Under the Guidance of MAY 2012
Transcription
Under the Guidance of MAY 2012
AGONIZING PARTITION: A STUDY ON THE SELECT INDO-ENGLISH PARTITION NOVELS A Thesis submitted to the Bharathidasan University, Tiruchirappalli in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN ENGLISH By V. FRANCIS (Ref. No. 007810/Ph.D.2/English/P.T./July 2007) Under the Guidance of Rev. Dr. A. SEBASTIAN, M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., PG & RESEARCH DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH St. JOSEPH’S COLLEGE (Autonomous) Re-Accredited with ‘A’ Grade( III Phase) by NAAC College with Potential for Excellence by UGC TIRUCHIRAPPALLI - 620 002, INDIA MAY 2012 Rev. Dr. A. Sebastian SJ, M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Associate Professor & Principal St. Joseph’s College (Autonomous) Tiruchirappalli - 620 002 India. CERTIFICATE This is to certify that the thesis entitled AGONIZING PARTITION: A STUDY ON THE SELECT INDO-ENGLISH PARTITION NOVELS submitted by Mr. V. FRANCIS is a bonafide record of research work done by him under my guidance in the PG & Research Department of English, St. Joseph's College (Autonomous), Tiruchirappalli and the thesis has not previously formed the basis for the award of any degree, diploma, associateship, fellowship or any other similar titles. The thesis represents the independent work on the part of the candidate. Rev. Dr. A. Sebastian SJ Research Adviser Tiruchirappalli - 2 24th May 2012 V. FRANCIS, Assistant Professor of English, PG & Research Department of English St. Joseph’s College (Autonomous) Tiruchirappalli - 620002 India. DECLARATION I hereby declare that the work entitled AGONIZING PARTITION: A STUDY ON THE SELECT INDO-ENGLISH PARTITION NOVELS has been carried out by me under the guidance of Rev. Dr. A. Sebastian SJ, M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Associate Professor & Principal, St. Joseph’s College (Autonomous), Tiruchirappalli and the work has not been submitted either in whole or in part of any other degree or diploma at any other University or Institute. V. FRANCIS Tiruchirappalli - 2 May 2012 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I express my sincere and profound gratitude to Rev. Dr. S. John Britto, SJ, Rector, Rev. Dr. A. Albert Muthumalai, SJ, Secretary and Rev. Dr. B. John Bosco, SJ, Deputy-Principal for their moral support and encouragement given to me to do this research work in this institution. I am overwhelmed with a deep sense of gratitude to my respectful and eminent research adviser Rev. Dr. A. Sebastian, SJ, Associate Professor & Principal, St. Joseph’s College (Autonomous), Tiruchirappalli, for having enabled me to carry out this research work under his valuable guidance. It is with his constant encouragement and meticulous supervision that I have been able to accomplish this fruitful task. I am indebted to Dr. S. Papu Benjamin Elango, M.A., M.Phil., B.L., Ph.D., Associate Professor & Head, PG & Research Department of English and to my respected colleagues for their valuable suggestions and encouragement. I record my sincere gratitude to Rev. Sr. M. Fatima, General Councillor, St. Aloysius Gonzagu Congregation, Pondicherry, Prof. A. Jesurajan, Assistant Professor & Head, Department of English, Arul Anandar College (Autonomous), Karumathur and Dr. D. Dhanalakshmi, Associate Professor of English, Periyar E.V.R. College (Autonomous) for their scholarly advice and suggestions. I extend my gratitude to my parents, family members, friends and all those who were instrumental in shaping me to bring out this thesis. V. Francis CONTENTS Chapter No. Title Page No. Acknowledgement I Introduction II The Irreparable Human Loss 44 III Brutal Religious Persecutions 74 IV The Huge Material Loss 102 V Psychological Trauma 123 VI Conclusion 155 Works Cited 169 Appendix (List of Papers Published) 1 CHAPTER - I INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER – I INTRODUCTION India is a land of towering traditions, diverse cultures, innumerable faiths, rich practices and affluent resources. There was an ancient civilization called Indus Civilization in India and Pakistan (2500 B.C. – 1900 B.C.). This civilization chronicles the glorious past of India in art, architecture, governance, belief system and technology. Indians had trade links and economic activities in every part of the world. This proves the exotic and finest products produced in India. India is a land of religions; wherein sprouted Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism. People spoke varied tongues and excelled in every field of knowledge. India is full of indigenous arts and crafts. The thousands of temples those adorn every nook and cranny of India is the vivid example for its glorious era of art, craft and sculpture. The pillar cut edicts, the rock cut edicts and the cave paintings of India are awesome. The fertile fields of India produced innumerable varieties of crops and spices. The varieties of Indian music, dance and literature are beyond comparison. Despite these diversities, there is a greater unity among the Indians. In short, it is an enchanting incredible India. These matchless glories attracted all the eyes. A number of invaders wanted to possess India. The Aryans were the first invaders of India. They came originally from the highlands of central Asia. Slowly they penetrated into 2 the basins of Jammu, Ganges and Deccan. Alexander invaded India in 326 B.C. He was followed by the Persian invasion in the sixth century. India’s west coast was acquainted with Arabs and other West Asians as part of the commercial expansion of the early medieval period. In the eighth century, another sort of Arab presence appeared in the form of Muslim army that conquered Sind. Mahmud of Ghazni invaded India and destroyed the Shiva idols at the temple of Somnath and carried a vast treasure of gold in 1025 A.D. Then the Slave soldiers invaded India and ruled from Delhi. Among the endless invaders, the advent of the Europeans was a death trap to the great heritage that was built and preserved for many generations. The very basis of Europe’s vigorous contacts with India from the late fifteenth century onwards was its prime interest to reach India and the Indes for trade. Ranabir Chakravarti in his work Trade in India observes the reasons for the Europeans’ interest for India: “Europe perceived India and the East as an area yielding exotic, exciting and mysterious products which were seen as luxuries in the European markets. India was seen as a land of riches, and trade with such a land offered prospects both real and imaginary, of fabulous gains” (3). The Portuguese had the lure of business in India, which paved the way for establishing the Estado da India Portuguesa. This was followed by the arrival of the Dutch, the French and the English. Among these Europeans, the English were able to establish their supremacy by creating the English East India Company. 3 The Mughal emperor Jahangir gave permission to the English East India Company to establish its factories and warehouses in India. The Company set up its first factory in Surat. Soon it began to expand its trade activities by establishing factories in Bombay, Calcutta and Madras. The riches of India tempted the company to build its empire in India. The feeble Mughal power actually facilitated the territorial expansion of the company. It raised its own army to establish its power. The Battle of Plassey (1757) marked the beginning of political supremacy of the English East India Company in India. They took over a long period of time – nearly one hundred years to build a strong empire in India. Bengal goods came to comprise nearly 60 per cent of English imports from Asia. But the Bengal nawabs did not encourage the free trade of the Company in their territories. There rose a dispute between the company and the then nawab, Siraj-ud-daula. This culminated in a battle in June1757, in which Siraj was defeated by Robert Clive. The company’s next victory was at the Battle of Buxar (1764), in which the Company routed the Mughal emperor Shuja. In 1772, the Company established its indirect rule in Bengal. In the south there were a few wars between the French and the English East India Company. In these wars, the French lost their positions in India one after another. Many of the Indian states in the eighteenth century were perpetually involved in mutual conflicts. Politically each one tried to establish its 4 supremacy over the others and the English were looked upon as a new force in this power game. The states entered into diplomatic alliances with the Company. These opportunities helped the Company to widen its imperial power and carry on its commercial activities freely. In 1798, Lord Wellesley was appointed as governor general of India. Bandyopadhyay in his work From Plassey to Partion: A History of Modern India writes the intention of Lord Wellesley: “…with a dream of conquest and a lust for personal glory” (51). But his wars caused serious financial crisis. So, he was called back. The Company had four rounds of war with Haidar Ali and his son Tipu Sultan over Mysore and Malabar. In 1799, Lord Wellesley vanquished Tipu Sultan and annexed his territories with the British. In 1801, the Company annexed half of Awadh and in1856 the entire Awadh. In 1845, the first AngloSikh war began. The British routed the formidable Sikh army and annexed Lahore. Through the Burma war, the Company was able to add the Northeastern India under its vast empire building. Coorg was annexed in 1834 by Lord Bentinck. The Company decided to raise its own army in India which has to be regimented and commanded by European officers. After a long process of annexation, the British began the process of Anglicization and the regulative administration under Cornwallis and Wellesley. Apart from the empire building, the British began their other processes like evangelization and providing liberal education to the Indians. Thomas Macaulay wanted to refine the Indians rather than to conquer them. Earlier the 5 Company had the outright control over its trade and administration in India. Later, even the British government had a share of the Company’s affairs in India. The Company constantly paid an enormous sum to the British government. The Regulating Act of 1773 officially recognized parliamentary right to control over Indian affairs. The Charter Act of 1831 announced the undoubted sovereignty of the Crown of the United Kingdom. Thus, the Company which came to India for trade possessed entire India under its restriction. The British rule that existed in India till 1947 had both blessings and curses. Since the British’s exclusive aim was Indian assets they used many foul methods to reach the end. The miseries they inflicted upon the Indians were essentially different and more rigorous than the sufferings that they underwent earlier. Before the British came to India there were civil wars, invasions, revolutions, conquests and famines but they did not go deeper than the surface of India. The ingress of the British broke down the entire framework of Indian society. India lost all its old glory and was left in a state of anarchy and melancholy. The British concentrated on the departments of finance and they completely neglected the departments of public works and agriculture. The oppression and neglect of agriculture is a great blow to India by the British intruders. The hand-loom and the spinning wheel, producing their regular myriads of spinners and weavers, were the pivots of the Indian society. From 6 immemorial times, Europe received the admirable textures of Indian labour. It was the British who broke up the Indian hand-loom and destroyed the spinning wheel. British steam engine and science uprooted the fine indigenous industry that was practised by the Indians from time immemorial. The Indian village administration was one of the best in the world. It united agriculture and manufacturing industry. The village administration had its own line of officials who carried their duties in a perfect tune. Every village had a headman (potail), an accountant (kurnum), a boundary man, a Brahmin, a teacher and an astrologer. Under this system, the Indians lived a harmonious life from time immemorial. The interference of British free trade, British taxcollectors and British soldiers destroyed this fine village administrative system and the economic boon of India. Indians lost their ancient form of civilization and their family unities because of the British rule in India. British imperialism will only be remembered as a dark period in the world history. It destroyed societies that had lived peacefully and successfully for thousands of years. It created false boundaries between people who had been united. It stole and plundered the wealth that drove ancient civilizations. And above all when it was finally defeated, it left behind a legacy of deprivation, conflict and seeds of future wars. The British imperialism disturbed the state of equilibrium among different ethnic groups by redefining their territories, thereby laying the seeds for future civil wars. 7 The British killed a number of innocent Indians in order to build their empire in India. One among them was the Jallianwalabagh massacre, where hundreds of peacefully protesting Indians were killed. Thousands of Indians were jailed during their freedom struggle. The locals were treated as subhumans by the British. They killed the indigenous industry. The British did not realize that India had a far longer history of civilization than the war-like Britain. The colonization overrode a way of life which had sustained and prospered for centuries. The British very often used the tactic of divide and rule which created an enmity between the Muslims and the Hindus. In India, the Hindu-Muslim conflict originated because of the British strategy to deteriorate the freedom struggle. Again, in Sri Lanka the gory ethnic war that went on for years was the consequence of British cheap tactics of taking Indian Tamils to work in the tea estates of Sri Lanka. But those exported Tamils were not treated just and were not given equal rights. Many Indians feel that the blunders and the grave wounds caused by the British will take many years to get healed. But there are a few others, especially the people of the present generation who view that the British rule in India was a blessing in disguise. It is an instinctive human desire to dominate others. If the British had not done it, then others would have – and arguably done a nastiest job. Besides their lootings, they have left behind certain good things like the construction of infrastructure, colossal buildings and introducing the postal system and railways. On the contrary the Christian Indians say that the British united a 8 desperate country, enhanced its economy and made their language popular in India. Bill Davidson, a British Sergeant who was against the British imperialism made the following comment on the British rule in India in Chaman Nahal’s Azadi: “Local cultures had been destroyed everywhere. More so in India which had a long history and tradition” (117). In the opinion of some of the historians, the British rule in India should not be deliberated by today’s standards. The past regime is past and it is not fair to cry for what is gone. Thus they conclude that the British rule in India was constructive for both the rulers and the ruled. It is important to look at the surfacing of nationalism and the freedom struggle that our fore fathers waged against the British. Sucheta Mahajan in his work Independence and Partition – The Erosion of Colonial Power in India remarks, “A number of books and biographies, which broadly fall within the nationalist historiographical stream, do recognize nationalism as the central cause of the British withdrawal from India” (28). After establishing a dominant government, the British began to meddle in the socio-religious aspects of the Indian society. Their political administration went hand in hand with evangelization and social services. The evangelists believed that the Indian religions were full of superstitions, idolatry and tyranny of the priests. Through introducing English education, they began to intervene in the religions of India. 9 In the early nineteenth century a number of foreign missionaries came to India. They began to translate the Bible into the vernaculars and established schools and hospitals. The British thought that a sense of duty to the natives will give them security. Macaulay’s minutes which came in 1835 asserted the introduction of English education in India. The main rationale of English education in India was to train the Indians for subordinate public services. With this introduction the tradition of indigenous classical learning began to fade away. A great aversion rose among the Indians against the British rule in the middle of nineteenth century. The Indians began to experience a lot of bitter grievances from the hands of the British. There was a Great Rising against the British Rule in 1857. It is generally believed that the Great Rising of 1857 began on twenty-ninth March from Barrakpur in Bengal where a Brahmin sepoy of the East India Company known as Mangal Pande refused to use the grease cartridges and invoked his other comrades to take arms against the English in order to shield their religion. When Sergeant Major Hudson ordered the soldiers to arrest him none of the soldiers stepped forward. Thereafter, the Sergeant Major Hudson tried to arrest him, but Mangal Pande shot him dead. He also shot another English officer who came to arrest him. Later, Mangal Pande was arrested and was hanged on April 8, 1857. The Mutiny that was begun by Mangal Pande echoed among the Indian sepoys of various other regiments. One among them was the revolt by the 10 Meerut sepoys. The Meerut sepoys killed a number of English officers and civilians and marched to Delhi. The revolt outbroke in the adjoining districts of Delhi. Later, the rebel army occupied Delhi. There were revolts in Firozepur, Muzzafarnagar, Kanpur, Jhansi, Gwalior and so on. Though the British were petrified by the incidents in Meerut, Delhi and its surroundings, they gathered the English armies from Bombay and Madras and they even won over some of the native rulers to their aid. There was a terrible fight between the mutineers and the British army. Finally, on September 24, 1857, Delhi was recaptured by the British. Though the mutiny was completely suppressed, it signaled the awakening of Indians. R. K. Sharma in his work History of Indian National Movement quotes the remark made by Lord Croame: “I want the young generation of the English people to read the history of the Mutiny of 1857, derive lessons out of it and imbibe those lessons in their hearts. In it we found so many lessons and warnings” (33). The Great Rising of 1857 was followed by a social and cultural awakening in India. Swami Vivekananda, who was the disciple of Ramakrishna, popularized the religious teachings of his guru. He condemned the caste system and the current Hindu emphasis on rituals, ceremonies and superstitions and urged Indians to absorb the spirit of liberty, equality and freethinking. In 1896, Vivekananda founded The Ramakrishna Mission to carry out humanitarian relief and social work. 11 The educated elite Indians began to question many of the fundamental assumptions upon which the traditional Indian society was rested. A number of educational societies were founded in India. Social thinkers like Raja Rammohun Roy waged a war against the evil practices that were followed in India. He fought against caste taboos, child marriage, female infanticide and sati. Iswarchandra Vidyasagar raised his voice to promote widow remarriage. Rammohun, who is often called the father of modern India, wanted to revive Hinduism in the light of reason. In the nineteenth century a number of social and religious reform societies were formed. They include; Brahmo Samaj, Sadharan Brahmo Samaj, Manav Dharma Sabha, Prarthana Samaj and Arya Samaj. The members of these Sabhas and Samajs made a new awakening and brought renaissance in India. The Aligarh movement made valuable contribution towards educational, social, religious and economic progress of Muslims in India. The younger generations of leaders in the Congress were disgruntled with the meek and passive demands of political change. So they became extremists. While some of them boycotted British goods and institutions, the others went further by using political terrorism of murder and dacoity through the use of pistols and hand grenades in the hope of getting speedy redress for their grievances. A current of young patriotism swept the entire country against the passive method of agitation followed by the moderates. Lokmanya Tilak, Nauroji, R. C. Dutt and Ranade wrote volumes on the British exploitation of 12 India. Lord Curzon divided Bengal into two provinces in 1905 – the Western Hindu majority province and the Eastern Muslim majority province. The partition was seen by the Indians as a clever move in the game of divide and rule. This created a great confrontation in Bengal. Between 1906 and 1911, there was a great uprising of revolutionary leaders, who were stimulated by the history of the western countries and hoped to get arms supplies from Anglophobe countries. In 1942, the Indian National Army was formed and in 1943, Subhas Chandra Bose took over the direct command of Indian National Army. In 1944, the Indian National Army left Rangoon along with the Japanese troops. They captured certain parts of Eastern India, but the sudden withdrawal of the Japanese army put the entire operation of the INA into ruin. Lala Lajpat Rai (the Lion of Punjab) with his fiery speeches roused patriotic spirit among Indians. Allan Octavian Hume, the progenitor of the Indian National Congress, had deep knowledge of the natives. The Indian National Congress was basically founded with two prominent agenda. The first was to amalgamate India and the other was to liberate India from alien rule. The Indian National Congress had three phases. The first phase was between 1885 and 1905. The leaders of the first phase belonged to the educated middle class and they were drawn from the cities. The second phase of the Indian National Congress was seen between 1905 and 1916. This phase comprised a number of new and younger members and their goal was to attain Swaraj. The third phase was 13 between 1919 and 1947. It was also called the Gandhian era. Purna Swaraj or complete independence was the goal of the congress during this period. Mahatma Gandhi contributed a lot to the attainment of independence. Gandhi used Satyagraha, Non-Cooperation Movement and Civil Disobedience as his tools to free India from the British clutches. A good number of selfless leaders emerged to free India. The protests and demands of the Indians were aggravated to a peak. The British could no more control the vast Indian subcontinent; and finally they decided to leave India. There are a number of reasons for the British decision to leave India. The growing potency of the Indian national movement posed a peril to the British Raj in India. Slogans like; Quit India, Do or Die, Now or Never and Dilli Chalo sounded terrific in the ears of the British. The loyalty of the Indian forces helped a lot for the victory of the Allied powers and in turn, the British were bound to give freedom to India. The diminishing British Army during the war was yet another reason. A large number of persons advocated the cause of India’s freedom abroad. They include, Louis Fischer, Pearl S. Buck, Lin Yutang, Norman Thomas and J. J. Singh. The year 1906 made a new chapter in the history of Indian politics with the formation of the Indian Muslim League. The League encouraged the Muslims to remain away from the national movement and not to ally with the Congress. They emphasized separate representation for the Muslims and a special dispensation for the Muslims in the government services. On the whole, 14 the League was a creation of British patronage of Muslims and treachery to the solidarity of Indian nationalism. In 1913, Mohammed Ali Jinnah stepped into the League. It was not until the Allahabad Session of 1930 that the Muslim League knew the probability of the creation of Pakistan. In History of Indian National Movement, R. K. Sharma notes that it was Sir Mohammed Iqbal who first foresaw the need for a separate nation for the Muslims. Sir Mohammed Iqbal said, “…a North West Indian Muslim state was desirable for the final destiny of the Indian Muslims.” (301). The growth of Muslim separatism was due to certain realities faced by the Muslims in many minority provinces. They lagged behind in terms of education and employment. They wanted to defend their deteriorating position. The uneven economic development, imperial interest and limitations of electoral politics widened the gulf between the Muslims and the Hindus. They had the panic that as soon as the British leave India, they will become the subjects of Hindus for ever in India. They hoped bright opportunities and economic affluence in the new nation called Pakistan. They did not want to live as minorities in a Hindu dominated India. The Lahore session of the Muslim League was held in March 1940 and the session was presided over by Jinnah. R. K. Sharma in his work History of Indian National Movement quotes the presidential address given by Jinnah: “The British Government, for the happiness of the Indians, should allow the major nations separate homelands by dividing India into two autonomous 15 national states,” (301). In this distribution, he saw the vision of friendliness between the Muslims and the Hindus. He thought that a single nation of India would, therefore, mean tyranny of the majority Hindus over the minority Muslims. There were talks between Gandhi and Jinnah in 1944. Jinnah wanted to have the existing provincial boundaries enact with Muslims alone deciding the future in their majority provinces. While, Gandhi rejected the Two Nation theory, he agreed to grant some limited form of self determination to the Muslims in their majority provinces. But the talks failed since Jinnah refused to have anything short of full sovereignty at the outset. The Cabinet Mission had the possibilities of Pakistan but it overtly declared against Pakistan. Jinnah was not satisfied with the proposal. Sucheta Mahajan marks the appeal made by Jinnah to the British Prime Minister Attlee in Independence and Partition – The Erosion of Colonial Power in India, “…avoid compelling the Muslims to shed their blood” and give them “honourable existence” (224). The Congress leaders did not think that Jinnah could accomplish his ideal by any means. Mahajan also records the views of the Congress leaders: “We will hear no more of that mischievous cry of Pakistan” Even Nehru mockingly announced in 1946: “I would like to see a revolution in India called by Mr. Jinnah. It is one thing to call for a revolution and another to carry out a revolution” (222). 