28 January 2024

The Partition and beyond: Saaz Aggarwal on Indian Explorers Podcast

The Partition and beyond: Sindhi Stories, Struggles, and Success with Saaz Aggarwal 

Embark on a captivating conversation with Saaz Agarwal, a prolific writer and artist, as she unveils the profound impact of the partition of India on the Sindhi community. 

In this episode, Saaz shares personal narratives that illuminate the violence and chaos of that turbulent period. She passionately advocates for preserving personal stories, emphasizing the resilience that defines the Sindhi community. Explore the intricacies of Sindhi culture and language loss, along with the lingering stereotypes. 

Join Sabrina Scott and Amit Nawalrai on an eye-opening journey that delves into the triumphs, struggles, and untold stories of the Sindhi community worldwide.

26 January 2024

Prejudices can only be overcome when we understand realities and face the truth



Talk given at the Willingdon Club in January 2025

On January 24, 2024, I spoke at the Willingdon Club, at the invitation of the club library. My friend Shahsultan happened to be in Bombay and she attended too, as my guest – she’s a member of the club but when she registered for the event, was informed that it was full and even the waiting list was full, which I found very flattering. Of course the club has many Sindhi members, but it was good to see that the audience had non-Sindhis too. One of them, a professor at a university in Canada, told me after the talk that I had missed speaking of an important point: the “bad name” that Sindhis have. He suggested that in future, if I did not want to talk about it, I include a disclaimer on the lines of “today I will not be speaking about the fact that Sindhis have a reputation for being crooks”.

His kind advice made me remember my primary motive in writing and speaking about Sindhis – the conviction that prejudices can only be overcome when we understand realities and face the truth. I believe that offering a body of true stories could work towards this.

One of the lovely moments at the event yesterday was when I spoke of Harchandrai Vishindas and mentioned his work as a city father of his hometown, Karachi, and found that there were 4 members of the audience who were his grandchildren! I requested them to stand up so I could take this photo.

I usually don’t bother to speak about the prejudice against Sindhis, but many of the people I’ve interviewed do, and many ask me about it. When I invited a range of Sindhi academics, businesspeople, artists, professionals and others, truly wonderful people, to contribute to my book SINDHI TAPESTRY: AN ANTHOLOGY OF REFLECTIONS ON THE SINDHI IDENTITY, it was very surprising to find that 4 of their excellent essays mentioned “The Sindhi and the Snake”!

In October 2013, at the fag end of a book tour in the south of Spain, I spoke to a gathering of 80 Sindhis in Gibraltar, showing photos, sharing insights, and explaining why I’d called it SINDH: STORIES FROM A VANISHED HOMELAND. At the end of my talk, Suresh Nagrani stood up to share something.

“When I was young,” he started, “I thought all Indians were Sindhi.”

This was greeted with a ripple of laughter, but it was no less than a fact: the Indians native to Gibraltar are indeed Sindhis. Suresh Nagrani went on: “Then I went to ‘uni’ in England. There I met Indians who were not Sindhi, from different parts of India. That was surprising. Even more surprising was that one of them said to me, ‘Oh, so you are a Sindhi. Let me ask you a riddle. If you meet a Sindhi and a snake, which one should you kill? You should kill the Sindhi!’”

The audience broke into guffaws.

First appeared in Sindh Courier on 25 January 2024