality at a Hindu temple, received blessings from a 100-year-old ‘Mata’, ate a meal in the Hemrajani home that tasted like my grandmother had cooked it – and drove away laden with presents, including ‘kharchi’ – a tradition of gifts of money – for my children.
Although situated off the Karachi-Hyderabad superhighway and just under two hours from each of these cities, Thano Ahmed Khan has remained remote and a small rural world unto itself. To us it provided the extraordinary experience of stepping back in time to the world of my ancestors.
What makes it a fascinating study to
all, however, is that during Partition when the Hindus were leaving Sindh to
settle in other parts of India and the world, not a single family left Thano
Ahmed Khan. They continue to live and work here, following age-old lifestyles and
traditions. They have prospered and live in peace and plenty. The Hemrajani family
has lands in the village where onion forms the major crop. They also have
cotton ginning factories and mills near Hyderabad, as well as agricultural
lands, including banana and guava orchards, there. The brothers and their
grown-up children travel to manage these businesses but the ancestral village is
their home and they live their in a joint family.
Says Bhagwandas Hemrajani, the second of six brothers:
We have
never had any problem. We continue to celebrate their festival days and family
events and live happily and with brotherhood.
Part of the
reason is because in this area we have had very good landlords and leaders. At
the time of Partition, it was the presence of the local chieftain Malik
Sekander Khan, that gave
us the reassurance that we needed to remain in our homes. When he passed away
in 1985, his son Malik Asad Sekander Khan took over and he is extremely
cooperative, attending all our functions and giving us every support.
Allah
tala hamari madad karta hai. Bahut khushi hoti hai aur sukoon hai.
Thano Bula Khan also has a dargah
which commemorates the ruler Raja Vikramajeet who abdicated his throne for the
life of a monk. This shrine displays of symbols of not just Hinduism but also
Islam and Sikhism, typical of the age-old syncretic religion of Sindh. This,
combined with good-quality local governance created a wall of kindness that
protected the people and kept them safe.
The parting present
Another touching example of peace, affection and kindness is of Mir Hassan Malkani and the rug entrusted to him by his mother Izzat Khatun.
Mir Hassan’s grandfather, Ali Gohar Malkani of village
Malkani near Sehwan, had any number of Hindu friends, but none as dear as
Moolo. His being Hindu had never been of consequence – until Partition.
Before Moolo and his family left Sindh for good he came to
bid Ali Gohar farewell. Ali Gohar was distraught and begged his friend not to
leave but there was nothing anyone could do. Moolo pressed Ali Gohar to use the
things from his home that he could not carry – kitchen utensils, rugs and
knick-knacks. There was a beautiful metal tray engraved with designs and fitted
with gold handles. When special guests visited, the children would be told,
“Moolay varo tray khani acho – bring the Moolo tray”.
One of the rugs had been woven with Moolo’s father’s name:
Valeccha Kodumal. Ali Gohar preserved it lovingly, hoping that a day would come
when he would be able to return the heirloom to his friend. Right until the war
of 1965, Ali Gohar and Moolo exchanged letters. Later that year, Ali Gohar
died. The letters stopped.
Ali Gohar’s daughter, Izzat Khatun, treasured the rug and
when the time came, entrusted it to her son Mir Hassan Mir Hassan grew up in
Sindh. He became a doctor and settled in London. His practice on Harley Street
established him as London’s foremost hair-transplant specialist. The rug is
safe with him as he continues trying to find the family of his grandfather’s
dearest friend so that he can return it and tell them how much the friendship
meant to his family and how much they mourned its loss.
Credits
Kartar’s story is excerpted from Sindh: Stories from a
Vanished Homeland by Saaz Aggarwal black-and-white fountain 2012
Triveni’s story is excerpted from The Amils of Sindh
by Saaz Aggarwal black-and-white fountain 2019
Cities Ran Amuck translated by Anju Makhija and Menka Shivdasani in Freedom
and Fissures: An anthology of Sindhi Partition Poetry (Sahitya Akademi
1998)
A visit to a Hindu village is excerpted from Look back in nostalgia,
Mid-day, 11 April 2013
The parting present is excerpted from Losing Home by Saaz Aggarwal
black-and-white fountain 2022
About the author
Saaz Aggarwal has a Master’s degree in Mathematics, but over
the years established herself as a writer and artist. Her body of work includes
biographies, translations, critical reviews and humour columns, as well as
themed painting collections and mixed-media installations. Her books on Sindh
are in university
libraries around the world, and much of her research contribution in
the field of Sindh studies is easily accessible online, for example in the
links sindhstories, sindhworkis, talks, and free
downloads.
First published https://usawa.in/issue-8/non-fiction-8/kindness-in-the-time-of-partition on October 29, 2022
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