16 Jinnah formalized his plan of Direct Action. The Delhi Session of the Muslim League held in April 1946, defined Pakistan as two independent states, in the north-west and the east of India. Sucheta Mahajan’s Independence and Partition – The Erosion of Colonial Power in India gives the inaugural speech of Jinnah in the Delhi Session of the Muslim League: If, unfortunately, the British are stampeded by the threat of blood-shed, which is more a bluff than a reality, this time Muslim India is not going to remain passive or neutral. It is going to play its part and face all dangers. Nehru is greatly mistaken that there might be trouble, as he says, but not very much. He is still living in the atmosphere of ‘Anand Bhawan’. (224) The first communal gun shot took place in Calcutta on August 16, 1946. It was instigated by the Muslims and the Hindu communal groups retaliated to it. The death toll in this communal collide was above five thousand. The Congress leaders were traumatized by this dreadful turn of events. Whereas Ghulam Ali Khan, Minister for Law and Order in Sind, declared that anyone opposed to Pakistan “…shall be destroyed and exterminated.” (Mahajan 228). Meanwhile, the Interim Government, comprising Congress representatives alone, was sworn in on September 2, 1946. The League started preparing for Direct Action calling it as jihad. Mahajan’s Independence and Partition – The Erosion of Colonial Power in India remarks how Wavell survived Jinnah’s intransigence: 17 I put in a great deal of hard work and had some acrimonious discussion at times trying to get the best possible deal for the League; and it was very largely Jinnah’s own fault that we did not succeed in getting an Interim Government on what would have been very good terms for the League. So I feel a little sore myself at the line Jinnah and the League have since taken. (230-231) Another communal riot broke out in Noakhali in East Bengal on October 10, 1946. It swiftly spread over to the entire district and its surroundings. Murders, forced conversions, looting and raping became common phenomena. Hindus, who were only eighteen per cent in Noakhali district, became the victims. The trouble in East Bengal painfully revealed to the Congress leaders that the stark reality of their position in the Interim Government was one of responsibility, without the power to exercise it. Gandhi felt that his ahimsa worked with the British but not with his countrymen. Both the Congress and British tried to strike the correct balance with Jinnah, but Jinnah always had his own way of going. Mahajan in his Independence and Partition – The Erosion of Colonial Power in India gives, how Nehru observed the attitude of Jinnah: “During the past few years it has been our repeated experience that Mr. Jinnah does not commit himself to anything and does not like coming to a settlement. He accepts what he gets and goes on asking for more” (253). Yet another big violence broke out in Chapra, Bihar on October 24, 1946. There were about five thousand killings and most of the fatalities were 18 Muslims. The leaders of the League and the Congress hurried to Bihar to console and to safeguard the victims. The three brutal incidents those shook the unity and solidarity of India sent waves of panic and insecurity to the entire nation. The minority communities of all the provinces sought the help of the centre for their defence and protection. Under the rule of the League, the Bengal Hindus had a sense of insecurity; and a bang of terror ran into their veins. Sucheta Mahajan, quotes the letter written by Lady Abala to Rajendara Prasad in his work Independence and Partition – The Erosion of Colonial Power in India to highlight the insecurity faced by the Hindus in Bengal: “It breaks our heart to think of dividing our beloved Bengal, but there seems to be no other alternative. This is certain that we cannot live under the League Government” (279). The entire North India witnessed communal polarization at a mass level. In this context the Muslims raised a disciplined paramilitary volunteer organization known as Muslim National Guard. Simultaneously, the Hindus built their own nationalist organization called Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS). The communal fire that broke out in Calcutta soon engulfed the whole of the Indian sub-continent. Riots began in Bombay during September, in Bihar during October, in Uttar Pradesh during November and in Punjab during December. There were about three thousand five hundred killings in Punjab and properties worth 150 million rupees were damaged. Nearly four thousand shops and houses of the Muslims were destroyed in just one week’s time. 19 Interminable efforts were taken to put an end to all the communal violence that was wide spreading in India. Bandyopadhyay quotes the final fate of the Indian sub-continent in his From Plassey to Partion: a History of Modern India, “By March/April 1947, many of the Congress leaders had more or less reconciled themselves to the idea of conceding Pakistan and accepting freedom with Pakistan” (545). Even Attlee confessed, “It would be quite impossible… for a few hundred British to govern against the active opposition of the whole India” (545). And he became determined to transfer the power by June 1948. Mountbatten reached New Delhi on March 22, 1947 to expedite the course of action. On his arrival he realized the impossibility of united India and foresaw the inevitability of partition. On third June Mountbatten announced his new plan and proposed to advance the date of transfer of power from June 1948 to August 15, 1947. D. R. More in his work The Novels on the Indian Partition quotes the Bill passed by the Attlee Government on eighteenth July: “As from the fifteenth day of August, nineteen hundred and forty-seven, two independent Dominions shall be set up in India to be known respectively as India and Pakistan” (13). Lord Mountbatten then appointed two Boundary Commissions – one for Bengal and another for Punjab. 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 Punjab Boundary Commission had Mr. Justice Din Mohammad, Mr. Justice Muhammad Munir, Mr. Justice Mehar 20 Chand Mahajan and Mr. Justice Teja Singh as its members. The Bengal Boundary Commission consisted of Mr. Justice B. K. Mukherjee, Mr. Justice C. C. Biswas, Mr. Justice Abu Saleh Muhammad Akram and Mr. Justice S. A. Rahman as members. Sir Cyril Redcliffe was given six weeks time to carry out this task. On August 14, 1947 a new nation called Pakistan was carved out from the Indian sub-continent. In a brief ceremony in Karachi, Mountbatten handed over the power to Jinnah, who became the first governor general of the Dominion of Pakistan. On the following day India was confirmed free and Nehru was sworn in as the first Prime Minister of free India. Gandhi decided not to participate in any celebration; instead he was in Calcutta where fresh violence had broken out. He went from place to place soothing and consoling the victims. R. K. Narayan in his Waiting for the Mahatma reveals the condition of Gandhi in the following way: “His place was where people were suffering and not where they were celebrating” (19). The speed in which the power was transferred was sternly criticized by many historians. When Pakistan was ultimately created, it contained 60 million Muslims, leaving behind another 35 million in non-Muslim India. Many viewed that the transfer was too hasty; but a few others viewed that the transfer was much delayed. The seventy-two day timetable (from June 3, 1947 to August 15, 1947) to transfer the power and to divide a big nation was done like a game of joke. During these days, the British were busy packing their luggage 21 to return to their country leaving the Indians torn. If asked, who was responsible for the division of the country, we will end-up only in a blame game. Syed Ali Mujtaba in his The Demand for Partition of India writes, “Muslim League wanted it, Congress consented to it and the British executed it” (1). Often one thinks of August 15, 1947 as a day of glory and jubilation. But the other side of the day is dark and woe-filled. Freedom did not come to India as Gandhi, Nehru and other great leaders dreamed off. Freedom left the country bleeding. Of course, the partition of the Indian sub-continent not only took away the life of Mahatma but also millions of others. A heavy knife ran across mother India’s body. Jinnah, the proponent of the two-nation theory and architect of Pakistan, himself then regretted that the creation of Pakistan was the biggest mistake that he ever committed in his life. People who had been living as brothers turned into foes all of a sudden. N. Radhakrishnan brings out the brutal picture of partition by quoting Leonard Mosley’s work Last Days of British Raj: In the nine months between August 1946 and the spring of the following year, between fourteen and sixteen million Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims were forced to leave their homes and flee to safety from blood-crazed mobs. In that same period over 6,00,000 of them were killed. But no, not just killed. If they were children, they were picked up by their feet and their heads 22 smashed against the walls. If they were female children, they were raped and then their breasts were chopped off. And if they were pregnant, they were disemboweled (42). The Indian sub-continent began to experience chaos and communal frenzy from August 16, 1946, when the Muslim League launched its Direct Action. When partition was announced, the two major communities began to express their buried hatred towards each other. India’s independence and its partition were the two sides of the same coin. Independence was the success of the national movement and the sacrifices of the great leaders; whereas partition was the evil created by some power hungry selfish men. What followed the partition was one of the worst scenarios in human history of the civilized world. About one million people were killed and about seventy-five thousand women were raped. In From Plassey to Partion: a History of Modern India Bandyopadhyay remarks: Trains full of dead bodies travelled across the border in both directions; more than ten million people were displaced and began to taste bitter freedom amidst the squalor of the refugee camps. The most well known victim of this frenzy was Gandhi himself, assassinated on 30th January 1948 by a militant Hindu nationalist (460). In West Punjab the Muslim army, police and civil officials committed the worst savagery in human history to wipe out the minorities. The riots in 23 West Punjab had their natural repercussion in East Punjab. The ambiance in the Delhi province became tense at the beginning of September, 1947 with the influx of mammoth number of refugees from West Punjab. The woes of the refugees took the form of retaliation. Delhi witnessed arson, stabbing and large scale killing between fourth and eleventh September. East Punjab experienced the worst. After Partition registers the official reports received by East Punjab government: “Females were separated from their males at Jhelum. Males were all herded together and cut down with axes and saws, as orders were issued not to waste a round on Kaffirs. The womenfolk were then allotted so many to each group of Pathans” (46). In Gujarat, region the number of abducted girls was estimated to be 4,000. These abducted women were sold in the open market. When the rest of India was merrily celebrating their freedom, the land of the five rivers was undergoing the sufferings of migration. For many, it was a day of long awaited freedom, great victory and grand celebrations; but for those who lived on the frontiers of Pakistan and India; and India and Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan), freedom was a nightmare, flee from peace to agony, a heart-breaking experience and a loss of life, religion, dignity, love, friendship and wealth. Amazingly for those who lived on the frontiers, freedom was in the form of communal fiend. There were misery filled exoduses on both sides – India and Pakistan. The frontier was completely in panic struck atmosphere. The woe filled people were forced to migrate from one nation to the other. There were 24 all forms of migration and evacuation between August 1947 and January 1948. Huge foot convoys under military escort were found common on both the sides. It was estimated that about 673 refugee trains ran across carrying over 27, 99,368 refugees inside India and across the border. Over 4, 27,000 nonMuslims and over 2, 17,000 Muslim refugees were moved in motor transportation. Even people were evacuated by means of air. D. R. More in his The Novels on the Indian Partition observes, “Historical foolhardiness and political madness shook the very foundation of peace and brotherhood and a reign of terror and irrationality prevailed in the entire atmosphere” (19). Almost overnight the Muslims, the Sikhs and the Hindus who lived affably for centuries turned into sworn enemies. With devilish guts they indulged in all the brutal atrocities of killing, looting, burning and raping. The aggressive nature of the partition created an atmosphere of reciprocated hostility and suspicion between India and Pakistan. The distrust and hostility created by partition over sixty years back still continues between India and Pakistan. According to the 1951 census, 72, 26,000 Muslims went to Pakistan from India while 72, 49,000 Hindus and Sikhs moved to India from Pakistan soon after partition. Looking at the scenario, in Bengal about 4, 25,000 Hindus migrated from the then East Pakistan (later became Bangladesh in 1971). The Hindus, Muslims and the Sikhs could not understand why they had to leave their birth places. No one wanted to leave their birth places; the places of their 25 ancestors and the places where they had their properties, friends and pedigree. They were forced to flee from their ancestral homes. Out of the ten million people in Pakistan, four million Hindus and Sikhs left from Pakistan on the announcement of partition, leaving the infant nation with six million Muslims. By the end of 1947, about 4, 50,000 Hindus had migrated from the then East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) to West Bengal, Assam and Tripura. Pramod Kapoor in his preface to Train to Pakistan records, “Almost ten million crossed a sketchy line drawn by a crumbling empire. Only half of them reached an alien land they were forced to call home” (xiii). This was the first bitter fruit of independence for those wretched millions. Khushwant Singh recalls one of Amrita Pritam’s poems addressed to Waris Shah about the condition of the bleeding Punjab in the preface to Train to Paskistan: Oh, comforter of the sorrowing Rise and see your Punjab The fields are strewn with corpses And blood flows in the Chenab. (xxiii) They had no idea of where they were going and what was in store at the new unknown destination. The trains which reached Pakistan packed with passengers had the scribbled message on the sides of carriage A present from India. The Muslims expressed their retort by sending back trainloads full of butchered Hindus and Sikhs with the message A present from Pakistan. All those who lived on the frontier region had the heaviest loss in their lives – lost 26 their dear ones; emotionally wounded; lost their properties and belongings; and became jobless. They had everything before partition but partition left nothing with them. Khushwant Singh in his preface in Train to Pakistan says, “It was a botched up surgical operation. India’s arms were chopped off without any anaesthetic, and streams of blood swamped the land of the five rivers known as the Punjab” (xiv). It was quite natural that a great national event – either positive or negative would haunt the minds of the people for a long time. And it might find its expression in diverse forms of art; like painting, music, songs, stories, novels, films, and the like. Hundreds of thousands of works have come out on certain well known events like the French Revolution, the American Civil War, the Russian Revolution, the Industrial Revolution, the Third Reich in Germany, the Cold War and the two World Wars. A few well known classics on this line are; Animal Farm, A Tale of Two Cities, War and Peace and The Naked and the Dead. Similarly the partition of India was a landmark event in the history of modern world. The harrowing event and its deep wounds still live in the minds of those who suffered the partition. The loss was not of India’s own – both the nations were the victims and all the three major communities experienced this holocaust. This unfathomable event was echoed in all forms of literature and films. The historians have primarily dealt with partition in terms of facts and figures and have been unable 27 to capture its impact on the lives of ordinary people; whereas the shocking memories of partition have found vibrant voice through literature. The incredible anguish and suffering caused by partition has become a favourite topic for the Muslim, the Hindu and the Sikh writers. Even the partition event has found a place in the text books of Pakistan and India. Krishna Kumar in his article “Partition in School Textbooks: A Comparative Look at India and Pakistan” quotes the lines that are found in a Pakistani history text book: “After the establishment of Pakistan, the entire subcontinent was engulfed in the communal riots. The riots were widespread in Punjab, Delhi, Bengal and Bihar in which 15 lack people were murdered, 50 thousand women were abducted and more than one crore people had to migrate” (17). The depiction of partition in Indian text books does not occupy a centre stage; whereas it is more glaring in Pakistani text books. The obvious difference between the text books of India and Pakistan are that for the Indian text book writers, partition marks a tragedy, while for the Pakistani writers partition means freedom and birth of a new nation. The partition of the sub-continent has led to enormous creation of literary and non-literary works. The particular branch known as Indo-English partition fiction has grown to stand as separate branch of study during the postindependence period. Even after sixty years of the partition we are able to see a film or a piece of literature on partition. Though most of these novels deal with the partition of Pakistan (formerly West Pakistan); there are a few novels 28 like Shadow Lines written by Amitav Gosh and Red Hibiscus by Padmini Sengupta which deal about the partition of Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan). The reason for this difference is the intensity of trouble in terms of the number of people killed in the holocaust and the amount of property that was damaged during the riots of partition, was admittedly less than that of Punjab. Debjani Sengupta’s Mapmaking: Partition Stories from Two Bengals was published in 2011. It is a collection of twelve stories written by the Bengali writers (West Bengal and Bangladesh). These twelve stories speak of the traumas faced by the Bengalese during the time of partition. It contains the stories of Akhtarruzzaman Elias, Selina Hosain, Syed Waliullah and Hasan Azizul Haq of Bangladesh, a few stories from West Bengal writers and one each story from Tripura and Meghalaya. Besides the enormous historical literature, there is also an extensive body of artistic work on partition. They mingle history with imagination to portray the horror and pain of partition. These artistic works include novels, short stories, poetry, films, plays, paintings, and so on. And works related to partition continue to pour both from India and Pakistan. While some of these works depict the colossal massacre that took place during the great refugee migration, the others contemplate on the aftermath of partition. A good number of novels have been written on the theme of partition. These novels are written in English, Urdu, Hindi, Bengali, Punjabi and Marathi. Many of these regional novels written on the theme of partition are 29 translated into English and in many other Indian languages. N. S. Gundur in his work Partition and Indian English Fiction, published in 2008 has recorded that there are about twenty-five novels written on the theme of partition calamity. But every now and then a new work keeps on coming on the theme of IndoEnglish partition and added to this new genre of literature. The Indian writers who witnessed this dreadful fury of partition could not keep their pens closed. They came out with their creative potentialities to bring back the forgotten human attributes. The holocaust created by the partition urged many novelists of north India to record the horrifying events that shook the nation. For some novelists the partition and the acidic experiences that followed became the major theme of their writing, but for a few others it was only a minor issue. Writers like Chaman Nahal, Khushwant Singh, Attia Hosain, Balchandra Rajan, Manohar Malgonkar and Raj Gill have treated the theme of partition in detail. Whereas R. K. Narayan, Salman Rushdie, Gurucharan Das, Shashi Tharoor and a few others could make only a partial and passing reference to partition in their novels. There are a number of reasons for this indifference; one among them is the bang created by partition on the writers like Chaman Nahal, Khushwant Singh, Manohar Malgonkar and Shiv K Kumar. Chaman Nahal, Khushwant Singh and Shiv K Kumar were part of the millions who migrated from Pakistan to India. But R. K. Narayan and other 30 South Indian novelists did not have much experience of the painful partition and its impact in their lives. Some of the notable novels on the partition theme are Train to Pakistan by Khushwant Singh, The Dark Dancer by Balchandra Rajan, Sunlight on a Broken Column by Attia Hosain, A Bend in the Ganges by Manohar Malgonkar, The Rape by Raj Gill, Azadi by Chaman Nahal, When Freedom Came by Sharf Mukaddam, Looking Through Glass by Mukul Kesavan, What the Body Remembers by Shauna Singh Baldwin and A River with Three Banks by Shiv K Kumar. Where as the novels like Waiting for the Mahatma by R. K. Narayan, Clear Light of Day by Anita Desai, Midnight’s Children by Salman Rushdie, A Fine Family by Gurucharan Das, The World is my Village by K. A. Abbas, Ties – Thick and Thin by N. N. Saxena, Cyclones by Manoj Das and The Great Indian Novel by Shashi Tharoor have depicted the partition fury in an oblique manner. Apart from the Indian English partition novels, there are also a good number of Indian regional novels on the historic partition event. Qurratulian Hyder’s Aag ka Darya (River of Fire) and Ramanand Sagar’s Aur Insaan Mar Gaya (Blleding Partition) were written in Urdu. Aani Manasacha Mudada by Saripad Joshi and Nahi Chira Nabi Panati by Nilkanth Deshmukh were written in Marathi. Kartar Singh Duggal’s Nahun Tey Mas (Twice born Twice Dead) and Amrita Pritam’s Pinjar (The Skeleton) were written in Punjabi. Bhisham Sahani’s Tamas was written in Hindi. Besides the novels, there are also short 31 stories, memoirs and diaries depicting the ghastly events of partition. Dr. D.R.More in his work The Novels on the Indian Partition remarks, “Short story writers like Adnyeya, Bhisham Sahani, Mahipsinh, Mohan Rakesh and Prakash Tandon have given best partition stories to the world” (52). Attia Hosain’s Sunlight on a Broken Column written in 1961 is an icebreaking novel on the theme of partition, because it was the first novel written by a Muslim writer. As a woman, she tries to present the agonies experienced by women during partition. It is not only the Indian writers who have written on the partition theme but also the Pakistani writers. The first partition novel that was written by a Pakistani writer is Pawn to King Three (1985). Mohumad Sipra’s this novel is a story of a boy called Adan, who has lost his parents in one of the bloodiest partition massacres in Amritsar. Bapsi Sidhwa is another Pakistani writer, who wrote the novel IceCandy Man on the theme of partition. She was an eyewitness of the disastrous partition, so, she presents the horrors she experienced at the time of partition. Since she is a Parsi, she stands unbiased in her interpretation of the cruelties of the partition. Another monumental work on the theme of partition was a collection of short stories written by Saadat Hasan Manto in Urdu. He was forced to migrate from Bombay to Lahore during partition. He died of the despair of partition at the age of forty-five. His master piece was Mottled Dawn: 50 Sketches and Stories of Partition is a fine collection of short stories on partition. In addition to this new genre known as partition novels; there are 32 also a great number of oral narrations about partition in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. Many creative minds ventured to give cinematic depiction to the bloody riots of the pre-partition and the post-partition India. Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan was adapted into a Hindi film by Pamela Rooks. Bhisham Sahni’s Tamas was adapted into a TV series for Doordarshan later it was turned into a four hour feature film. Bapsi Sidhwa’s Ice-Candy Man was filmed by Deepa Mehta with the title Earth. Amrita Pritam’s novel Pinjar was filmed in 2003. The Sky Below is a feature-length documentary on partition. Even the movies like Gandhi directed by Richard Attenborough and Hey Ram directed by Kamal Hassan have several scenes connected to partition. A good number of literary works have been written on the theme of Indo-Pakistan partition. The present study is done only on a few select IndoEnglish novels which deal with the theme of partition. This study focuses on four well known works that vividly depict the incidents related to partition and its aftermath. They are; Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan (1956), Manohar Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges (1964), Chaman Nahal’s Azadi (1975) and Shiv K Kumar’s A River with Three Banks: The Partition of India: Agony and Ecstasy (1998). Khushwant Singh was born in Hadali in West Punjab (now part of Pakistan) and had his education in Lahore, Delhi and London. After his studies he came back to Lahore and began his career as lawyer. The riots that broke in 33 Lahore in the middle of 1947 forced him to leave Pakistan. In his preface to Train to Pakistan he says, “Lahore was burning but we were determined not to leave. It was after all my home. We sent the children to Delhi but stayed put in Lahore, hoping against hope” (xvii). But Chris Everett, a friend of Khushwant Singh advised him to leave Lahore. Finally on 12th August, 1947 he and his family left for Delhi by road. He left everything, including his newly-acquired bungalow. Later, during one of his visits to Lahore, he stayed as a guest in his own house. Since he had the first hand experience of the partition and its sinister and venomous impact, he could spin an impressive novel out of it. He stayed in Bhopal where he wanted to articulate his excruciating pain and experience that he himself had lived through. After nine years he published his Train to Pakistan (1956). Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan was originally titled as Mano Majra (the village which stands as the centre stage for the entire novel). It won Grove Press Award in the same year. It was the first novel in English by an Indian about the partition of the sub-continent. Singh published Train to Pakistan in 1956. Since then there has been a continuous flow of novels about the event. Train to Pakistan is a major breakthrough in the line of Indo-English fiction. The partition of the Indian sub-continent serves both as a background and a foreground to the novel. The novel is set in a peaceful North-west frontier village called Mano Majro, which is equally populated with Sikhs and 34 Muslims. Mano Majra is on the bank of the river Sutlej. The novel has four sections – the first is Dacoity, the second is Kalyug, the third is Mano Majra and the fourth is Karma. Singh clearly builds the turbulent days of partition in these four sections. The events of the novel begin from one night in August 1947, and presents events as they unravel in the weeks following. During this period, the people of the whole village pass from the state of happiness and steadiness to that of bitterness and disturbance. Sudhir Bose in his film review titled “From Print to Film: Train to Pakistan” says, “Singh recreates the lull and the storm that swept the living humans turned brutes and the dead humans across swollen waters” (37). A Bend in the Ganges was written by a Maharashtra born writer Manohar Malgonkar. Malgonkar is a prominent writer in Indo-English literature who has immense gift in dealing with history and politics. E.M.Forster called A Bend in the Ganges as one of the three best novels of 1964. Richard Church in his assessment of the novel compared A Bend in the Ganges with Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace. R. K. Narayan is reported to have said that Malgonkar is his favourite Indian novelist in English. Malgonkar, the grandson of one of the former Diwans of the princely state of Indore, began his career in the Indian Army. He entered the Indian Army as a soldier and rose to the rank of a lieutenant colonel. He began his literary career with the novel Distant Drum. His army life experiences are beautifully documented in many of his 35 novels and short stories. Though Malgonkar is predominantly remembered for his novels, he has also written more than fifty short stories. A Bend in the Ganges begins with the Civil Disobedience Movement of the early thirties and ends with the post-partition riots in Punjab. The novel contains thirty-six chapters formed into three parts. The first thirteen chapters cover the period between 1937 and 1939 and set in West Punjab. The next ten chapters cover the period between 1939 and 1942 and set in the Andamans. The last thirteen chapters cover the period between 1942 and 1947. These chapters describe the country’s independence and the partition horrors and communal riots in Punjab. The novel is packed with events one after another. Meenakshi Mukherjee in her review on A Bend in the Ganges points out the various events that are depicted in the novel: “…the boycott of foreign goods, the secret activities of terrorist groups, the outbreak of the second World War, the Japanese occupation of the Andamans, the British retreat from Rangoon, the long march of evacuees from Burma, the Bombay dock explosion and the dismemberment of India” (79). A Bend in the Ganges has two protagonists – one is Debi-dayal and the other is Gian Talwar. They both vary in a number of respects like background, rationale and conviction. It is their lives through which Manohar Malgonkar proceeds to present the entire action of the novel. There are a few other characters like Sundari, Shafi, Tekchand and so on; they only play a supportive role to Gian Talwar and Debi-dayal. The author even brings a few historical 36 figures and events to reinforce the political ambience of the novel. The appearance of Gandhi and Jatin Das is found in the novel; similarly the events like Jallianwalabagh massacre and the Kuch Kaurianwalan confrontation in Amritsar. The action of the novel ranges from domestic feud to national bloodshed. However, the theme of partition is given sharp focus only in the last part of the novel. The novel is adventurous, well-knitted and full of action. Chaman Nahal’s Azadi is the next novel taken for the study. Chaman Nahal was born in Sialkot (now in Pakistan) in 1927. His family migrated to India at the time of partition. He served as lecturer in many universities in India. He was serving as reader in English in Rajasthan University between 1962 and 1963. Then he served as professor of English in Delhi University between 1980 and 1992. He is a visiting faculty at several universities in the U.S.A., Canada, Japan, North Korea, Singapore and Malaysia. He has written nine novels besides a good collection of short stories, essays and critical works on Melville, D. H. Lawrence, Hemingway, Nehru and so on. Azadi is the Sahitya Academi Award winning novel by Chaman Nahal. It presents a very persuasive and graphic depiction of the horrors and paradoxes of partition experience felt by the people of north-western India during the time of partition. It deals with the political, social, economic, religious, psychological and cultural implications of freedom. It was written in 1975. Since Nahal and his family migrated from Pakistan to Delhi, he himself witnessed the sufferings of the people and a number of communal killings, riots 37 and rapes. So Nahal is seen as an angry young man who tries to articulate his feelings of torment through his novel Azadi. The novel is set in Sialkot (Nahal’s birth place) between the partition announcement of June 3rd, 1947 and the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi on January 30th, 1948. It nearly covers eight tumultuous months in the history of the Indian sub-continent. Azadi narrates the pathetic plight of five families along with a huge number of Hindus and Sikhs from Sialkot to Delhi. Lala Kanshi Ram is the protagonist of this novel. He is a well-established grain merchant in Sialkot. At the pronouncement of partition, Sialkot, a Muslim majority city experiences looting, killing and burning. Lala Kanshi Ram, his wife Prabha Rani, his son Arun and his Hindu and Sikh neighbours seek asylum in the refugee camp. When Lala Kanshi Ram hears the death of his daughter Madhu and her husband at the hands of the Muslims, he becomes utterly wrecked. He and his family members later join the foot convoy to India. In spite of an armed escort, the convoy witnesses relentless attacks, killings and abduction of Hindu women by Muslims. Finally, they reach Delhi with wrecked hearts to begin their life afresh. Lakhmir Singh in his article “Chaman Nahal: Azadi” writes: Azadi is, in fact, the story of millions of people uprooted from their homes for no fault of their own and this story is symbolized in the person of Lala Kanshi Ram and his family and the pain that they go through during the process of this cataclysm in their lives and their estrangement from their own home-land (226). Azadi is a striking psychological study on freedom and the partition. 38 The fourth novel taken for this research work is Shiv K Kumar’s A River with Three Banks. Kumar was born in Lahore in 1921. He had his early education at Dayanand Anglo-Vedic High School and Forman Christian College, Lahore and Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge. He received his doctorate in English Literature from Cambridge University. He taught English literature at Osmania University and the University of Hyderabad besides being a visiting professor at various universities in the U.S.A. and England. He received the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1987 for his work Trapfalls in the Sky (a collection of poems). He has written six novels besides being a novelist, short-story writer, poet, playwright, translator and critic. Kumar’s A River with Three Banks was published in 1998. Mulk Raj Anand in the blurb of A River with Three Banks has applauded this novel as, “It re-creates, in a language that glows with fragrance and colour, not only the trauma that one associates with partition, but also love, compassion and forgiveness that evoked even in the midst of communal frenzy. Here is a poet’s visualization of the India of 1947 – its brutality and romance, its agony and ecstasy.” Since Kumar lived in Lahore at the time of partition, he witnessed the unbearable horrors of partition. His migration as a refugee from Pakistan to India and his experiences of the holocaust kindled him to write this story. S. Robert Gnanamony in his work Literary Dialectics: Notes and Chords from East and West notes Kumar’s reason for writing this novel: “All that he had seen with his naked eyes started haunting him wherever he went to. So after 39 many years, Shiv K Kumar has crystallized the chunk of reality in his A River with Three Banks” (115). Unlike the other novelists of partition, Kumar’s dealing of partition is entirely different. His novel is an ideal mixture of historical precision and creative imagination. The author spins a beautiful love story against the backdrop of the communal frenzy that followed the partition of the Indian subcontinent. The author focuses on the values of love, compassion and forgiveness that were found in some individuals and were missing in many. The novel is set in Delhi, Allahabad and some other parts of Northern India at the time of the partition. The novel stresses on the man-woman relationship like marriage and divorce, love and hate, forgiveness and revenge. Gautam Mehta is the central character of the novel. He is a Delhi based journalist. In order to divorce his adulterous wife he takes refuge in Christianity. Later, he meets Haseena, an abducted Muslim girl from Allahabad by a gang headed by Pannalal, and forced her into prostitution. Gautam again gets converted into Islam to marry Haseena. He risks his life by taking Haseena’s mother and sister to Pakistan. Since partition literature has become a major chunk of Indian literature, many research studies have been undertaken on them. There are studies on the partition novels of North Indian writers, the partition novels of South Indian writers, the partition novels in Hindi, the partition novels in Punjabi and the partition novels in Urdu. There are some researches which focus on the theme 40 of partition novels. And a few other studies mainly concentrate on the aspects of plot, characters and setting of the partition novels; whereas the present research aims to study the human and economic loss; and the religious and psychological trauma of the people during the time of partition through a few select Indo-English partition novels. This research work is done based on the study of the above four novels. And this thesis tries to probe the socio, economic, political, psychological and religious conditions of the people during the partition holocaust. Keeping these aspects in mind, the research study is divided into four chapters apart from the introduction and the conclusion. The second chapter is tiled as “The Irreparable Human Loss”. The partition of the sub-continent witnessed a terrific human massacre – leaving millions of people being killed and a huge exchange of refugees from either side of the international border. There was a great upsurge of violence like killings, rapes and arson. Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan presents innumerable dreadful sights of horror like trainloads of corpses and the swelling of the Sutlej with corpses. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges depicts the mad killings, rapes and abductions, and wailing and weeping which were common during that time. Similarly, Chaman Nahal’s Azadi gives the killings of the Hindus which became a daily ritual in Sialkot after the announcement of partition. Shiv K Kumar’s A River with Three Banks too has similar portrayal 41 of violence that was witnessed in Delhi, Allahabad and many parts of the Northern India. Since the ensuing chapter is entitled as “Brutal Religious Persecutions”, it aims to scrutinize the various religious intolerances presented in the select novels that are taken for study. Train to Pakistan speaks of the troubled relationship between the Muslims and the Sikhs as the announcement of the partition; and the sacrifice made by Juggut Singh to save his beloved Nooran, a Muslim girl. A Bend in the Ganges exhibits the distrust that was rampant at the time of partition between the Muslims and the Hindus. The Muslims betraying their Hindu counterparts and the visa versus are described in this novel. In Azadi, Sardar Niranjan Singh who burns himself is of the view that he was ready to lose his life but not his Sikh dharma. During the exodus, Nahal describes a number of defiled and destroyed places of worship of the Hindus and the Sikhs. In A River with Three Banks, Gautam, the protagonist finds that religion was the chief tool that was used at the time of partition. Gautam is basically a Hindu, later becomes a Christian and finally a Muslim. He experiences joy in all the religions. The next chapter is titled as “The Huge Material Loss”. It analyses the various material losses presented in the novels that are taken for study. In Train to Pakistan a group of youngsters attack the Muslims of Mano Majra and take away their cattle and other belongings. Killing of animals and destroying houses, shops and the places of worship were the order of the day. A Bend in 42 the Ganges gives the heavy economic loss of Tekchand. He had one of the best houses and a lot of property in Duriabad. He has to leave everything and go bare handed towards an unknown destination. Azadi presents the majority Muslims freely looting the minority Hindu and Sikh houses and shops. The Hindus leave Sialkot empty handed leaving behind their houses and properties which they took years to earn. In A River with Three Banks, Shiv K Kumar gives an explicit picture of the enormous property loss due to the communal rage. Burning of vehicles, houses and shops are narrated in the novel. “Psychological Trauma” is the title of the next chapter. Partition caused physical, economical, religious and psychological agonies. Among these, psychological wounds were the deepest, and remained with the people for a long period. In Azadi, Arun remains a torn boy. The gift of Azadi to Arun was his everlasting separation from his beloved Nurul Nisar. His father Lala Kanshi Ram’s emotional outpouring is found when he was forced to leave his own home and flee as a refugee. In A Bend in the Ganges Tekchand faces a great psychological crisis. The city of Duriabad was his and his ancestors. The announcement of partition compels him to leave the city. He could not compromise his emotional separation of the town of Duriabad. Similar is the case of Juggut Singh in Train to Pakistan. Nooran, his beloved has to leave Mano Majra to the newly created nation of Pakistan. He carries Juggut Singh’s child in her womb. This brings a 43 great agony to Juggut Singh. He sacrifices his life to save Nooran and his unborn child. Shiv K. Kumar in his novel A River with Three Banks gives the psychological agony faced by a Muslim family. Abdul Rahim of Allahabad goes in search of his abducted daughter Haseena. He and his family undergo a great mental agony. He is killed by a group of Hindu fanatics while he was searching for his daughter. This leaves the family to further ruin. Haseena too undergoes psychological torture when she is forced to become a prostitute. The concluding chapter of this thesis sums up the entire study highlighting the process of this research. The burden of partition still lies heavy in the hearts of millions. The bearing of partition and the way it has affected the relationship between India and Pakistan is given a sharp focus in this chapter. The study also tries to probe the objectivity of these select authors and the message they wish to impart to the world. Further, it proposes a few other areas of research which could be carried out along the same line. CHAPTER - II THE IRREPARABLE HUMAN LOSS 44 CHAPTER – II THE IRREPARABLE HUMAN LOSS The creation of the new nation called Pakistan and the sudden departure of the English from India transferring the administration to Indians themselves left lakhs of Indians who lived on the frontiers with unfathomable woes. It was a departing kick of the British Imperialism both for Hindus and Muslims. The clash of communal venom in the late 1947 was something unimaginable in the land of Buddha and Mahatma. The five rivers of prosperity, civilization and life flooded with corpses and blood that rose out of the loss of human values. Instead of jubilation, there were fear and horror. People became aliens in their own homes. Freedom and the creation of a new nation in the Indian subcontinent came in the form of devouring demon. The innocents became flies to the wanton boys. There was a great exodus both from India and Pakistan. People on the border discarded their houses, properties and relatives in order to save their lives. Communal frenzy reached its peak. The hard fought freedom through non-violence had its celebration in the form of violence. Friends became foes over night and began to crouch on each other. Killing, raping, looting and burning became the order of the day. The whole of North India experienced a tumultuous period. Men had their sport in counting on their prey. There was a mass migration like that of the Israelites in the Old Testament. 45 In order to save the precious lives, evacuation works were carried on both the sides. From the day of the announcement of partition, on an average of 50,000 non-Muslims were brought to safety everyday with the available means of transport. After Partition, published by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India, gives the following detail about the mass migration: “From September 18 to October 29, 1947, in 42 days, as many as 24 non-Muslim foot convoys, totaling 8, 49,000 souls with hundreds of bullock carts and thousands of cattle crossed over to India” ( 53). Between August 27 and November 6, 1947 about 673 refugee trains ran between the two nations carrying over 27,99,368 refugees on both the sides. By the end of 1947 about 12, 50,000 refugees were given shelter in 160 camps all over India. In short, the late 1947 was marked with horrified flight on the entire frontier region. Despite these evacuative measures and military escorts, the two nations witnessed lawlessness and violence to the core. Khushwant Singh in his Train to Pakistan describes the situation in this manner: “…all of northern India was in arms, in terror or in hiding” (3). The entire nation was bewildered and shocked to see a nation of Ahimsa with guns and spears thirsting for blood, property and women. Harish Raizada in his article “Train to Pakistan: A Study in Crisis of Values” points out, “The harrowing incidents of 1947 had shaken the faith of all the sensitive and thinking people of India in the intrinsic nobility of man, taught by its sages and saints including Mahatma Gandhi during various stages in its cultural evolution of thousands of years” (161). 46 The partition and its aftermath was the darkest period in the history of modern India. Many literary and non-literary works have been produced on the partition of the Indian sub-continent. Of the many literary works, Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan is the first novel in English written by an Indian about partition. It was first published in 1956 as Mano Majra when Khushwant Singh was forty. The novel abounds with the description of the partition holocaust. Khushwant Singh himself felt a great mental agony at the ghastly human tragedy of partition. Harish Raizada in his article “Train to Pakistan: A Study in Crisis of Values” quotes what Khushwant Singh said in one of his interviews: The beliefs that I had cherished all my life were shattered. I had believed in the innate goodness of the common man. But the division of India had been accompanied by the most savage massacres known in the history of the country…. I had believed that we Indians were peace-loving and non-violent, that we were more concerned with matters of the spirit, while the rest of the world was involved in the pursuit of material things. After the experience of the autumn of 1947, I could no longer subscribe to these views. (162) The action of the novel is spun around a tiny village called Mano Majra. There were about seventy families in Mano Majra. This village was situated in Punjab, the most affected area of partition. It was on the border of India and 47 Pakistan; and on the bank of the Sutlej. Though the village was dominated by the Sikhs, there were also Hindus and Muslims. They had all lived peacefully together since time immemorial. They did not even know that the British had left India and the Indian sub-continent was divided into two nations. The subinspector informed to the deputy commissioner in Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan, “I am sure no one in Mano Majra even knows that the British have left and the country is divided into Pakistan and Hindustan” (30). The action of the novel is spread over a few weeks of August and September in 1947. It covers only the disorderly days of partition. Peace-loving Mano Majrans entered into a world of chaos with the killing of Lala Ram Lal. Five decoits entered the village and killed Lala Ram Lal, the moneylender of the village. Through Lala Ram Lal’s killing the author sets the note for the horrors that are going to follow a suit. Though he was killed by the dacoits, Malli and his men, two innocent persons became scapegoats for the action. The next day of the murder, police arrived at Mano Majra and arrested Juggut Singh and Iqbal suspecting them for the murder. Prafulla C. Kar in his article “Khushwant Singh: Train to Pakistan” observes, “Thus the sleepy village awakes to life and slowly joins the turbulence outside” (95). Though the village had heard of the communal troubles that have taken place in the other parts of the district, it had not experienced any partition violence. With the killing of Lala Ram Lal and the arrest of Iqbal and Juggut Singh Mano Majra too began to experience the partition trouble. 48 In Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan, Hukum Chand, the magistrate and Deputy Commissioner of the district says to the sub-inspector, “Do you know, the Sikhs retaliated by attacking a Muslim refugee train and sending it across the border with over a thousand corpses? They wrote on the engine ‘Gift to Pakistan’!” (26). Then the sub-inspector narrated another incident that took place in the markets of Sheikhupura and Gujranwala and how Pakistan police joined hands with the Muslim Mob in killing Hindu and Sikh refugees. He reported that the Pakistan police and the army took part in the killings in which almost the entire community of Hindus and Sikhs were washed out. Some women killed themselves and their children by jumping into wells. Many of the wells in that area were filled with corpses. There was a railway station at Mano Majra. A few trains ran through this station. One among them was the train that ran between Lahore and Delhi. The village had its rhythm of life in tune with the trains those passed through Mano Majra. After the announcement of partition, the trains were filled with Sikh and Hindu refugees from Pakistan and with Muslim refugees from India. Even the roofs were full of fleeing refugees. One day in the early September, a ghost train reached Mano Majra. It came from Pakistan. It was filled with corpses of men, women and children. Khushwant Singh in his Train to Pakistan describes the train in the following manner: There were bodies crammed against the far end walls of the compartment, looking in terror at the empty windows through 49 which must have come shots, spears and spikes. There were lavatories jammed with corpses of young men who had muscled their way to comparative safety(129). The dead bodies were removed from the train and were carried on crude bamboo stretchers to a leveled ground. The bodies were thrown one above the other. A police officer came to Mano Majra and ordered the people in Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan: “Every one get all the wood there is in his house and all the kerosene oil he can spare” (125). With the wood and kerosene collected from Mano Majra, a mass cremation was done near the station. Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan describes the manner in which those corpses were burned: “Red tongues of flame leaped into the black sky. A soft breeze began to blow towards the village. It brought the smell of burning kerosene, then the wood. And then – a faint acrid smell of searing flesh” (127). This incident brought a heavy shock in the lives of the Mano Majrans and completely worried the whole village. Even Hukum Chand, deputy Commissioner of the district was bewildered and frightened. There were more than a thousand dead bodies in the train and another four or five hundred might had been killed on the roofs, on footboards and between buffers. Mano Majra alone did not experience this revulsion but all the places on the border line witnessed this type of nightmarish event. Swain, S. P. in his article “Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan: A Thematic Analysis” points out, “Everywhere there is mass madness and Mano Majra too reels 50 under the opprobrious and ghastly scene of communal frenzy” (85). The trains that ran through Mano Majra were crowded with Sikh and Hindu refugees from Pakistan or with Muslim refugees from India. The onset of forty to fifty Sikh refugees from Pakistan created a tensed atmosphere. Though Muslims of Mano Majra offered them food, there was a panic that they might start killing Muslims of Mano Majra in vengeance to the pains that they underwent in the hands of Muslims in Pakistan. So, Hukum Chand sent a message to the commanding officer of the Muslim refugee camp asking for trucks to evacuate Mano Majra Muslims. In Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan, the Sikh refugees from Pakistan spoke of, “… women jumping into wells and burning themselves rather than fall into the hands of Muslims. Those who did not commit suicide were paraded naked in the streets, raped in public, and then murdered” (178). Rumours of atrocities committed by Sikhs on Muslims in Patiala, Ambala and Kapurthala created an antagonistic atmosphere in Mano Majra. An unknown hostility began to germinate between the Muslims and the Sikhs of Mano Majra. The guiltless people of Mano Majra did not think that they had to pay a heavy penalty for the freedom that they never yearned for. A Muslim youth in Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan says, “Freedom is for the educated people who fought for it. We were slaves of the English, now we will be slaves of the educated Indians – or the Pakistanis” (69). The lambardar informed the people of Mano Majra, “The winds of destruction are blowing across the land. 51 All we hear is kill, kill. The only ones who enjoy freedom are thieves, robbers and cutthroats. … We were better off under the British. At least there was security” (71). Even the officials and police had their own hands in supporting such people of their own religion. While describing the partition holocaust, Khushwant Singh stands unbiased. He presents an unprejudiced account of the partition calamity. D.K.Chakravorty in his article “The Theme of the Partition of India in Indian Novels in English” comments on the impartial stand of Khushwant Singh in the following way: “Evidently the author does not take any side. He is admirably free from partition attitude. Throughout this novel we find his balanced and unbiased attitude” (45). A truckful of fleeing Muslim soldiers from Amritsar to Lahore killed a number of Sikhs who were walking along the road to reach India from the recently created Pakistan. They stabbed some naive Sikh pedestrians and hastened their truck. The same way the Sikhs and the Hindus committed atrocities over the Muslims. A group of four Sikh Sardars who were driving a jeep began shooting a mile-long column of Muslim refugees walking on the road. With four stern guns they shot as many as Muslims they could. All these incidents began to perturb the state of affairs of Mano Majra. The release of Malli and his band in the middle of Mano Majra created fear and anxiety. Mali and his men began spreading the rumour that Lala Ram Lal was killed by Muslim criminals, but they were the factual killers. They put a knife on the homogeneity of the Muslims and the Sikhs. They unleashed a reign of 52 terror in Mano Majra. To add fuel to the fire, the Sikh refugees who reached Mano Majra started to speak of the ruthless and vicious killings of the Sikh men, women and children by the Muslims in Pakistan. They often congregated in the temple and narrated their woes to others. The Muslims felt that they were insecure in Mano Majra. The Muslims, who had earlier decided to stay in Mano Majra, were forced to migrate to a refugee camp. They found that they were not protected in the land where they had lived for generations. The Muslims of Mano Majra were taken to a refugee camp at Chundunnugger, later to be taken to Lahore by train. On the same day, there was a steady rain and the Sutlej began to rise. There was a panic among the people of Mano Majra that the Sutlej might flood and drown them. Singh’s Train to Pakistan notes that the lambardar appointed, “… four parties of three men each for watch to be kept all through the night” (198). At midnight the three men who were on watch heard human voices calling for help. They heard cries from the river. They noticed dead cows, bulls yoked to carts, and dead men, women and children floating on the river. Vultures and kites flew over the river to eat the floating carcasses. There were hundreds of corpses floating on the Sutlej. They were not drowned but were murdered. Khushwant Singh in his Train to Pakistan describes the floating dead in the following way: “Some were without limbs, some had their bellies torn open, and many women’s breasts were slashed. They floated down the sunlit river, bobbing up and down” (202). 53 There was another train that came to Mano Majra with full of dead bodies. This too had come from Pakistan. The people of Mano Majra waited for the soldiers who might come to collect oil and wood to burn the dead bodies. This time the soldiers did not come to gather oil and wood instead, a bulldozer reached the Mano Majra railway station. It dug a rectangular trench for fifty yards then the dead bodies were brought from the train and laid on the large pit. After the mass burial the bulldozer leveled the trench with the ground. Two soldiers were left to guard the place from the devastation of jackals. With the abandoned Muslim houses, the entire village looked like a haunted one. One night a few militant youth came to the gurdwara of Mano Majra. They wanted the youngsters of Mano Majra to join with them in killing the Muslims. In Train to Pakistan, Singh observes the angry words uttered by the leader of the militant group: For each Hindu or Sikh they kill, kill two Musulmans. For each woman they abduct or rape, abduct two. For each trainload of dead they send over, send two across. For each road of convoy that is attacked, attack two. That will stop the killing on the other side. It will teach them that we can also play this game of killing and looting. (222) This talk by the stranger infuriated the youths of Mano Majra. Malli and his men along with a group of refugees joined with the militants. They charted to assault a train carrying Muslim refugees of Mano Majra and other places to 54 Pakistan on the next day. They planned to tie a wire rope across the bridge which will sweep all those sitting on the roof of the train. That will leave around four to five hundred Muslims dead. Then the militants with guns will begin to shoot at the windows and kill as many as they could and send the train only with dead bodies. The next morning the lambardar went to the police station at Chundunnugger to notify the police of the plan of the young militants. But Hukum Chand, the Deputy Commissioner uttered his powerlessness to stop the action of the young militants. Singh’s Train to Pakistan notes the caution given by the sub-inspector to Hukum Chand: “There are mobs of twenty to thirty thousand armed villagers thirsting for blood. I have fifty policemen with me and not one of them would fire a shot at a Sikh” (232). Hukum Chand decided to release Juggut Singh and Iqbal because he was convinced that Juggut Singh will do something to save the train in which his beloved Nooran with his unborn child in her womb would be migrating to Pakistan. The sub-inspector clearly informed Juggut Singh about the designed attack of the train in which the Muslims of Mano Majra would be going to Pakistan. He even made provision to drop them in Mano Majra at the earliest. Hukum Chand befell completely frustrated with the events that occurred around him. Looking at the killings and lootings, he called, “… it is a bloody Holi.” He reminisced the three nasty and gory incidents that happened to a few people due to the communal venom of the partition. The first incident was 55 related to one of his orderly’s daughter called Sundari. She got married four days ago and went to Gujranwala with her husband where her husband worked as a peon. She had not yet slept with her husband not even seen his face completely. Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan narrates their cold-blooded murder in the following way: There were large stones on the road. Then hundreds of people surrounded them. Everyone was ordered off the bus. Sikhs were just hacked to death. The clean-shaven were stripped. Those that were circumcised were forgiven. Those that were not were circumcised. Not just the foreskin: the whole thing was cut off. She (Sundari) who had not really had a good look at Mansa Ram was shown her husband completely naked. They held him by the arms and legs and one man cut off his penis and gave it to her. The mob made love to her. She did not have to take off any one of her bangles. They were all smashed as she lay in the road, being taken by one man and another and another. (259-260) Then Hukum Chand brooded over the calamity of Sunder Singh. Sunder Singh was a valiant soldier. He traveled to Sindh along with his wife and three children by a train. The compartment which was meant to carry forty sitting and twelve sleeping had over five hundred men and women. There was no water in the train. The train was stranded for four days during scorching heat of summer on a wayside station. He could not even supply water to his children so 56 he gave them his urine to drink. When that too dried up he could not bear the agony of his children; so he pulled out his revolver and shot his children and his wife. All these incidents scared Hukum Chand and he sensed beaten up for his inability to do anything against all these incidents. The entire frontier suffered with these types of cruelest happenings. The novel ends with the great sacrifice of Juggut Singh. What could not be done either by Hukum Chand or Iqbal was carried on by Juggut Singh. When the young militants along with Mali’s gang and the volunteered refugees were prepared to kill the Muslims who were bound to Pakistan in a train were saved by Juggut Singh. He climbed on a steel span where a wire rope was tied to sweep away the Muslim refugees who were on the roof of the train. He took his kirpan and began to cut of the wire rope. Singh’s Train to Pakistan describes his great sacrifice in the following way: “He went at it with the knife, and then with his teeth. The engine was almost on him. There was a volley of shots. The man shivered and collapsed. The rope snapped in the centre as he fell. The train went over him, and went on to Pakistan” (263). The budmash became the unknown saviour not only to his beloved Nooran and his unborn child but also hundreds of Muslims who travelled by the train. If not Juggut Singh, all would have been killed. Through out the novel are found, incidents relating to murder, killing, mass burials and trains filled with human corpse. Singh uses the trains as well as the Sutlej as the symbols of horror and carriers of human corpse. Earlier the 57 trains that passed through Mano Majra brought life. The people knew their timings only through the passing trains. But now, the trains that passed through Mano Majra had a ghastly look. They were loaded with human corpses. Similarly, the Sutlej was the largest river in the Punjab. Its water irrigated vast vicinity. But during the time of partition it flooded with blood and corpses of human beings and cattle. Thus, both the trains and the Sutlej became agents and messengers of death. A Bend in the Ganges written by Manohar Malgonkar covers a number of events before it props into the horror filled days of partition. The novel begins with the terrorist activities of Ram Rahim group in Duriabad; then the author depicts the horrors of Andaman Cellular Jail. It is followed by the Japanese invasion in Andaman and the out break of the II World War. Next comes the role of I.N.A. (Indian National Army) and the Japanese bombing on Bombay. Finally, the author proceeds to depict the killings, the lootings and the mass migration that took place in the Indian sub-continent on the wake of partition. The novel is set in the entire Indian sub-continent. It starts from Duriabad, and then proceeds to the Andamans, Madras, Bombay, Calcutta and Lahore. The climax is set in Duriabad. The huge loss of human lives is common in all the partition novels. Malgonkar too views this tragic phenomenon towards the end of the novel. The novel opens with Ahimsa (a non-cooperation agitation), and gradually rises with tension to witness the agonizing partition which came in the form of 58 violent massacres, rapes, murders and abductions. Dr. Vikas Sharma in his Treatment of History in Indian English Novels examines: It (A Bend in the Ganges) shows the dawn of freedom greeting the sub-continent in the pools of blood. It throws light upon the catcalls of the crowd, and the carrying away of innumerable women struggling and screaming at top of their voice. The novel depicts the Muslim fears of being ruled by the Hindus after the departure of the Britishers. It expresses the Muslim belief that the Hindus are their real enemy, and they are more dangerous than the foreigners. (111 – 112) A Bend in the Ganges clearly studies the painful events of partition and seeks to explore the fatal details of the partition history. The novel begins and ends in Duriabad, a town in West Punjab. The youth of the town stood united in driving away the British from India. Shafi Usman, whose father was killed in the Jallianwalabag massacre of 1919, led a terrorist movement containing thirty-seven Hindu and Muslim nationalistic youths. They indulged in a few terrorist activities in order to disturb and to drive away the British from the Indian soil. They never bothered about their religion instead they stood united for the cause. But Hafiz Khan, the acknowledged chief of the terrorists in India, brought a divide and caused communal malice among those young men. Malgonkar points out the words of Hafiz Khan that stimulated Shafi in A Bend in the Ganges: “The time has come to take a second look – to reorientate 59 ourselves. The enemies of the moment are not the British; they are the Hindus. That’s what we must recognize!” (89). He infuriated Shafi further by stating: “Remember that in the Muharam riots, seven people were injured in the rioting itself, eighteen men died by police fire – all Muslims. … It is to that end that we must all work, must all recognize the new enemies: the Hindus!” (92–93). These words of Hafiz set flame in Shafi’s heart. Shafi, a religionless nationalist became a religious extremist over-night. He turned blood thirsting on Hindus and killed a number of guiltless Hindus. The Indian sub-continent experienced an immeasurable agony and blood-shed when it was partitioned. Debi-dayal, one of the major characters of the novel brooded over the condition of India at the time of partition in Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges : “It is almost as though just when they are on the point of leaving the country, the British have succeeded in what they set out to do. Set the Hindus and Muslims at each other’s throats” (289). The last few pages of A Bend in the Ganges describe a number of sadistic incidents that rocked the nation on the wake of partition. The first incident that was portrayed in the novel was the disfigured face of Basu’s wife Dipali. Basu was Debi-dayal’s friend, when Debi called on Basu in Calcutta; Basu recounted the dreadful incident that happened to his wife. His wife Dipali was once lovely like a heroine. During one of the Hindu – Muslim riots in Calcutta her face was disfigured by some Muslims. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges observes the words of the disillusioned Basu: “Someone 60 threw acid at her face – an electric bulb filled with sulphuric acid. That was the standard weapon of the Hindu – Muslim riots, don’t you know? That is what has happened to the face of India – the mutilation of a race conflict” (289). This brutal act was done by some Muslims. Dipali becomes house-ridden because of the ugly wound and scar on her face caused by a fanatic Muslim. Debi, the son of Tekchand was burnt in wrath to revenge Shafi, who betrayed him and his fellow Hindu members. He travelled to Lahore along with Basu to revenge Shafi. Debi revenged Shafi by buying the prostitute called Mumtaz, with whom Shafi had affair. Angered Shafi tried to throw an electric bulb filled with sulphuric acid on the face of Mumtaz. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges gives Shafi’s angry words while throwing the bulb: “Take that, you slut!... that will make you more beautiful than ever!” (311). Debi saves Mumtaz by taking the hurt on him by pushing her aside. Since Duriabad was in Punjab, it had Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs living there for years. Whenever one of the communities had its festival, there was inevitably some clash resulting in a few killings. But the commotion felt in August 1947 was something unimaginable. Everyone was caught in the frenzy – including the officials and the armed forces. Malgonkar in his novel A Bend in the Ganges puts the situation in the following words: Tens of millions of people had to flee, leaving everything behind; Muslims from India, Hindus and Sikhs from the land that was soon to become Pakistan; two great rivers of humanity flowing in 61 opposite directions along the pitifully inadequate roads and railways, jamming, clashing, colliding head-on, leaving their dead and dying littering the landscape. (332) The entire country witnessed a religious civil war. There were huge atrocities wherever the Hindus and the Muslims lived in equal number. The situation was worse in Punjab. Through the horrors faced by Tekchand and his family in Duriabad, Malgonkar presents the situation that prevailed on the frontier region at the time of partition. Tekchand in Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges saw, “The freedom they had longed for was only a day away; a freedom that would bring only misery to millions of them. The entire land was being spattered by the blood of its citizens, blistered and disfigured with the fires of religious hatred; its roads were glutted with enough dead bodies…” (332). Earlier when his wife suggested him to leave Duriabad, he laughed at her. He believed that it was his ancestral city where he would always be safe and sound. But then the circumstances were entirely different; even escaping from the hands of maddened Muslims was not easy. His driver, Dhansingh was burnt alive by a sprawling mob, when he tried to escape to India along with his family. Dhansingh’s two children were stoned to death in front of his eyes and his wife was taken by the mob. Helpless Tekchand could not find a way to flee from the fuming Muslim mob. He remained locked in his house along with his wife Radha and daughter Sundari. He tried to be in touch with the police officials in order to join the 62 convoy to India. But that too failed because of the indifferences between the Indian and the Pakistani officials. Tekchand glimpsed through the window the burning of Sikh and Hindu houses in the city. Later he got a call from his Sikh friend Sardar Awtar Singh. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges records the information given by Sardar Awtar Singh to Tekchand: “We are at least fifty here – about a dozen men … We have three shotguns and a pistol…the men take it in turns to keep guard, night and day” (342). Sardar Awtar Singh asked Tekchand and his family to join with them. While they were in conversation, Sardar Awtar Singh screamed in alarm the coming of thousands of hungry Muslim mob towards his house. Sardar Awtar Singh uttered his last incomplete sentence: “They are setting the house on…” (343). The only hope that Tekchand had too vanished. He became a beaten and wrecked man. At this point Gian arrived like god-sent man to save Tekchand and his family. Gian was no more a self-centered person; rather he came there with genuine concern to save Sundari and her family. He took a week to reach Duriabad from Delhi. He told them that he had come there in order to give whatever help he could to the family of Tekchand. Gian’s coming gave a little optimism to the lost family. Gian went out twice to find out the leaving of the convoy to India. Finally, he learnt that the convoy had left already and he urged Tekchand and his family to get into the car and join the convoy. When they were about to leave, Shafi came with three other men to kill them and to loot their things. At the end of the tussle, Shafi fired at Tekchand’s wife and killed 63 her. Sundari became mad and took the statue of Shiva and beat Shafi to death. Leaving Shafi, his friends ran away for their life. Tekchand finally decided to join the convoy along with Sundari and Gian. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges gives the mourning made by Tekchand throughout the journey: “They killed her, my Lakshmi – and I have left her behind, not even cremated. All alone! – I promised I wouldn’t. She would never have left me” (380). On the way the convoy was halted for an hour to make way for another convoy that was going in the opposite direction. When the convoy resumed its journey, Sundari could not find her father. She waited for him for a while; finally she decided to continue her journey leaving her father behind. Debi and Mumtaz, who stayed in Kernal decided to go to Duriabad. They joined the mass migration that was on its way to the newly created Pakistan. They were sure of the dangers; still Debi wanted to join his parents who lived in Duriabad. They left Kernal on August 12, 1947 – just three days away for the long awaited freedom. Since the announcement of partition, many railway employees ran away to their own countries – the Hindus to India and the Muslims to Pakistan. The railway stations that were on the border suffered a lot without station masters, signalmen, engine drivers, clerks, and so on. Debi and Mumtaz got into a train that was bound to Duriabad. On their way they watched scene after scene of carnage; like flood filled pools, disfigured dead bodies and scattered things. Malgonkar in his A Bend in the Ganges describes 64 the partitioned Punjab in the following manner: “The land of the five rivers had become the land of carrion. The vultures and jackals and crows and rats wandered about, pecking, gnawing, tearing, glutted, staring boldly at their train” (360). Since, the entire Punjab was seething with communal passion; Debi disguised himself like a Muslim with a dark-brown fez and a long, knee-length shirt. He used a common Muslim name called Karim. Before they reached Duriabad, a mob of thieves dismantled the railway line. So, the passengers were asked to walk for two miles, where in another train would be arranged for their further journey. They began their two miles of walk in weariness. All in a sudden a frantic mob of Muslims emerged on either side of the refugee movement. The mob began to search Hindus among the refugees. They even accounted about the killing of fifty Hindus, who came to Pakistan in the disguise of Muslims. They recognized an old man as Hindu. The mob cut off his penis and killed him. They murdered a few others and abducted some women. Malgonkar gives another distressing description in A Bend in the Ganges: “Someone threw a small child high in the air, and before it fell down, a man with a sword ran forward and caught it on the point of his sword” (368). All in a sudden, someone among the refugees pointed out Debi as a Hindu, because he was suspicious through out the journey, and he did not show much cheer when they entered into Pakistan when the Muslims were joy filled to see their new nation. Mumtaz pleaded to the mob to spare her husband. The 65 mob tore away his dress and confirmed that he was a Hindu. It was the 15th of August 1947; and the time was early morning. The mob pierced a big knife in the middle of Debi. Then the mob dragged away Mumtaz naked when Debi was dying in a pool of blood. Thus the entire family of Tekchand except Sundari, perished because of partition. Unlike the other partition novels, Chaman Nahal’s Azadi straight away explores the partition holocaust experienced from Sialkot to Delhi. Since, Nahal himself migrated from Sialkot to Delhi at the time of partition; he is able to give a touching document on the plight of the millions due to partition. The novel opens on June 3, 1947 - the date on which the partition of the subcontinent was announced. And it ends on January 30, 1948 – the day Gandhi was assassinated. Thus the novel is completely at the issue of partition. The novel does not take up any side issue or events. Through Lala Kanshi Ram, his family and his neighbours; Nahal presents the barbaric days of partition. Gundur in his work Partition and Indian English Fiction states, “It (Azadi) is a well written novel on the partition. In Nahal’s hand the theme of partition assumes epic dimension. Through the moving saga of Lala Kanshi Ram’s family,… Nahal gives on authentic picture of the partition, which makes it an unbiased document in history… (56). Lala Kanshi Ram, the protagonist of Azadi was a wholesale grain merchant. He lived in Sialkot (now in Pakistan), along with his wife Prabha Rani, and son Arun. His house was among the Sikhs and the Hindus of that 66 area. It was exactly at 7 p. m. on third June, 1947 that Lord Mountbatten, the Viceroy made his announcement of the partition. His announcement turned the entire situation of Sialkot up side down. A great catastrophe was let lose amidst jubilations and celebrations. The minority Sikh and Hindu communities of Sialkot became victims of the partition brutality. The Viceroy’s announcement was followed by a frantic procession by the Muslim mob with spears. The mob wanted to pass their procession through the mohalla, where the Sikhs and the Hindus lived. But the dangers of violence got averted because of the arrival of the Deputy Commissioner of Sialkot, who was a Hindu. In general, the Viceroy’s announcement of partition created irruption, riots and killings in many parts of India. Nahal, in his Azadi describes the violence of partition in the following manner: “Many cities of the Punjab had been aflame for months; there were large scale killings and lootings in Lahore, Gujarat, Gujranwala, Amritsar, Ambala, Jullundur, Rawalpindi, Multan, Ludhiana and Sargodha” (125). But the condition of Sialkot remained intake, because of the vigilance of the Deputy Commissioner. The first communal violence in Sialkot began on June 24, 1947, in which a number of Hindus and Sikhs were killed. Nahal describes the situation of Sialkot in the following manner in his Azadi: “And then it became almost a daily ritual. There were four or five cases of stabbing each day, and at least four or five fires. It was not mass killing or organized killing – not yet” (125). 67 The real trauma in Sialkot began only after the arrival of the Amritsar train. The train reached Sialkot with the wounded, driven away and attacked Muslims in Eastern Punjab and other places. The news spread like a wild fire in the entire city. And that night, the first great violence broke out in the city. The Hindus and the Sikhs, who lived in Dharowal mohalla were looted, burnt and beaten. They ran away seeking shelter in the nearby refugee camp. From then on, there was curfew every night in Sialkot. This incident left the Hindus and the Sikhs of the city in panic. Then the Muslims systematically burnt one each Hindu mohalla every night. As the incidents of violence increased, people began to migrate from one country to another. Almost half of the Hindus and the Sikhs of Sialkot migrated to India with in a month of the Viceroy’s announcement of the partition. The shops of the minority communities got looted; including Lala Kanchi Ram’s. All the hopes of living in Sialkot vanished among the Hindus and the Sikhs when the Deputy Commissioner was killed. The Deputy Commissioner, who was a Hindu, got killed by his Muslim bodyguard. The Muslims began to loot and burn one each mohalla every night. Finally Lala Kanchi Ram and his neighbours left for the refugee camp, with the hope of returning back to their loved city soon. Mukunda’s mother refused to join them. She did not want to leave Sialkot until her son Mukunda was released from prison. 68 The second part of the novel, The Storm presents the horrible catastrophe that took place due to the bifurcation of the country. The first killing that shattered Lala Kanshi Ram was the killing of his daughter Madhu Bala. Madhu Bala and her husband Rajiv were travelling from Wazirabad to Sialkot to join Lala Kanchi Ram’s family. A mob of Muslims got into the train and killed all the Hindus and the Sikhs, including Madhu Bala and Rajiv. Arun and Suraj Prakash along with Barakat Ali went to the spot of the massacre to identify the dead bodies. Abdul Ghani, a fanatic Muslim in Nahal’s Azadi told to Arun, “Who told you your sister was killed, my boy? But don’t worry. I put her and her husband into fire with my own hand, and they are now on their way to dozakh, to hell – where I hope they rot for ever!” (185). The Punjab Boundary Force was set up in August 1947, to safe guard the minorities in the Punjab. But they could not do much. Nahal in his Azadi describes their situation in the following manner: “… the minorities in East and West Punjab were slaughtered while men of the Boundary Force looked on. In such a vicious ambiance, what could one or a few Englishmen do?” (211). Even Nahal called the killings as “organized slaughter” and “fratricidal war” committed by both the nations. There were about two thousand refugees in the Sialkot camp. They were waiting for the Indian escort to take them to India. Finally a lage body of Gurkha troops arrived from India. Even foot convoys were not spared despite of the escort. In many of these convoys only half of them reached the other side of the border; and the rest perished due to hunger, or disease, or violence. 69 The Sialkot foot convoy started on September 24, 1947. The transfer of the people was the greatest problem that both India and Pakistan faced during the partition. From Sialkot the foot convoy had to reach Dera Baba Nak, a border down on the Indian side. The distance was forty-seven miles. On their way, they saw a number of butchered bodies, disfigured human limbs and skeletons. The convoy faced three attacks by the Muslim mob on their way. The first attack on the convoy took place near Pasrur. A large number of Muslims armed with rifles and swords ambushed the convoy and killed hundreds of refugees and carried away a large number of young girls from the convoy. Leaving the dead and the abducted the convoy moved on for its safety. The following day, the convoy again got assailed near Qila Sobha Singh; in which about two hundred people were killed, many women were snatched and hundreds of people were wounded. The biggest of the assault came, when they stayed in Narowal refugee camp. A huge number of Muslims with the support of Pakistan army attacked the camp in the night. It was an unanticipated assault. The terrified refugees ran here and there. Throughout the night they hid under the trees or in the open fields. The next morning they found out more than two thousand bodies; over thousand women were kidnapped and six of the Indian officers were killed. Padmini’s daughter Chandini was also abducted. Suraj Prakash was murdered cold-bloodedly. Nahal illustrates the killing of Suraj Prakash thus in Azadi: “He was stabbed through the abdomen; his face was also mutilated – both his eyes 70 were taken out…So savage had been the vengeance, every single body had been badly mutilated” (317). Every family reached India by loosing one or two of its members. When they reached India they saw the same mayhem committed by the Hindus and the Sikhs on the Muslims. They glimpsed train loaded with slaughtered Muslims; Muslim women’s naked procession; a long line of dead Muslim bodies in the railway station and massacred Muslim bodies. Shiv K Kumar’s A River with Three Banks is a recent addition to the dominant Indian literature in English on the subject of partition. Though the partition had receded fifty years when the novel was written, the author presents a clear and realistic picture of partition days in the novel. Like Khushwant Singh and Chaman Nahal, Shiv K Kumar too migrated from Pakistan to India. So, his novel has reliable presentation of the partition. Gundur in his work Partition and Indian English Fiction quotes Sachindra Mohanty’s interview with Kumar: “I myself an immigrant from Pakistan. I was born in Lahore and migrated to Delhi in 1947 when the communal holocaust was at its worst” (188). Like Khushwant Singh and Chaman Nahal, he too was an eyewitness of the enormous partition tragedy. The novel was set at the back-drop of Delhi and Allahabad. The personal problems of Gautam and Haseena were presented against the background of the partition. It was Haseena, who endured a lot due to partition. She was abducted from a college in Allahabad. Then she was taken to Delhi by 71 a pimp called Pannalal. Later she was compelled into prostitution. Her father Abdul Rahim, who came to Delhi in search of her, was killed by a Muslim gang. Gundur in Partition and Indian English Fiction observes, “The most suffered victims of the partition were neither Muslims, nor Hindus, nor Sikhs but women of all these communities. Women were put to death, nakedly paraded in public, raped, abducted and forced to prostitution” (192). His comment aptly fits to Haseena. She too endured all the above mentioned atrocities, in one form or the other. The novel opens with a brief narrative on the partition violence in Delhi. From the day, the sub-continent was partitioned; there had been reports of killings everyday. No one could resist the Hindu and the Sikh refugees who had fled from Pakistan. They began to payback the Muslims, whenever they got a chance. Delhi remained a troubled city with innumerable killings, burnings and curfews. The first agonizing event that was registered in A River with Three Banks was the killing of Abdul Rahim. He was an innocent Muslim of Allahabad. He came to Delhi in search of his daughter, who was abducted, when she went to college to study. He searched everywhere in Delhi to find out his daughter. Through a Muslim he came to know that many of the abducted Muslim girls were forced into prostitution. One day, when he was on the streets of Delhi, searching his daughter, a group of frantic Hindus and Sikhs identified him as a Muslim. They began to track him in order to kill him. The old man fell in front of St. John’s church gate and got viciously killed by the mob. Father 72 Jones and Gautam felt horrific at the sight. They removed the dead body and buried it in the backyard of the church. The rioters and the killers were partly supported by the police. When Father Jones asked Gautam on getting the help of the police; Gautam in Kumar’s A River with Three Banks replied, “But would it serve any purpose? I’m certain they’re in league with these killers. They move in much after all is over” (12). Not only have human beings become the victims of the holocaust but also animals. An old cow which was searching for some food in a garbage got killed by a few Muslims. Gautam salvaged Haseena from the brothel. He took her to Delhi railway station in order to take her to Allahabad. As they waited in the railway station, they saw a number of gruesome events. A refugee train from Amritsar reached Delhi. Kumar describes the people who got down the ghost train in the following way in his A River with Three Banks: “… men with amputated penises, young women whose breasts had been chopped off after they had been raped…” (99). They also saw a Muslim couple who were hiding behind a newspaper stall, being pulled away by a group of frenzied mob and knifed to death. On reaching Allahabad, Gautam perceived a particular Muslim mohalla which was hectic with smelting and sharpening of knives, swords, spears and other weapons for fortification. The killings and violence were so large in the partitioned India. Looking at the barbaric situation, Mrs. Taylor, a British says the following words in Kumar’s A River with Three Banks: “What I can’t 73 understand is how all this is happening in the land of the Buddha and Gandhi” (147). She saw the whole sub-continent was exercising barbarism despite its great cultural legacy. The raid at Neel Kamal gave yet another side of the partition woes. Neel Kamal was a restaurant which offered wine, woman and fun to its clientele. Most of the women who were used there for brothel were abducted women of the Hindus, the Muslims and the Sikhs. Each of these women had a miserable tale of her own. One among them was Lakshmi. She lost her entire family in the Multan riots. Later she was forced to become a prostitute. Even Haseena recounted the agony of some of the abducted girls in Neel Kamal who were forced into prostitution. If they objected, they were afflicted with physical punishments. Haseena’s mother and her sister Salma saw a grave situation that prevailed everywhere. They believed that they could no more be safe in India. Haseena’s mother articulated her feelings to Gautam in Kumar’s A River with Tree Banks: “I can’t let Salma be whisked away next. You can’t take charge of the entire family when there are abductors lurking everywhere” (169). She also saw a possible assault on their mohalla by the Hindus. So, they decided to leave for Pakistan. The train in which they boarded was attacked many times. They witnessed a number of their fellow Muslim migrants being massacred in the train. Thus, Kumar presents the horror filled days of partition in an equitable manner. CHAPTER - III BRUTAL RELIGIOUS PERSECUTIONS 74 CHAPTER – III BRUTAL RELIGIOUS PERSECUTIONS India was the fountain head of many religions in the world. They include Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism and Sikhism. By nature, Indians were warm hearted to the alien religions like Islam and Christianity too. That is why masques, churches and temples are found in many villages in India. Despite their varied religious practices, all Indians enjoyed camaraderie and brotherhood. Whenever there was a communal tussle, the kings and emperors breached the gap and nurtured cordiality. Emperor Akbar experimented a universal religion known as Din-e-Ilahi. Syed Ali Mujtaba in his The Demand for Partition of India reports, “The 15th, 16th and 17th centuries were the period of cultural assimilation, mutual tolerance and religious co-existence…. Dadu, Nanak, Kabir, Pipa were the torch bearers of religious tolerance and religious co-existence in India” (8). The English East India Company, which was established in 1600, had an upper hand over the natives of India. At the initial stage, all communities stood united to throw away the Company. The Muslims first realized their minority position only after the local bodies’ election. They did not have adequate numbers in electoral politics. Using it as the right coin, the British followed a system known as divide and rule. The formation of the Muslim league in 1906 brought another death blow and stood as challenge to the unison of the Indian sub-continent. There were a 75 number of talks and conferences to bring unity among the Hindus and the Muslims but all in vain. The Muslims stood firm in safeguarding their dwindling position by demanding a separate nation for the Muslims. Due to their fervent demand, real communal malice began to take its roots between the Muslims and the Hindus. This was followed by a number of riots and killings. In the Calcutta riot of August 1946, about five thousand people were killed. It was followed by the Nokhali riots in which a few thousands were killed and many were forced into conversion. Then came the Bihar riots which claimed about ten thousand lives. Slowly, the entire nation was caught into communal clashes of diverse forms. The efforts of Lord Mountbatten, the last Viceroy, to put out communal fire proved futile, except to cut India into two parts. Religions that were established to bring peace and brotherhood stood with rifles, swords and spears to cut the throat of others. S.Bhagwat Goyal makes the following comment in his article “Nahal’s Azadi: A Review”: “Religion, which is supposed to be an embodiment of human and spiritual values, became an instrument of hatred, rapaciousness, evil, exploitation, sadism, torture, murder, rape and wholesale destruction” (124). A great human atrocity was done in the name of religion. It was religious fanaticism that shook the face of the Indian sub-continent. The fanatic religious leaders and their cohorts were the main cause for the division of the nation and for the irruption of violence. The division of the Indian subcontinent was not done on the basis of language, colour or caste but on the 76 basis of religion – a Hindu India and a Muslim Pakistan. So, religion became the main target of the fanatics to fan the violence to the ceiling. They carried out their atrocities in the name of Gods. Partition witnessed unbelievable amount of religious mayhem. Thousands of people were forced to get converted into other religions. Temples, Masques and gurdwaras were sullied. Those who had firm faith in their religions resisted religious conversion. Eventually, they committed suicide to avoid forced conversions. Holy books were burnt. Many shrines of worships were turned into stalls and markets. Even animals were branded in the name of religion. People changed their dress code and names according to the locale they lived or travelled. Religion is a highly sensitive issue, which will easily evoke any Indian. Unlike the westerners, the Indians are tinged with their religion. They feel religion as their skin, which cannot be peeled off till death. In India, if anyone wishes to converse or write on religion they should do it with utmost care and a note of caution. Any religious delusion will put the entire nation in flames, like the Babar-Masjid issue or the Godhra violence. This research is done on four novels by four different authors. But none of them is subjective in their approach; none of them feels that their religion is better than the others; and none of them identifies with the religion of their own. The novelists, Khushwant Singh, Chaman Nahal, Manohar Malgongar and Shiv K Kumar had their first hand experience of the partition holocaust, 77 but none of them show their religious mark in their works. They never portray that their religious people were the best and the others were the worst. They spot a sheep as well as a wolf in every religion. They are not carried away with their religious nepotism or fanaticism; instead stand firm on religious tolerance and unanimity. They have their protagonists drawn from all the three warring religions – Hinduism, Islam and Sikhism. Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan pictures a religious homogeneous village called Mano Majra. Mano Majra consisted of a Hindu family and Sikh and Muslim families of equal number. It was a village known for its integrity, communal concord and brotherhood for time immemorial. The protagonist of Train to Pakistan was a Sikh called Juggat Singh who was in love with a Muslim girl, Nooran. This showed the homogeneity of the village where interreligious marriage was possible. Again the mullah of the village, Imam Baksh always greeted the Sikh priest Meet Singh as brother and in turn Meet Singh called Imam Baksh as uncle. Chote Lal Khatri in his article “Trauma of Partition in Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan” makes his comments on Mano Majra:“…in the beginning we see that peaceful coexistence and communal harmony has been prevailing in the village. It stands as a replica of unity and integrity in diversity that is the fundamental feature of Indian culture” (42). But all of a sudden, communal revulsion and religious intolerance erupted in this peaceful village in the name of religion. 78 Though Singh’s Train to Pakistan explores more of the political and the economic condition of the people during partition; it too has a few references to religious intolerances and persecutions that were faced by many innocent people in the East and the West Punjab. It also exposes religious sacrilegious done to the holy places and books. Since Singh also experienced the amiabilities and the atrocities committed in the name of religion; he is cautious in handling the religious sentiments of the people. He nowhere reveals his religious identity. The first victim of religious fanaticism in Singh’s Train to Pakistan was Iqbal, a social worker sent by the People’s Party of India. He was sent by his party to bring serenity among the people of the border area. He reached Mano Majra from Delhi. Iqbal was a common name used by Muslims as well as Sikhs. He pronounced that he had no religion. But the police who arrested him imposed a religion upon him. They branded him as Muslim and a member of the Muslim League. Hukum Chand, magistrate and deputy commissioner of the district asked the police to make the following entry on Iqbal’s warrant in Singh’s Train to Pakistan: “Name: Mohammed Iqbal, son of Mohammed something-or-other or just father unknown. Caste: Mussulman. Occupation: Muslim League worker” (90). This is an evidence to show how people were tortured in the name of religion. Again the sub inspector affronted Iqbal by saying: “You are a Muslim. You go to Pakistan” (99). Where as Malli and his 79 gang, who were the real killers and villains in the novel were let scot-free, because they were all Sikhs. Singh also recapitulates the religious lenience and harmony that were exercised between the Muslims and the Sikhs of Mano Majra, while the rest of the nation was engaged in the religious war. Fifty Sikh refugees reached Mano Majra from Pakistan. They were driven away by the Muslims from their own homes. Those refugees were genially treated by the Muslims of Mano Majra. The Muslims brought food to the temple and gave to the Sikh refugees. But this affable relationship was not found in every heart. There were a few religious vandals who longed to slash the village into two parts on the basis of religion. Women were the most awful sufferers of this religious viciousness. They were abducted, raped and were forcefully converted. Even animals were not spared. Cows were killed by the Muslims and in turn, the Hindus and the Sikhs dirtied the Masques with pigs’ meat. Singh’s Train to Pakistan reveals some of the religious vengeances committed by the Sikhs in the Masques: “…mosques being desecrated by the slaughter of pigs on the premises, and of the copies of the Holy Koran being torn up by infidels” (178). Again Singh gives a graphic description of the floating of cows in the Sutlej, which might have been the act of Muslims. The news of religious massacre and brutalities committed by both the Muslims and the Sikhs reached Mano Majra too. Their long lasted brotherhood turned into a mutual suspicion and distrust. The Muslims found no choice but 80 to leave Mano Majra, because the village was dominated by the Sikhs. Thus the religions that bound the Muslims and the Sikhs for generations after generations now had become a tool of division and hatred. Even after the Muslims vacated Mano Majra, the fanaticism did not die down. Looking at the state of affairs, Chote Lal Khatri in his article “Trauma of partition in Singh’s Train to Pakistan” notes, “Quite suddenly every Sikh in Mano Majra became a stranger with an evil intent. His long hair and beard appeared barbarous, his kirpan menacingly anti-Muslim. For the first time, the name Pakistan came to mean something to them – a heaven of refuge where there were no Sikhs” (44). A gang of Sikhs reached Mano Majra and inflicted communal malice among the youth of Mano Majra. Though the village elders pleaded them not to harm the Muslims of Mano Majra, they stood strong and obstinate to kill all the Muslims of Mano Majra. The gang along with a select group of Mano Majra Sikhs planned to assail the train bound to Pakistan carrying the Muslims of Mano Majra. They sought the blessings of God, whenever they began their brutal act. Seema Murugan in her article “No Small Matter: Interpretations, Thematic Reinterpretations and Realistic Over Interpretations in Train to Pakistan” comments, “The divine aid was sought for killing Muslims on the train and the Sikh youth had chanted the following verses as a prelude to his plans of violence: By the grace of God / We bear the world nothing but good will” (32). 81 The mullahs inflicted communal malevolence by carrying skulls and bones saying that they were the skulls and bones of the Muslims killed in India. Even gurdwaras echoed the preaching of violence and hostility. Thus, Singh presents a number of incidents, events and communal carnages that were executed in the name of religion during partition. He looks at religion as the major force that kindled suffering, humiliation, agony and loss. Manohar Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges is concerned with a number of political events that took place between the Civil Disobedience Movement of the early 1930s and India’s freedom on August 15, 1947. The division of the Indian sub-continent and its consequences are depicted only in the last few chapters of the novel. But the partition theme gets the greatest connotation in the entire novel. Since Malgonkar was interested in history, he looks at the partition from political-historical point of view. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges is both praised as well as criticized for his handling of the religious aspects in the novel. Many indict him by saying that he had sided with the Hindus by creating affirmative Hindu characters and harmful Muslim characters. Many believe that the characters Shafi Usman and Hafiz Khan stand as villains against Hindu-Muslim concord. But Basavaraj Naikar in his article “The Theme of Anti-Colonialism in A Bend in the Ganges” quotes the words of R. S. Singh in order to shield this remark: The feeling that Malgonkar has written his novel from a biased Hindu’s point of view does not hold good since, if he had 82 condemned Shafi, a Muslim, for religious fanaticism and lacking in-human qualities, he has damned Gian also who, although a Hindu, was mean and disloyal. What Malgonkar dislikes most is hypocrisy, and he would not spare anyone who would lack in human sympathy and ideals, be it Shafi or Gian, a Muslim or a Hindu (130). Malgonkar faithfully presents the warring humanity and their ravaging atrocities done in the name of religion through the family of Tekchand. He sees the partition holocaust as merely a religious conflict and the fear of one religion over the other. For some, religion became a guard and for others, a sword during the tumultuous days of partition. Psychologically, religion was the foundation for the horrid violent upheaval. It all began due to some unwanted religious aversion among the Hindus, Muslims and the Sikhs. Even the two major parties that were formed to drive away the British from the Indian soil soon became tinged with religion – the Congress for the Hindus and the Muslim League for the Muslims. In the beginning of the novel, the Hindu and the Muslim youth stood united, because their main focus was to drive away the British from India. Shafi Usman and Debi-dayal were such good friends, despite their different religions. Even Debi looked at Shafi as a Muslim who had become a Sikh and looked like Buddha. The Hanuman Physical Culture Club unified the Hindu, the Muslim and the Sikh youths of Duriabad. They remained committed in 83 order to over throw the British rule in India. They did not see religion as a hindrance to their nationalism. Malgonkar in his A Bend in the Ganges writes, “…Hindus and Muslims and Sikhs, men of different religions united in the cause of freedom as blood-brothers: the Freedom Fighters” (68). But these blood-brothers soon became sworn enemies when they were injected by communal malignity. It is Kafiz Khan, a leader of the terrorist movements in India, who poisoned Shafi’s mind with religious devilry. He was of the opinion that India is for the Hindus and a new nation called Pakistan is for the Muslims; and the real foes of the Muslims were not the Britishers but the Hindus. Though, in the beginning, Shafi was mystified gradually, he became a complete fanatic who thirsted for Hindu blood. It was not only Shafi who became an irrational communalist; almost all the members of the club became communal haters. Basu, one of Debi’s friends says in Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges, “What had been aimed against the British, has turned against itself. And the ugliest thing it has bred is distrust. No Hindu can trust a Muslim any more, and no Muslim trusts a Hindu” (290). Thus, it was the religious ill-will that brought all the untold woes in the Indian sub-continent. Despite the religious pandemonium and madness, there were a few people in the novel, who craved to love and help the innocent victims of the partition. A few characters in the novel stood as messiahs of serenity and religious harmony. Debi, though cheated by Shafi, a Muslim, he saved a 84 Muslim girl called Mumtaz from a brothel in Lahore. Later, he decided to marry her. Since they were conscious of the religious violence, forced religious conversions and persecutions, they changed their names and dress code, when they travelled to the newly carved Pakistan. Debi changed his name as Karim and dressed like a Muslim with a dark-brown fez and a long, knee-length shirt. During the time of partition, the people began to develop an inquisitive information of identifying a person’s religion from dress code and manner of behaviour. Malgonkar in A Bend in the Ganges states, “Many people claimed that just by looking at a man they could tell a Hindu from a Muslim; …” (362). This shows the suspicion and mistrust that ran among the Muslims, the Hindus and the Sikhs. When Debi and Mumtaz travelled to Duriabad, they observed a deep suspicion in the eyes of every traveller. If they were not able to decide the religion of a particular person, the simple method they followed was to remove off the person’s trousers and examine whether the person was circumcised or not. Debi became a victim of this religious investigation on the day of India’s independence – August 15, 1947. Tekchand, the father of Debi and one of the richest men in Duriabad first thought that he and his family were out of harm in their ancestral town Duriabad; but when the partition aggression mounted to its max out, he realized the dangers awaiting him and his family. His daughter Sundari thought that they could get out of Duriabad and join the convoy only if they disguised as Muslims – with Muslim names and dress code. She was sure that, it was the 85 religious fanaticism that had created all these tumult and only by pretentious scheme they could save their lives. This obviously shows the religious lunacy of the people. Towards the end of the novel, Shafi entered the house of Tekchand. Tekchand’s house was filled with the idols of Hindu gods. He showed great veneration to them and saw blessedness in every idol that was in his house. But for Shafi and his friends they were merely obscene gods. So, Shafi’s squad became iconoclasts. Malgonkar, in A Bend in the Ganges describes their iconoclastic act in the following way: “Shafi began to stare at the images, almost as though he has just become aware of them. He strode over, seized one of the statues in his hand and crushed it on another. Then, as though seized with frenzy, he went about the room, raining blows on the figures, toppling them down” (377). Thus, Malgonkar perceives at the great partition catastrophe in the light of religion and further underlines how religious animosity paved communal malice and caused terrific persecutions. Unlike other partition novels, Chaman Nahal’s Azadi completely concentrates on the turbulent days of partition. It just covers eight months of events that infected the Indian sub-continent in the name of partition. The novel precisely begins on June 3, 1947 – the day on which the news of the partition of the sub-continent was announced. Though Nahal’s Azadi broods more over the psychological aspects of partition, he too sees, how religion became an influential and powerful weapon in the hands of fanatics in order to carry on 86 their vengeance and venom. Nahal sees that all the horrors – pillaging, killing, raping, humiliating and persecuting were committed during the time of partition were either in the name of Allah or of Ram or of the great Gurus. A. V. Subba Rayudu in his article “A Wiped out Dream: Azadi” observes, “Religion cease to be a humanizing influence. It creates a strong sense of division of separation, so that all who belong to another religion become ‘other’, legitimate targets for attack” (122). Partition left millions of people landless, homeless, rootless, parentless and loveless; the only cause for all these loss was irrational religious belief and illogical communal disgust. Nahal in his Azadi convinces his readers with the idea that the brutalization that was followed by the proclamation of partition was due to communal frenzy and religious bias. Like the other writers of partition novels, Nahal too stands communal free while presenting his characters. Lakhmir Singh in his article “Chaman Nahal: Azadi” makes the following observation on Azadi: “The novel in fact gives a picture of these riots in their totality, without presenting a Hindu or Muslim point of view. Nahal blames both the communities for losing their sense of balance and sanity” (234). The brutalities committed by the Muslims in Pakistan were repeated in India by the Hindus. Sialkot, the city where Azadi was set is a typical Punjabi city. The Muslims, the Sikhs and the Hindus all lived mutually with one spirit known as Punjabiat. They had many common bonds like language, festivals, dress code, 87 ceremonies and food items. Only in the seclusion of their homes they worshiped diverse gods. The harmonious co-existence of these three religious people is finely described by Nahal in his Azadi: “So there was utter harmony among them, and the fact that Ghani was a Muslim and Lala Kanshi Ram a high-caste Hindu never entered their heads. They spoke a common tongue, wore identical clothes,…” (54). But what on the earth shook their bonds of friendship is a miracle. How religious chauvinism rose among their harmonious life is a mystery. The fanatic Muslims of Sialkot openly displayed their religious insanity at the pronouncement of partition by Lord Mountbatten, the viceroy. Though Jawaharlal Nehru, Mohammed Ali Jinnah and Baldev Singh spoke in the radio after the announcement of partition asking the people to maintain peace; it could not penetrate into the deaf ears of the maddened, irrational fanatics. The homogeneous city of Sialkot witnessed barbaric and fierce procession by the Muslims celebrating the birth of a new nation called Pakistan. The celebration was followed by setting up of fire on the shops and houses of the Hindus. Later some Muslims forced the Hindus and the Sikhs to leave Sialkot. Abdul Ghani, a Muslim who owned a shop close to Lala Kanshi Ram’s said the following to Lala Kanshi Ram in Nahal’s Azadi: “I want you to leave because you’re a Hindu, and you don’t believe in Allah.” Lala Kanshi Ram replied, “You know that’s not true. I believe in God as much as you do” (134). This shows how the Muslims were eager enough to chase away the Hindus and the 88 Sikhs from Sialkot. Their religious madness was further intensified when they heard the violence in East Punjab against Muslims. Even communal elements sneaked into the judiciary and government offices. The Deputy Commissioner of Sialkot was a Hindu. He went around the city with his Muslim body-guard in order to instill confidence among the two communities. But the same bodyguard killed the Deputy Commissioner in his communal fury. The escalating atrocities of the fanatics in the name of Gods and religions left all the rational ones in bewilderment. They saw Sialkot whirling under communal madness. The Hindus and the Sikhs were either killed or chased away from their homes; their properties were either looted or destroyed and their places of worships were either converted into shops or demolished. The whole city whirled under the command of religious vandals. In Nahal’s Azadi, Prabha Rani, the wife of Lala Kanshi Ram saw the circumstances of Sialkot in the following way: “…was certain those who stayed behind after the fifteenth of August had either been annihilated or converted to Islam; it was no city for the Hindus any longer” (172). Lala Kanshi Ram became a beaten man in the confrontation of religions. He lost his shop, house and daughter. Despite the profound physical and mental distress, he never lost his hope. He never gave up his prayer. Every morning and evening he sat before the portrait of Lord Krishna and chanted his prayers and hymns. Sometimes, he was joined by his wife and son. It was his fervent religious spirit that made him live despite the heavy shocks that he faced. 89 Nahal had observed that among all the religions, the Sikhs were the worst sufferers of the partition. There were two main reasons for their massive sufferings. The first reason was, the precise division or the cutting of the Indian sub-continent into two nations fell in the middle of Punjab; and the next reason was, the Sikhs were easily identifiable. They had clearly identifiable things like beard, turban, kangan and so on. The only way for a Sikh to get to India safely was to shave off his hair. Many Sikhs underwent this ordeal of shaving their heads and beards. The Sikhs of Sialkot went through immense humiliation and ordeal at the hands of Muslims. They were whisked away from the camp and killed. Nahal in his Azadi notes that the beard and the hair on the heads of the Sikhs were once, “…a kind of badge of courage, which in olden days distinguished you (them) as a warrior. In these times it was like shouting your (their) identity from the housetop – which meant speedy death for you (them) at the hands of the Muslims” (245). Sardar Jodha Singh asked his son and grand-son to shave off their beard and cut of their hair. He made this request for the safety of their migration to India. Though his son Teja Singh agreed, his grand-son, Niranjan Singh felt greatly affronted. He did not want to deflect from his Sikh dharma. Every one in the family tried to persuade him. But none of their words changed him from his strong faith in Guru Maharaja. He believed that his Guru Maharaja would save him from the evil hands of the Muslims. 90 Niranjan Singh’s wife, Isher Kaur pleaded him to do so for the sake their child, who was going to be born in a few days. Even Lala Kanshi Ram said to Niranjan Singh in Nahal’s Azadi, “The moment you reach India, you can grow your hair again. And if you like, you can do penance at the Golden Temple in Amritsar” (246). He stood intractable and irreconcilable in his faith. He fell at the feet of Sardar Jodha Singh and lamented in Nahal’s Azadi, “Please, grandfather, I’ll give my life for your sake. Only please don’t ask me to cut my hair” (247). Every now and then, they all reminded Niranjan Singh of his protection, whenever they heard any violence against the Sikhs. Since Niranjan Singh was completely devoted to Guru Maharaja, he refused to shaving off his beard and cutting off the hair of his head since he considered them violating faith. Isher Kaur’s fears increased as her husband refused to cut off his hair. Every night she began to cry with fright. Finally, it was her tears that melted Niranjan Singh. One night he told his wife that he would cut his hair for the safety of the family. But his sense of Sikh distinctiveness tormented his consciousness. He collected wood from neighbouring places and set himself ablaze when the entire camp was asleep. For Niranjan Singh his faith and belief in his religion became more imperative than mere endurance. Nahal in his Azadi writes the final words of Niranjan Singh’s staunch faith, when he burned in fire: “I belong to Waheguru, Waheguru is great.’… ‘Life I’ll gladly lose, my Sikh dharma I won’t” (262). 91 Teja Singh and Suraj Prakash also belonged to Sikh religion. Though they too respected their religion, for the safety and security of the family and their lives, they agreed to shave off their head and beard. They did not find any harm in loosing their hair for survival. But the case of Gangu Mull was different. Gangu Mull, the husband of Bibi Amar Vati decided not to leave Sialkot, because he showed excessive attachment to his property and belongings. He owned two buildings in Sialkot, which he did not want to part with. In order to save his property, he became Ghulam Muhammed, a converted Muslim. In Azadi, Nahal quotes the words uttered by Gangu Mull to Lala Kanshi Ram: “Well, they were my property, and I have decided to stay on here as a Muslim. They will continue to remain my property” (270). He reflected on marrying a Muslim women even, in order to save his property. Nankana Sahib, the birth place of Guru Nanak (the founder of Sikh religion) was attacked by Muslims. Nankana Sahib is the holiest of the holy places for the Sikhs. After partition, it became part of the newly created Pakistan. The Muslims annihilated all the Sikhs in that town and damaged the shrine thereby it was closed for worship. While the convoy proceeded from Sialkot to India, they witnessed a number of Sikh and Hindu places of worship being sacrileged by Muslim vandals. They were also defiled with obscene Urdu words written on the walls. Despite these tumultuous religious situations, there were people, who were not carried away by the fanatic spirit that prevailed. Nahal presents a few 92 characters that were cordial and homogeneous towards the people of other religions. Chaudhri Barakat Ali’s family was one among such broadminded families in Sialkot. Barkat Ali and Lala Kanshi Ram were bosom friends. Whenever there were celebrations or festivals, the two families joined the celebrations, despite their religious differences. Barkat Ali brought up his entire family with the spirit of religious integrity and made them love others as their own brothers and sisters. He remained a great source of moral support to Lala Kanshi Ram and his family, when they underwent hurt after hurt in the hands of the frenzied Muslims. It was Barkat Ali along with his son Munir who went to identify the dead bodies of Lala Kanshi Ram’s daughter Madhu Bala and her husband, Rajiv. When Lala Kanshi Ram was in the camp, Barkat Ali often visited him to console and to offer solace. When the convoy left for India, Barkat Ali and his son Munir walked along with Lala Kanshi Ram’s family for six miles. Nahal in his Azadi describes the deep and devoted friendship that existed between Barkat Ali and Lala Kanshi Ram through the words of Barkat Ali: “If not in our life-time, Insha-Allah in the life-time of our children this folly will surely be undone’… ‘We are one people and religion cannot separate us from each other” (276). Similarly, there was another kind hearted Muslim doctor called Hakim Saheb in Narowal. He candidly condemned the narrow minded Muslims of Narowal for their atrocities done in the name of religion. He felt deeply sorry for the inhuman attitude of Muslims towards the women of other 93 religions, when the abducted Sikh and the Hindu women were paraded nakedly in the streets of Narowal. Many of the partition novelists, besides portraying the chaotic and turbulent days of partition spin their stories amidst love and passion. Nahal too presents an inter-religious love story between Arun (a Hindu boy) and Nur (a Muslim girl). Despite their religious differences, they loved each other passionately. Arun was ready to embrace Islam for the sake of Nur. Even Nur’s brother Munir helped the lovers in exchanging love letters and arranging their meeting places. Shiv K Kumar’s A River with Three Banks is set in Delhi and in Allahabad. Allahabad means city of God, but the city of God was turned to be savage combat zone in the name of God. Whenever a Muslim mob or a Hindu mob went out either to kill or loot, they used the names of Gods. The Muslims articulated Allah-ho-Akbar before they started any ravaging act against the Hindus; similarly the Hindus pronounced Har Har Mahadev before they started any atrocity against Muslims. They subjugated the names of God for indulging in all kinds of anti-social activities. Though all religions forbid killing, looting, molesting, degrading and abducting others partition witnessed all these things in the name of God. People practised all these brutalities to show their religious spirit and power. S. Robert Gnanamony in his work Literary Polyrhythms: New Voices in New Writings in English quotes Gulam Abbas’s story “Avtar: A Hindu”: 94 You have spilt so much of blood… You have raped women; stripped them naked and paraded them through the streets of the city; chopped off their breasts and noses; burnt them alive. You have their children with spears and flung them in the air. You claimed that you committed these crimes in the name of your religious duty… You are not human beings. You are worse than jackals. (23) Even God was petrified to see the butcheries committed in His name. He cursed and damned them as heartless animals. Kumar’s A River with Three Banks unfolds the poignant and fanatic savagery committed by irrational human beings in the name of religion. Gautam, the central character of the novel was portrayed as pious in heart but he was not attached to any religion and its practices. Though born as Hindu in Lahore, he became a Christian in order to divorce his unfaithful wife Sarita; and later he became a Muslim and adopted a Muslim name Saleem by reciting the kalma. Kumar in his novel A River with Three Banks calls Gautam, “…a Hindu, turned Christian, was now committed to marrying a Muslim” (198). He stands as an icon of religious tolerance and harmony. His religious secularity is vivacious when he utters the following words to Father Jones: “Look at what my co-religionists are doing these days. All this pious talk about Brahma, ahimsa, the Higher Self, cow worship, and then this senseless killing of innocent Muslims!” (6). 95 Gautam’s father, Shamlal and his mother Radha were ardent followers of Arya Samaj. For them Maharishi Dayanand was the holiest of the holy gods. When they migrated from Lahore to Delhi in 1947, they witnessed a number of Hindus and Sikhs being persecuted by Muslims. Though they disliked other religions in the beginning, they changed their stance later. Like Gautam, they too found divinity in every faith. The Resurrection of Jesus Christ kindled Shamlal. Later he took interest in reading the Holy Koran. He asked Gautam to read the following lines from the Koran in A River with Three Banks: All human beings are created as a family A single community Then God sends His Prophets Bearers of glad tidings, Who guide those who believe in Him And punish the evil (191). Along with Gautam he went to attend a prayer meeting of Gandhi. In the prayer he heard the chanting from the Buddhist scripture and the Gita; then a Parsi hymn and a Christian poem written by Cardinal Newman and finally, a reading from the Koran. Shamlal became mesmerized. Kumar has put the feeling of Shamlal in his A River with Three Banks, “Gautam’s father exchanged an omniscient look with his son” (198). The title Three Banks suggests three religions – Hinduism, Christianity and Islam. It also suggests the union of the three rivers at Triveni – the Ganges, 96 the Jumna and the Saraswathi. Gautam flows in the river of three religions. Again the death of Abdul Rahim brings these three religions to one spot. He is a Muslim killed by the Hindus and buried by the Christians. The letter that Abdul wrote to his wife Sultana Begum shows how the streets of Delhi were alarmed with religious narrow-mindedness. Kumar’s A River with Three Banks describes the condition of Faiz Bazar in Delhi, “… a watershed between the two belligerent communities, Hindus and Muslims, sworn to eternal enmity” (15). Whenever violence irrupted, it became a routine thing that the Muslims blamed the Hindus and the Hindus blamed the Muslims. Later both, the Hindus and the Muslims jointly blamed the English that they had sided with one of the two religions. Since the partition was done on the basis of religion; the Hindus thought that India was only for them and the Muslims thought that Pakistan was only for them. But unfortunately the guiltless peace loving people became the victims of communal vandalism. After his baptism Gautam went home with his friend Berry. Suddenly, a Muslim mob caught hold of them to butcher them. Gautam and Berry escaped from their swords by saying that they were Christians. The crazy mob left them only after verifying Gautam’s baptism certificate. Though neither Gautam nor Berry was a Christian, it was the religious certificate that saved them from the irrational Muslim mob. The turbulent days of partition had no time for rationality but for madness. Those who pretended easily got away from any angry mob. A number of such instances are found in Kumar’s A River with 97 Three Banks. Gautam says in a sardonic manner, “It should be all right so long as I move about in a dhoti and kurta, some caste mark displayed on my forehead.’… ‘How funny, one’s life depends upon what one wears these days” (119). Many people changed their names, dresses, appearances and religious symbols in order to save their skins from the religious fundamentalists. Gopinath Trivedi was a Hindu who lived in a Muslim dominant locale in Delhi. There were only a few Hindu families in that area. Whenever he saw a frenzied Muslim mob around his house, he raised the Pakistani flag on the top of his roof. He said to Gautam and Berry in Kumar’s A River with Three Banks, “Well, I’m Gopinath Trivedi and, since we’re just a few Hindu families around here, I always put up a large green flag with a crescent, whenever a Muslim mob passes by” (56). Whereas he had the picture of Swami Dayanand in his house. Such an irony became an unavoidable need of the hour. Gautam too altered his colour according to the place he went. When he took Haseena to Allahabad, she pleaded Gautam to visit her house. Since her house was in the Muslim dominated mohalla, he disguised himself as a Muslim (with a sherwani and fez cap) in a public toilet and went to her house. It sounds idiotic but in reality it is rational. Show of religious activities and symbols spared many lives. Again when they went out to visit Allahabad, Haseena wore kumkum on her forehead and Gautam put on Hindu caste mark. 98 S. Robert Gnanamony in his work Literary Polyrhythms: New Voices in New Writings in English had quoted the words of Gandhi that appeared in Communal Unity: “Hindu women were without the auspicious vermilion mark on their heads and foreheads and without their conch shell bangles” (17). Similarly Muslim women posed themselves as Hindu women to escape rape, abduction and murder. In a world of madness, any rational and practical human being would first consider of her/his protection. Since communal frenzy was created by maddened people, there was no harm in just changing a person’s exterior. But such disguise could not be adopted by the animals. The irrational communalists even branded animals in the name of religion. Kumar in A River with Three Banks narrates one such pitiable event. When a gang of Muslim goons were not able to quench their thirst of a kafir, they spotted a cow as kafir cow. A man pierced a spear in its belly and butchered it ruthlessly. The cow made a terrific cry and fell against a lamp post. This satanic deed will definitely freeze all who are human. The wanton mob not only killed people and animals but also demolished shops and houses and dirtied shrines and holy places of worship. A few events of sacrileges are narrated in A River with Three Banks. A Hindu local paper called Our Land carried a report about the defiling of a Shiva temple with the meat of a butchered cow. And the paper branded that the vandalism was done by Indian Muslims with the help of Pakistan and demanded instant action. A 99 cow’s head was thrown into a Hanuman Temple in Allahabad and that action too was ascribed to the Muslims. Though the fanatics accused other religions about the sacrileges the English commissioner had a different opinion. He says in Kumar’s A River with Three Banks, “It was a Hindu who did it. It’s always a Hindu who throws a cow’s carcass into a temple, and a Muslim who dumps a pig’s head into a mosque…. Diabolic ingenuity, isn’t it? The idea is to keep the battle raging” (146). A number of mosques in India and temples and gurdwaras in Pakistan were dirtied and desecrated by religious fanatics. A communal malice filled Hindu cried in Kumar’s A River with Three Bank, “We’ll turn every mosque in Delhi into brothel” (200). They even blamed Gandhi that he had sided with Muslims and called Gandhi as Maulana Gandhi. Many of the partition novelists attempted to alleviate the religious tension created by partition by their holistic approach. They portrayed interreligious marriages and inter-religious friendship. Through this they wanted to put across to the world that God is not in the form and figure of religions, their symbols and utterances of prayer but in loving fellow human beings. Gautam, Shamlal, Father Jones and Haseena are shaped by Kumar to convey this message. They are the representatives of universal brotherhood and instruments of peace. When goons turn into bloodhounds with their religious marks these people stand as torch-bearers for others. Kumar cites a number of verses from the Holy Scriptures of different religions and monuments in his fiction in order to hark back the religious 100 fundamentalists that religions are not created for annihilation but for construction. S. Robert Gnanamony in his Literary Dialectics: Notes and Chords from East and West remarks, “Shiv K Kumar through this novel seems to imply an apparent solution to the repulsive communal tension in our country. He wants the readers to read the Holy Scriptures with an open mind and live by it” (121). A River with Three Banks contains versus from the Koran, the Gita and the Bible. It makes references to the scriptures of other religions too. Gautam went around Allahabad for a visit. When he was at the Ashoka Pillar, he was awestruck by the great vision of Ashoka which was engraved both in Pali and English. The verses go this way: True religion does not recognize any barriers Between one human being and the other. It embraces all living creatures – man animal and bird. Compassion, endurance, understanding and love are man’s greatest treasure (157). The above words clearly spell the character of a true religion. Religion has human values and it is the embodiment of all the virtues. But at the time of partition people used religion as the weapon of vengeance. Jim an American tourist in A River with Three Banks says, “What a shame we kill each other in the name of God!” (172). Kumar is a visionary writer like Tagore. A River with Three Banks echoes the following lines of Tagore’s Gitanjali: 101 Leave this chanting and singing and telling of beads! Whom dost thou worship in this lonely dark corner of a temple with doors all shut? Open thine eyes and see thy God is not before thee! He is there where the tiller is tilling the hard ground and where the pathmaker is breaking stones. He is with them in sun and in shower, and his garment is covered with dust. Put off thy holy mantle on the dusty soil! … Come out of thy meditations and leave aside thy flowers and incense! What harm is there if thy clothes become tattered and stained? Meet him in toil and in sweat of thy brow. (7) CHAPTER - IV THE HUGE MATERIAL LOSS 102 CHAPTER - IV THE HUGE MATERIAL LOSS In a chaotic carnage and turbulent situation, the ruffians get attracted towards two things – first material and then women. The partition of the Indian sub-continent, which brought unsurmising woes in the lives of millions of people left a massive material loss and women were exploited as commodities by the maddened mob. People deserted their houses, shops, lands, properties and cattle in order to save their lives. D.K. Chakravorty in his article “The Theme of Partition of India in Indian Novels in English” observes the holocaust, “The upshot of this (partition) was that twelve million people had to flee, leaving their homes…. It is also on record that over a hundred thousand women, young and old, were abducted, raped, mutilated” (43). Buildings and houses that were built by the blood and sweat were either burnt or demolished or occupied by others; properties were abducted; costly things were looted and cattle were mercilessly killed. The records say that fifty-five lakh Hindus and Sikhs were evacuated from the newly created nation Pakistan by December 7, 1947 and a few lakh people were evacuated later. All the migrants were given accommodation in hundred and sixty refugee camps that were established in various parts of India. The migrants had the hope that they could return to their native places and could inhabit their houses and land. Since Pakistan was turning entirely an Islamic country, the possibility of repatriation became impracticable. It became 103 a tough job for the Indian government to provide job and safe haven to all these migrants. The early migrants were asked to reside in the houses that were left by Muslims. But that was scarcely enough even for one-fourth of the flooding migrants. A survey was made to know the extent of property left by the Hindus and the Sikhs in Pakistan. After Partition, a work published by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India, documents, “…The amount of loss incurred by the refugees as a result of migration from Western Pakistan to India, that in Delhi alone up to July 22, 1948, over 94,364 claims were registered with the Registrar of Claims. The registered value of 66,583 claims from out of these, so far consolidated comes to Rs. 806 crores” (72). The work also estimates the agricultural land that was left by the Hindus and the Sikhs in West Pakistan exceeded the land that was left by in East Punjab by 1200000 acres. Pramod Kapoor in his preface to Singh’s Train to Pakistan comments: Migrating men used their women’s odhnis to wrap up whatever they could salvage of their wealth – treasures accumulated over generations tied in three yards of cloth – and ran in opposite directions – Hindus to the east, Muslims to the west. Mansions were deserted, acres left behind, families cut to half – the entire geography of a sub-continent was soaked in blood. (xiii) 104 Even while making the boundary fixation, the members of the commission had differences of opinion among themselves. After Partition gives the opinion of Sir Cyril Radcliffe: “…the weight and value attached to them made it impossible for the commission to arrive at any agreed solution” (23). It clearly shows that the members of the commission focused their attention to the wealth and resources that the provinces had in itself. In the division of Bengal, the Muslims could not accept the loss of Calcutta, Murshidabad and part of Nadia district, because they were the sources of economic boom. The Sikhs in Punjab became acrimonious, because it was they by their sweat and toil turned the rough and barren lands into high yielding agricultural farms. They felt that they had lost half a century of their measureless labour. Migrants lamented over the loss of all that they earned for years and years. They could not get back their money and jewels that were in bank lockers. They could not carry all their possessions and precious things. When they ran for safety, they could only carry the bare minimum. Margaret BourkeWhite in Singh’s Train to Pakistan registers one such incident: There seemed hardly a person who was not nursing some loss, such as the rich Muslim woman from Amritsar who had thrown her jewels in the bottom of the well, when her home fell on the Indian side of the line. She had run across the border to Pakistan, and when I saw her there, she was trying hysterically to hire a driver to go back and retrieve the jewels from the well. (250) 105 Some left their valuables in lockers; a few others buried them in the earth with the hope of getting them back when they returned and yet others left their possessions in the care of a known neighbour. But returning could not become an actuality in their lives. Even a great number of cattle owned by the people of various communities were left behind. All the migrants reached either India or Pakistan only with what they could carry. Many of them lost their near and dear ones; but all of them had material loss. Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan is often branded as a sociopolitical novel. The novel explores the social condition of the people of Mano Majra village and how political sway changed the entire destiny of the village. Unlike Chaman Nahal’s Azadi, Singh’s Train to Pakistan does not completely spin around the partition trauma. He narrates the socio-political condition of the people at the back-drop of partition. The novel does not give much weight on the material loss of the people due to partition. But there are instances, where Singh speaks of looting, destruction of buildings and abduction of livestock. Like millions of migrants who left their belongings, Singh’s family too left everything in Lahore in 1947. His family left its newly-acquired bungalow to a Muslim friend called Manzur Qadir. Pramood Kapoor in his preface to Train to Pakistan quotes the nostalgic sentiment of Singh during one of his trips to Lahore: “I stayed as a guest in my own home. I had put him (Manzur) in possession of it when I left Lahore in 1947” (xvi). 106 Singh begins the novel by introducing the socio-cultural aspects of the village called Mano Majra. Then he proceeds to narrate a looting done by professional robbers. Though the burglary was not an outcome of communal separation it set the tone to the lootings that were going to follow suit. The decoits headed by Malli entered the house of Lala Ram Lal, the moneylender of the village. The moneylender pleaded to the dacoits in Singh’s Train to Pakistan, “You can take all – jewellery, cash, account books. Don’t kill anyone” (13). But they killed him and took away all the money and jewels. This prelude is followed by an enormous material loss of millions of people. Mano Majra was a typical village which was known for its religious forbearance and brotherhood. The Muslims and the Sikhs almost were equal in number. The mosque and the gurdwara stood in side by side. The village had no resent against any religion. All the religions were welcomed into this village. They also had a common deity in the form of a three-foot slab of sandstone erected vertical under a keekar tree. The entire village had faith in this common deity. V. T. Girdhari in his article “Historical Text, Human Context: Kushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan” describes Mano Majra, “Khushwant Singh’s picture of Indian society in Train to Pakistan is like the state of Eden…” (32). The first report of looting and taking away the possessions of others reached the village only in the form of rumour. Hukum Chand, the magistrate of the district wanted the Muslims of Mano Majra to go away to Pakistan in 107 safety. But he did not want them to take too much belongings with them. Singh in his Train to Pakistan gives the reasons for this attitude of Hukum Chand: “Hindus from Pakistan were stripped of all their belongings before they were allowed to leave. Pakistani magistrates have become millionaires overnight” (30). The refugees who had come from Pakistan little by little fanned the communal inferno. Their entry created a dismal state of affairs over Mano Majra. Hukum Chand had no other go except to evacuate the Muslims of Mano Majra. Pakistan soldiers were called to take the Muslims to refugee camp. The people who had enormous belongings did not know how to take everything with them. They started packing their things and got ready to go to the camp. The Muslims of Mano Majra thought that they would soon be back to their houses in Mano Majra. Next morning Pakistan officers along with a few soldiers came to take the Muslims of Mano Majra to a refugee camp in Chundunnugger, later to be taken to Pakistan by train. The Muslim officer in his demanding voice ordered the Muslims of Mano Majra: “The only luggage you can take with you is what you can carry – nothing more. You can leave your cattle, bullock carts, charpoys, pitchers and so on with your friends in the village” (Singh 194). They were permitted to take only the baggage that they could carry with their hands. This shocked the Muslims. Though they insisted for taking all their belongings their requests were denied by the officer. So, they left behind a vast amount of their possessions and belongings and moved to the refugee camp. 108 It was a dismal sight. Some of them had nothing to carry except a blanket, a few others had only a pair of clothes bundled in a blanket. In their journey to an unknown destination, they hardly thought of their belongings. When their lives were at stake, what would be the use of the materials that they carried? Vicki Goldberg’s words that are quoted in Singh’s Train to Pakistan reveal the state of the people when they reached the alien land: “Many who survived walked into a strange land without money, a change of clothing or a hoe to cultivate the alien land” (117). The peace loving Sikhs of Mano Majra requested the officials to allow the Muslims to take their properties along with them. They told the officials that property was a bad thing that would poison their mind and they might be tempted to steal them away. The Sikh officials made an arrangement to leave the cattle, carts and houses under the care of Malli and his men. The officials also cautioned the villagers not to meddle with Malli or his men. Malli and his men were notorious and were known for their looting and thieving. Kamal Mehta describes the character of Malli and his gang in his article “Train to Pakistan: A Study of the Partition and its Impact on the People”: “It is a great irony that these five people (Malli and his gang) are the parasites on society. They can’t be useful to people. These are hooligan, anti-social, absolutely self centered and immoral people” (28). As soon as the Muslims left Mano Majra, Malli and his gang started to ransack the houses of Muslims. They freely looted the unoccupied houses of the Muslims. They drove away the 109 bullocks, cows and buffaloes and mares and grabbed away the chickens, utensils and other articles of value. Mano Majra was on the bank of the Sutlej. It was a resource of life for millions of people who lived on its banks. The Sutlej brought agricultural bounty in Punjab. Partition holocaust turned this life giving mother into life taking monster. It became a carrier of dead bodies. The entire river turned into red. With the coming of partition, the water level of the Sutlej increased. The swell of the river was due to the immense dumping of dead bodies and things. Singh’s Train to Pakistan narrates, “The river had risen further. Its turbid water carried carts with the bloated carcasses of bulls still yoked to them. Horses rolled from side to side as if they were scratching their backs” (201). Cattle were killed and thrown into the river. Things carried by the fleeing refugees were snatched from them and were thrown into the Sutlej. The looting and marauding of Muslim houses was repeated again and again in several villages of Punjab. There were looters everywhere; as soon as the Muslims were evacuated, these looters entered into their houses and blundered their properties. After the evacuation of the Muslims of Mano Majra, the Muslims of Chundunnugger were also evacuated to the refugee camp. The Sikh and the Hindu goons entered the area inhabited by the Muslims and devastated their entire property. They looted what they wanted and burnt the rest. Every Muslim house in that area was turned into ashes. The police and the officials could do nothing against this free looting. The reason was that the 110 violent mob always outnumbered the police in many folds. At places, the mob formed twenty to thirty thousand people but the number of the police men were only fifty. Some times even the police and the officials sided with these looters and got a share for them. Manohar Malgonkar’s works are known for their daring nature and adventurous spirit. His works boldly question some of the established orders and stigma in the society. This aspect of Malgonkar is vibrant in A Bend in the Ganges. The novel includes personal as well as national events in it. It questions the practicality of Gandhi’s ahimsa (non-violence). Since he believed violence as an indispensable and inseparable part of human nature; and backlashes Gandhi’s notion of non-violence. The novel opens with non-violent protests and closes with wide spread violence of the entire sub-continent resulting in millions of human death and heavy loss of assets and belongings. Through huge material loss incurred by Tekchand, Malgonkar wishes to communicate the inestimable amount of wealth that was lost in the partition communal frenzy. Malgonkar draws his two major characters – Gian Talwar and Debidayal from aristocratic families. The former comes from the family of landlords and the later is the son of a flourishing industrialist. The novel closes with the absolute economic disaster in both the families. Gian’s family lost all the wealth due to personal enmity and Debi’s family lost all the property due to the partition catastrophe. The case of Debi’s family was the case of millions of 111 Indians who were fleeing both to Pakistan and India. All that they earned by their hard labour could not be carried along with them. They evacuated their houses only with a meager amount of things they could carry to an unknown destination. Some women wrapped up their jewels in a piece of cloth and threw them into wells with the hope of coming back and retrieving them. But they could never come back to posses their jewels again. K. K. Sharma and B. K. Johri in their work The Partition in Indian-English Novels state, “Millions of people became homeless, lost their belongings, fell victims to violence and insult, faced a new challenge and had to start all over again” (55). The first great destruction narrated in A Bend in the Ganges occurred in Bombay during the Second World War. The Japanese invaded India and bombarded the city of Bombay. They dropped bombs in the harbour of Bombay. This left the ships and the docks being blown up and a large number of people were killed and wounded. A man called Baldev reported in Malgonkar’s A Band in the Ganges, “The bombers have destroyed the city. The Japanese have reduced the city to dust” (271). Though this bombardment was not directly connected with the partition; it forewarned the great calamity that was going to engulf the entire sub-continent in a short span. The news of the partition turned the entire atmosphere up side down. The administration collapsed; the police and officials became dumbfound. The irrational mob began to rule the streets. They freely burgled and burnt the 112 properties of others. Dhansing, the driver of Tekchand went to bring his family to a safer place. On the way, his family was caught by a sprawling Muslim gang. The gang killed Dhansingh’s entire family and burnt the car. A number of Hindu and Sikh houses were set fire and were reduced to ashes. Wherever the people turned they could see the glow of fire in the entire city of Duriabad. Sardar Awtar Singh, a friend of Tekchand lived in one of the isolated areas of Duriabad. As the partition savages increased, he collected around fifty people in a house, so that they could guard themselves from any onslaught by the Muslims. All in a sudden a ruthless mob surrounded the house and set the entire house including the people in fire. All the people were burnt alive. The killing of cows became a common thing in Duriabad after the proclamation of partition. They were killed because they were branded as Hindu animals. Since all the cows were killed, the entire city ran short of milk. The indefinite closer of the banks left the evacuating people in a flex. They were neither able to withdraw their savings nor able to deposit. In their flight, their savings scarcely came to their minds. Tekchand who had a large savings in banks was not able to withdraw even a single paisa because of the nonfunctioning of banks. And so he decided to take only the jewels in a box and left the rest in Duriabad itself. The same was the case of millions of migrants, who were fleeing from their own natives and homes as if their places were invaded by some alien rulers. Malgonkar in his novel A Bend in the Ganges narrates, “They left 113 behind everything they possessed; their lands, houses, cattle, their household goods” (355). He also notes one of the pathetic carnages on the migrants, which resulted them to run away for life leaving everything that they carried. “At one place there was scatter of pitiful human belongings: bed-rolls, bundles, tin trunks, chickens in bamboo baskets, brass utensils gleaming in the sunlight, perambulators, boxes, tiffin-carriers, earthen surais… but not a human being” (359). The roadsides were littered with burnt-out cars, lorries, bullock carts, carts and tongas. Tekchand was the most affected character in Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges. He suffered a great loss at all the levels – physical, mental and material. Tekchand was an affluent person. His house was one of the best residential buildings in Lahore. He owned a brand new Ford V8, which was not possible even for rich Indians. Malgonkar describes the house of Tekchand in the following manner: “His family had lived in Duriabad for over a hundred years. They owned the Kerwad Construction Company, and the Kerward Housing Development, and God knows what else – even a street in the cantonment was named after them: Kerward Avenue” (12). His company was spread in many cities and towns, including Bombay. He was mounting richer and richer everyday with his countless business. Malgonkar terms him as a man worth million. Tekchand had a huge collection of brass, bronze and copper statues of antiquity in his private museum. In A Bend in the Ganges Malgonkar states that 114 the museum had a grand collection and there was “… no equal outside the Prince of Wales’ Museum in Bombay” (14). He was also the possessor of a number of gardens and farms. He had enough servants at his call. But partition brought massive ruin in his life. All his servants ran away for their lives leaving him alone to suffer. He lost his total fortune and became completely a wrecked man. He even thought that he should have left Duriabad a month or two weeks ago and that would have saved a good portion of his assets. Tekchand lamented to his daughter Sundari in Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges: “Your mother wanted us to leave a whole month ago. Even two weeks ago, we could have done it – just driven off. I could have brought over all the trucks from the works here, and we could have loaded them with everything we wanted to take from here” (336). Tekchand went to bathroom and sobbed thinking about the treasures he was going to leave behind – the biggest construction business in Punjab, the splendid museum, a regal abode with its articles and furniture and a number of farms and gardens. As he was about to leave Duriabad, he had the last fleeting look at the house. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges gives the following description on the richness of Tekchand’s house: The Kashan and the Kermanshah carpets which had covered the floor and were now rolled up, carpets that he had been collecting with a connoisseur’s fussiness and avidity for the past twenty years and more, carpets that had come to him from his father and 115 grandfather, were now worthless; as were the other possessions they had prided themselves upon; the Spanish silver candlesticks, the baccarat chandeliers and the Georgian tea service, the Minton dinner set and the rosewood dining table that seated twenty-four. (341) His ancestral properties and all the expensive materials he earned through his business and possessed from his ancestors looked remote and they did not belong to him any more. Soon someone would occupy the moneyed house and all the belongings. He left Duriabad, with Gian and his daughter Sundari, in a car. He carried only little things that could be accommodated in the car. With absolute obliteration, he was not able to pull himself towards the new destination. He did not know where he was heading towards and how he was going to start all again his future. Tekchand lost the savings and investments of his grandfather, father and his own savings at the hands of the gory demon called partition. Chaman Nahal’s Azadi is often applauded with one accord as the best novel on the theme of partition. The time of the action precisely spreads around the traumatic days of partition. Even his characters are directly caught up in the process of partition. Lala Kanshi Ram, the protagonist of the novel stands as part and parcel of the partition trials and tribulations. Nahal uses Lala Kanshi Ram as his mouthpiece to present the horrors of partition. Rama Jha in his review of Azadi states, “Lala Kanshi Ram whose experiences symbolize the soreness and sufferings of the millions affected by the partition” (114). 116 The novel is set in an environment of tension and that tension runs throughout the novel. C.N. Srinath in his article “The Writers as Historical Witness: Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan and Chaman Nahal’s Azadi” notes, “There is violence, butchery, accounts of rape, murder, ghastly incidents, slaughtering of Hindus and Muslims, riots and rampage in Azadi” (63). Nahal, without deviating his focus, completely dwells upon the partition horrors and its related actions. Nahal uses the term azadi in a sardonic manner. Azadi means freedom, but none of the characters in the novel experienced and enjoyed the long awaited freedom. The freedom brought neither celebration nor prosperity, but doom. Every house in the border had some despair to share. For the frontiersmen, azadi came in the form of devouring demon, which wrecked the people both physically and mentally. It came in the form of bloodshed tearing a beautiful nation into two halves and turning millions of people destitute and homeless refugees. Paul Love in his article “The Narrative of Migration: Nahal’s Azadi in Comparative Context” remarks, “Freedom, ‘Azadi’, has become an occasion of crisis and catastrophe for them” (71). The complete ambiance was in gripping gloominess. Every character had a loss in one form or the other. Some had physical loss; a few others underwent emotional calamity and yet others lost their materials and reached the new nation bare handed. Even Mahatma Gandhi, the prophet of non-violence became a prey of the frenzied partition mob. 117 The partition announcement turned the entire sub-continent into looter’s den. Wherever there was a minority community, the people belonged to it were forced to leave behind everything they possessed. Azadi is set in Sialkot. The people of Sialkot enjoyed harmony and homogeneity, when it was part of the undivided India. The Boundary Commission award marked Sialkot as part of the newly shaped nation, Pakistan. Since Pakistan was created for the Muslims, the Hindus and the Sikhs became the minorities and aliens in their own birth place. Most of the Hindus and the Sikhs of Sialkot were traders and they owned shops and palatial houses. Some of them even had multi-storied buildings. But partition fluctuated them from prosperity to adversity. Lala Kanshi Ram, the protagonist of Azadi was a reputed wholesale grain merchant in Sialkot. He had earned enough for his family through his hard work. Nearly for three decades he toiled and sweated to acquire the assets. He had eight small trunks filled with pricey metals and other materials. But unfortunately the partition devastated his thirty long years of savings. The tempting eyes of the Sialkot Muslims fell on the property and belongings of the Hindus and the Sikhs. They devised a scheme to loot the shops and the houses of the Hindus and the Sikhs. One day in the afternoon a ravaging mob entered the marketplace and ransacked the things from the shops of the Hindus and the Sikhs. Lala Kanshi Ram, who was in his grain shop, became alarmed by the approaching Frankenstein monsters. The unruly Muslim mob broke open all 118 the shops of the Hindus and the Sikhs and took away everything from the shop leaving nothing. Lala Kanshi Ram, who could not prevent the demonic acts of the bunch of hooligans, ran home for life. He did not even lock the shutters of his shop. While running from a distant corner he saw the mob entering his shop and raiding away sacks of grains. The only source of his income – the shop, was now devastated by the religious hooligans. The mob not only looted the belongings of the Hindus and the Sikhs but they had also great pleasure in destroying their properties. During night time they set fire to one each mohalla. Almost from the day of the announcement of partition, every night the sky of Sialkot glowed with fire. In Azadi, Nahal picturizes the state of Sialkot: “The fires were started in the night, and the four fire engines in the city had, were kept rushing from one fire to the next. More than murders, it was the fires that were frightening and demoralizing” (126). If one gang had set fire on an east mohalla of Sialkot, the other group would have set fire on the west. Throughout the night, the fire engines were kept hectic. The Hindus and the Sikhs had many sleepless nights, fearing that their mohalla may be attacked and set ablaze at any time by the Muslim vandals. Almost for a week, the fanatics burnt down one mohalla every night. Chaudhri Barkat Ali, the bosom friend of Lala Kanshi Ram, disclosed the cruel plan of the fanatics that they had targeted the street where Lala Kanshi Ram dwelled. The entire mohalla, inhabited by the Hindus and the Sikhs was left just before six hours to save their lives and properties. Bibi Amar Vati, who 119 owned two large buildings in Trunk Bazaar, had no other go except to abandon the building. Lala Kanshi Ram, who had already lost his grain shop, had to leave the plot where he had planned to construct his new house. Almost the entire population of the Hindus and the Sikhs of Sialkot migrated from their home town to unknown destinations with the bare minimum that they could carry with them. Lala Kanshi Ram had a well furnished house, stocked with luxurious and costly fineries. His eight trunks and two steel chests were filled with expensive blankets, bedspreads, towels, shoes and so on. In Azadi Nahal recounts the coziness of Lala Kanshi Ram’s house in the following words: “The furniture in their house was so massive, beds so strongly made and tables and chairs with thick, solid legs and tops,…” (145). Since they were forewarned about the impending assault that would take place in a short while, they became crumbled and crushed completely. They did not know what to carry and what to leave. Lala Kanshi Ram and his family had finally decided to go to the refugee camp with one steel trunk and a bedroll filled with some clothes. The rest they left in the house itself hoping that they would be back soon to possess them again. But Lala Kanshi Ram had foreseen that he might not come back to reclaim his belongings that he had earned by his sweat. Lala Kanshi Ram burst out this to Bill Davidson, a British officer in Nahal’s Azadi: “…all that I had taken nearly thirty years to build is being lost because you refuse to protect us” 120 (147). He even felt aged and worried that it might not be possible for him to earn afresh all the comforts and belongings in an unknown place, where he was going to live for the rest of his life. Unable to carry with him all the hard earned assets, he felt dejected and moved to the refugee camp with the members of his family and his neighbours. Later, the refugees were taken to India by an escorted foot convoy. On their way from Sialkot to Dera Baba Nanak – a border town in India, they glimpsed enormous devastation to the properties of the Hindus and the Sikhs. On the way they found a village comprising twenty houses belonging to the Hindus and the Sikhs, being smashed. Not even a single person was seen in that village. The entire village had a grisly look and was littered with broken household things. Finally, the convoy reached Amritsar with empty pockets without knowing what to eat, where to sleep and what work to assume. Amritsar too had a horrific and phantom look. Many buildings had been destroyed. Some buildings stood like skeletons without any roof. Nahal’s Azadi gives the picture of Amritsar in the following lines: “The city looked as if it had been bombed from the air. Not a building in Hall Bazaar, the main thoroughfare of the city stood intact; they were in total ruin. The roofs were gone. The window frames burned out, the walls collapsed” (326). Looting and devastation of property were a common phenomenon during the time of partition. There was an enormous mutual destruction both in India and Pakistan – the Indians destroyed the properties and belongings of the Muslims and the 121 Pakistanis did the vis-à-vis. Since Nahal’s Azadi deals more on the issue of psychological trauma of partition he does not focus on the materials that were ravaged during the time of partition. The entire North India underwent a great desolation due to the partition of the Indian sub-continent. Since people were on flight to save their lives, they left behind their possessions and valuables. As soon as the owners left, the louts claimed the evacuees properties as their own. The malevolent mob brought down buildings, houses and places of worship. The entire frontier was ravaged by looters. Even the states like Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Bengal, Assam, Tripura, Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, Gujarat, Maharashtra and Jammu and Kashmir were under-fire. Buildings and monuments were toppled down. Every work that deals on the theme of partition has something to say about the material loss caused by the partition. Shiv K Kumar too narrates a few events related to the material loss faced by people at the time of partition. A River with Three Banks traces the havoc and ravages occurred in Delhi, Allahabad and a few other areas of North India. Gautam, the central character migrated from Lahore to Delhi safely, along with his family. But he had lost all his property. It was not only Gautam who had lost his property in the new nation (Pakistan); but also millions of others. When Gautam went to report on Gandhi’s prayer meeting a number of distressed Hindus and Sikhs recounted their woes and how they ran away to India, leaving all their belongings in Pakistan. A Pakistan migrant in Kumar’s A River with Three 122 Banks reported, “…while our temples in Pakistan are being used as urinals? We have no shelter now…”; another migrant shared, “I lost my entire property in Peshawar…” (199). Gautam, while taking Haseena’s mother and sister to Pakistan, saw the pathetic flight of millions of Muslims. Most of them carried only a handbag or a suitcase. That was the only property they were able to carry to their new destination. They deserted their houses, farms, plots, furniture and other heavy materials which they could not carry along. Since many of the migrants traveled by crowded trains, it was difficult for them to carry even the minimum luggage. Common properties and buildings were attacked by the marauding mob. A River with Three Banks describes a cinema hall that was gutted near Asaf Ali Road in Delhi. The cinema hall was blasted because it was showing a Hindu movie. Even animals became the victims of the mass destruction. The Hindus killed pigs and threw them into the masques. Whereas Muslims killed cows and buffaloes those belonged to the Hindus. In A River with Three Banks, Kumar describes the killing of an old harmless cow by a Muslim mob. The innocent cow was chewing some food in a garbage; a fanatic Muslim gang branded it as a Hindu animal and put it to death by their swords. The irrational and malevolent hooligans always had great delight in the destruction of the properties and belongings of others; and partition gave them a let out to carry their desired destructions freely. CHAPTER - V PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA 123 CHAPTER – V PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA A scar or a wound that is caused in the body will be healed sooner or later; but what is inflicted in the heart can never be cured. A person’s mental agony will always linger afresh as long as the person is alive. Partition accompanied physical butcheries, emotional turmoil, material loss and religious persecutions. People might have forgotten the physical and the material loss; even the religious atrocities might have been wiped away from their memories. But the scar that was implanted in their hearts is fresh even today. R.K.Agnihotri in his article “On a Pre-Partition Partition: The Question of Hindu-Urdu” views, “Never in the history of mankind had such a large-scale migration taken place in such a short time. What is worse is that this nightmarish experience of partition left such deep scars on the minds of Hindus and Muslims that they are nowhere close to healing even after 50 years” (29). Many of the partition novels and stories are written by the writers, who witnessed the partition holocaust with their naked eyes. The psychological turmoil that they underwent at the time of partition is the main cause for this vast creation of literature known as Partition Literature. All the partition literatures are known for their delineation of the mental and emotional anguish endured by an assortment of people. The chief concern of all the partition novelists is the mental trauma faced by millions of people during partition. All other concerns and losses find only a partial trace in the partition literatures. 124 Urvashi Butalia was a child at the time of partition. She along with her parents left West Punjab and reached Delhi because of the partition of the Indian sub-continent. Butalia, later made an evaluation between the scourges faced by the migrants during partition and the panic experienced by the Sikhs of Delhi during the 1984 anti-Sikh riots. In her article “Listening for a Change: Narratives of Partition”, she identified a number of Sikhs recalling the horrors they underwent at the time of partition. She concludes her article by stating that the partition event, “…rely heavily on people’s memories of an event, a time or a place” (141). The psychological rack experienced by millions can never be wiped off from their lives. Partition brought interminable woes in the lives of many a millions. All the Muslims who lived in India underwent the revulsion of irrational mob. Similarly all the Hindus and the Sikhs who lived in the East and the West Pakistan came to India with inconsolable sores. Among all the sufferers, women underwent the worst abuse and maltreatment at the time of partition. They were treated worse than cattle. First they were abducted, then raped, next converted forcefully and finally they were sold in the market for prostitution. The tribulations of women were many folds during the time of partition. They were physically offended, psychologically tormented and spiritually persecuted. Some women who underwent all these ordeal were later rescued by social workers and government agencies. When they were sent back to their own houses, many of the families did not admit these grieved women into their 125 own houses. Their own family members blamed them saying that they have become infected. In the article “The Repetition of Silence: Partition, Rape, and Female Labour in Bapsi Sidhwa’s Cracking India” Lopamudra Basu quotes an appeal made by Nehru through newspaper in 1946: I am told that there is an unwillingness on the part of their relatives to accept those girls and women (who have been abducted) back in their homes. This is a most objectionable and wrong attitude to take and any social custom that supports this attitude must be condemned. These girls and women require our tender and loving care and their relatives should be proud to take them back and give them every help. (8) At the proclamation of the partition, the entire frontier region was hectic with evacuation and migration work. Foot convoys were arranged in order to evacuate the people. Millions of people who had great inclination and love for their birth place were uprooted from their ancestors’ home-land to an alien land. The migrants left behind everything they cherished for years and years. The people, with whom they worked, played, laughed and shared were all shattered into different parts of India, East Pakistan (Bangladesh) and West Pakistan (Pakistan). They left their beloved places with sorrow and sadness. Ten million people were uprooted due to partition. Many agonized men and women made human cries, when they heard the word partition. Parting the loved ones was an excruciating experience. They felt that their roots were 126 completely cut off. Their lifelong relations and bonds were all gone. They lost their sense of affinity and belongingness in their own soil where they enjoyed every right. The sense of uprootedness is vividly presented in Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan. The novel was set in a village called Mano Majra. It was a typical Indian village with its own tradition and customs. There were about seventy families in that village. The Sikhs and the Muslims were about equal in number. When half of the village was forced to migrate to Pakistan, there was a great emotional explosion in the entire village. Nooran left Mano Majra for Pakistan, carrying Juggut Singh’s unborn child in her womb. She underwent immeasurable mental torment and heartache in her life due to partition. Juggut Singh became psychologically torn, when he heard the plan of attacking the train in which his beloved Norran would travel. Hukum Chand, the magistrate and deputy commissioner of the district was thrown psychologically broken, when he became aware of his powerlessness to stop the butcheries. Iqbal, a social worker was badly treated and humiliated by the police. The ill-treatment and abuse caused on him brought unfathomable woe to his heart. Hukum Chand, the magistrate and deputy commissioner of the district foresaw a great catastrophe that would fall on Mano Majra due to the outpouring number of refugees from Pakistan. The refugees, who reached Mano Majra with serious losses, began to spread the cruelties committed by the Muslims on the Sikhs and the Hindus. Their woe filled tales began to sow the 127 seeds of hatred, vengeance and venom among the fanatics of Mano Majra. Hukum Chand smelt the danger at the right moment and he immediately sent a police to the commander of the Muslim refugee camp to come at once and evacuate the Muslims of Mano Majra through trucks. The Muslim refugee commander along with a few Pakistan army men reached Mano Majra for an inspection before the actual evacuation was done. In Train to Pakistan Singh narrates the result of their coming in the following manner: “…had divided Mano Majra into two halves as neatly as a knife cuts through a pat of butter” (178). This brought the entire village under the cloud of gloom and suspicion. Despite the external threads, the bond that united the Muslims and the Sikhs was strong. Some of the Sikhs came and comforted the Muslims. They promised their help for the protection and safety of the Muslims of Mano Majra. In Singh’s Train to Pakistan, a young Sikh told the Muslims, “As long as we are here nobody will dare to touch you. We die first and then you can look after yourselves” (184). Imam Baksh, the mullah of the mosque became emotionally busted, when he heard the news that the Muslims of Mano Majra have to leave for Pakistan. He broke down with unbearable psychological and emotional ailment. He uttered the following in Singh’s Train to Pakistan: “What have we to do with Pakistan? We were born here. So were our ancestors. We have lived amongst you as brothers” (184). His outburst melted the entire gathering. 128 The Muslims could not assimilate the thought of parting their ancestral place for ever and go and settle in an alien place without any roots and establish all again everything. It was a heartbreaking experience for them to part with the place where they had their great ancestry for centuries. Even the Sikhs were tormented, when they heard that the Muslims would be soon evacuated to Pakistan. They could not think of parting their Muslim brothers with whom they had lived their entire life. Singh gives their collapsed psyche in Train to Pakistan, “Imam Baksh broke down. Meet Singh clasped him in his arms and began to sob. Several of the people started crying quietly and were blowing their noses” (184). Again Singh gives another picture of the emotional bond between the Muslims and the Sikhs in the same novel, “Sikh and Muslim villagers fell into each other’s arms and wept like children” (185). Since the Muslims of Mano Majra would be leaving for the refugee camp the following morning, no one slept that night in Mano Majra. The Muslims with their bleeding heart and untold woes kept on packing their things. Singh’s Train to Pakistan paints the saddest night that the Muslims of Mano Majra experienced in their lives: The whole village was awake. In most houses she (Nooran) could see the dim flickers of oil lamps. Some were packing; others were helping them pack. Most just talked with their friends. The women sat on the floors hugging each other and crying. It was as if in every home there had been a death (187). 129 The following morning, the Muslim refugee commander and the Pakistan soldiers reached Mano Majra to evacuate the Muslims of Mano Majra to the refugee camp in Chundunnugger and later to Pakistan by train. The Muslims were not allowed to carry all their materials; rather they were permitted only to carry a handful of things. The Muslims of Mano Majra had the palest look and the greatest mental agony when they left their loved place, people and things. Even the Sikhs took part in their pitiable departure. The eyes of the Sikhs were all fixed on the mourning Muslims till they vanished from sight. The Sikhs turned to their houses with heavy hearts. The same type of departure was experienced by ten millions of people during the time of partition. In Singh’s Train to Pakistan, Nooran, the daughter of Imam Baksh was greatly affected due to partition. She was bewildered, when her father asked her to pack the luggage in order to go to the refugee camp. She never thought that such a frightful event will ever happen in her life. She did not want to leave Mano Majra, because she carried Juggut Singh’s child in her womb. In Singh’s Train to Pakistan she shouted with dismay, “Who will throw us out? This is our village. Are the police and the government dead?” (187). Since she loved Juggut Singh so much and she wanted her child’s father to be along with, it was hard for her to go to Pakistan without him. She desperately needed Juggut Singh in her and in her child’s life. 130 The same night, when every Muslim was getting prepared to go to the refugee camp Nooran slowly crept to the house of Juggut Singh and begged hard to his mother to accept her as her daughter-in-law because Juggut Singh had promised to marry Nooran. On hearing this Juggut Singh’s mother turned wild and rash. She shouted at Nooran as pitch. Singh’s Train to Pakistan, narrates the pain filled wailing of Nooran. She fell at the feet of Juggut Singh’s mother and uttered, “Beybey, I have Jugga’s child within me. If I go to Pakistan they will kill it when they know it has a Sikh father” (189). She left Mano Majra without any hope or any life – both for herself and for her unborn child. The next prominent character, who underwent deep psychological ferocity in Singh’s Train to Pakistan was Juggut Singh. Juggut Singh was an assortment of good and bad qualities. A. G. Khan in his article “Contrastive Study of Characters in Train to Pakistan” sketches Juggut Singh as, “… robust, gay and impulsive. He bears no hatred for the policemen. He develops friendly relations with anyone he meets, be he the tonga driver or Iqbal. He always takes initiative. Fond of making jokes he is a real Sikh who can laugh at himself. He loses his temper whenever there is a remark about Nooran” (17). Like his father, he too was a budmash (a notorious criminal). But he had a devoted heart to sacrifice his life in order to shield the lives of others. It is a common fact that most of the partition writings deal with interreligious love relationship. Singh’s Train to Pakistan too paints a love affair 131 between a Sikh boy and a Muslim girl. Juggut Singh was a Sikh who was profoundly in love with a Muslim girl called Nooran. It resulted in Nooran bearing his child in her womb. The partition drew away Nooran and other Muslims to Pakistan. Juggut Singh was freed from his confinement on the very same day, when the Muslims of Mano Majra were to be taken to Pakistan by train. When Juggut Singh was released, the sub-inspector intimated him that all the Muslims of Mano Majra had left for the refugee camp and they were to go to Pakistan by a train that night. The next dreadful news that he received was the intended attack of the train that was bound for Pakistan along with his beloved Nooran. Juggut Singh turned thoroughly crushed and paralyzed at the news. The thought of Nooran and his child in her womb caused him insufferable agony. He felt a stirring and by all means determined to save the lives of his unborn child and his beloved Nooran. His mental agony and emotional anguish turned him into a saviour. The whole village knew the preplanned assault of the train by the militant Sikhs along with Malli’s gang. But none dared to thwart it – including Hukum Chand, the deputy commissioner of the district. Juggut Singh alone had the nerve to avert the train attack and he became bold because of the emotional attachment he had for Nooran. After seeking the blessings at the gurdwara at night, he instantly went to the bridge, where the militants were awaiting for their assault. He resolved to give his life in order to save Nooran. 132 He scaled up the steel span and got on the rope. Then he started to slash the rope heavily with his kirpan. The rope was tied by the militants in order to crash away all the Muslims who travelled on the roof of the train. He used all his potency to cut the rope. He was fired by the militants, but with wounds and blood, he continued the task unrelentingly. He fell on the track, when he accomplished the mission. The train went over him taking Nooran and his child safely to Pakistan. K. K. Sharma and B. K. Johri in their article “The Scenic and Naturalistic Treatment of the Theme: Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan” remark the sacrifice of Juggut Singh: “He hacked the rope vigorously. He set an example of supreme sacrifice and lay down his life for the sake of enabling the Muslims, particularly his mistress, Nooran, to reach Pakistan safely” (83). Hukum Chand is an archetypal magistrate and deputy commissioner fashioned by Singh in Train to Pakistan. He was a well balanced and an experienced bureaucrat. He had the qualities of an individual as well as a bureaucrat. He too suffered emotional crunches on three diverse occasions. His first emotional disillusionment occurred, when he realized that the messy circumstances created by the partition could not be controlled by him. Banta Singh, the lambardar of the village came to Hukum Chand to report about the intended train attack by the militants. Hukum Chand realized his helplessness to prevent the attack because the entire state of affair was in the hands of the irrational fanatics. 133 Hukum Chand’s mind was troubled, because, he could not do anything to sustain law and order in his locale. In every violence, the armed mob always outnumbered the police. The police with their limited forces could do nothing against the huge mob. Singh’s Train to Pakistan gives Hukum Chand’s emotional eruption through the following words: “What am I to do? The whole world has gone mad. Let it go mad! What does it matter if another thousand get killed? … What is a few hundred out of four hundred million anyway? An epidemic takes ten times the number and no one even bothers” (228 – 229). Hukum Chand turned so frustrated and pale, when he heard the diverse occurrence of violence that were ravaging around him. He recapitulated the death of Prem Singh. Prem Singh was his colleague. When he went to Lahore to amass his wife’s jewellery he was killed by the Muslims. Then he recalled the death of Sundari and her husband. Sundari was the daughter of Hukum Chand’s orderly. Sundari and her husband Mansa Ram went to Gujranwala after their marriage. On the way, they were caught by a Muslim gang and Mansa Ram was mercilessly butchered and Sundari was dragged away. The next death that he brooded over was the death of Sunder Singh. Sunder Singh was a valiant soldier. While he was travelling with his wife and three children to visit his estate in Sindh, the train was halted in an unfamiliar place for four days. The passengers were not allowed to get down the train. When his children cried of thirst, he gave his urine. When that too dried up, he had nothing to provide them. He could not stand their cries, so, with his own 134 pistol he killed his children and his wife. All these gruesome deaths created an internal commotion in Hukum Chand. He felt that he was lost in the world of insanity and barbarism. Haseena Begum was Hukum Chand’s sweet-heart. He used her to gratify his physical desires. But his infatuation, later turned into real affection. Though, she was the age of his lost daughter, he began to love her. She was a Muslim from Chundunnugger. When the Muslims of Chundunnugger were startled of the communal violence, she believed that Hukum Chand will save her by all means. Since the Hindus and the Sikhs designed to attack the Muslims, the total Muslim community of Chundunnugger was evacuated to the refugee camp. Haseena too was taken to the refugee camp. The Muslim refugee commander was cautioned of an attack on the refugee camp by the mob of the adjacent villages. So, he decided to take all the refugees (including the Muslims of Mano Majra) to Pakistan by train. Haseena was one among the travellers in that train. The sub-inspector informed Hukum Chand about the assault of the refugee train that was going to take place. When Hukum Chand heard this bitter news, he turned heart-broken, because, in the same train Haseena too would travel to Pakistan. He was certain that, by no means, the planned attack on the train could be prevented. He frantically wanted his Haseena to reach Pakistan securely; but he had no means to stop the huge carnage that was planned by the mob. Finally he learnt that in the same train, Juggut Singh’s beloved Nooran too travelled. So, he issued an order to 135 release Juggut Singh at once and leave him in Mano Majra itself. He was definite that Juggut Singh will do anything to save the life of Nooran. It was Juggut Singh who finally saved the life of Nooran, Haseena and thousands of others by sacrificing his life. Iqbal is yet another character who suffered grave humiliation and dishonour in Train to Pakistan. He was a communist worker sent by the People’s Party of India to the frontier to establish peace. He had come to Mano Majra in order to stop the bloodshed that was going on in the border due to partition. Many critics had branded him as a pessimistic character who lacked courage, simplicity and commitment. K. C. Belliappa in his article “The Elusive Classic: Khushwant Singh’s Train to Pakistan and Chaman Nahal’s Azadi” evaluates the character of Iqbal: “In Iqbal, we have the portrait of an ‘armchair intellectual’ who eats sardines, uses Australian butter, sleeps on an air mattress and drinks whisky from his hip flask” (64). He reached Mano Majra a day after the killing of Lala Ram Lal. But on the very next morning of his entry, he was detained. He was shamed by the police by fastening handcuffs around his wrist and taking him through the street. He did not commit any blunder but he was erroneously charged. He was accused of a Muslim Leaguer, who had come to generate trouble in the border region. Though he was a Sikh by birth, while in prison, his name was entered as Mohammed Iqbal and his religion as Islam. 136 He was debased in front of others in the police station. Singh’s Train to Pakistan states the way in which Iqbal was tormented by the sub-inspector. The sub-inspector asked him, “Why don’t you go and do your propaganda in Pakistan where you belong?” (98). The sub-inspector accused him as a Muslim and asked him to go to Pakistan. He was locked in the same cell where Juggut Singh was. He was stripped off to find out whether he was a Sikh or a Muslim. Iqbal’s frustrated soliloquy in Singh’s Train to Pakistan discloses his aggravation: “Where on earth except in India would a man’s life depend on whether or not his foreskin had been removed?” (239). When he was freed along with Juggut Singh, he was like a lifeless being. He attained a high state of disillusionment and could do nothing to avert the train attack that was deliberated by the Sikh militants. He was offended mentally and emotionally. The partition of the Indian sub-continent witnessed many enforced evacuations. The people did not desire to go to an unknown place leaving their relatives, friends and things. At the same time, there was great peril for the Muslims to remain in India and for the Sikhs and the Hindus in Pakistan. Ten million people, who migrated to unfamiliar places, had deep bangs in their hearts. Many women were kidnapped by outsiders; and those women were molested and possessed by many men. Some were forcefully converted, married and made to bear children for strangers. There was crucifixion at every moment of their lives and that agony remained with them till they died. 137 Anis Kidwai’s memoir, Azadi ki Chhan Mein (written in Urdu) contains a number of sad occurrences related to the dismal plight of women at the time of partition. In “Listening for a Change: Narratives of Partition” Urvashi Butalia has quoted a few lines from the memoir of Anis Kidwai: “In all of this sometimes a girl would be killed or she would be wounded. The ‘good-stuff’ would be shared among the police and army, and the ‘second rate stuff’ would go to everyone else and then these girls would go from one hand to another and then another and after several would turn up in hotels to grace their decor” (130). Millions of people were physically, mentally and emotionally traumatized during partition. All the partition novels and stories account the psychological wreckage faced by millions of people. Manohar Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges too has a number of incidents related to emotional outbursts and agony filled cries due to the wounds that were inflicted in their hearts. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges has multi-dimensional themes, events and viewpoints. The writer takes the readers to the entire India. Many critics have ruled A Bend in the Ganges from the list of Indo-English partition novels. Despite the crowded events and episodes, the last fifty-two pages of the novel truly appraise the horrors of partition in a thespian manner. The last three chapters of the novel entirely focus on Duriabad and its surrounding. Duriabad was on the frontier and it was completely submerged in the pool of blood. The 138 people of Duriabad had sleepless nights. Every night there was fire, arson, wailing and crying. Malgonkar presents the agonies of partition through Dewan Bahadur Tekchand and his family. August 1947 saw unpredictable amount of commotion in the entire undivided Punjab. The long awaited freedom was only a few days away, but the entire frontier region began to feast on blood. Tekchand, one of the richest men of Duriabad was shocked to see the tumultuous atmosphere of Duriabad. He had huge amount of wealth, which was earned by himself and his ancestors. He had more than a dozen servants at his beck and call, but all of them had fled away as violence engulfed the entire Duriabad. When the city burnt in violence, there were only three in his large house – Tekchand, his wife Radha and his daughter Sundari. Tekchand became wretched, as his fears began to grow. He brooded over his fifty-one years of solid labour and his profound attachment to the city. Malgonkar notes down the deep anguish articulated by Tekchand to his daughter Sundari in A Bend in the Ganges: After a lifetime spent in this part of India, in this town, and giving oneself to it and taking from it; letting one’s roots sink deeper and deeper. There is a street named after my father, a library after me, a maternity home and a girls’ school after your mother. This is my city, as much as that of its most respected Muslim families – the Abbases, the Hussains, the Chinais. I, my family, have done so much as any of them to make it prosperous and beautiful. (337) 139 He had immense emotional attachment to the city of Duriabad. Parting Duriabad was like parting his root and life. He had to shake, all that was part of his life. Malgonkar had devoted a few pages of the novel, exclusively to show the emotional sobs of Tekchand. His attachment to Duriabad was something more than mere money and property. It was something that he was habituated to, lived to, craved to and enjoyed to in his life. Tekchand gazed at his gorgeous house, its ornaments, his personal collection of bronze and the rich articles that he had accumulated for years in his house. He saw a part of his life in every possession he had. He began to moan with aching thought. He surmised that all his hard earned possessions will be looted away by others and his bungalow will be occupied by someone soon. He went into his museum, which had a vast and rich collection of statues and antiques. He was fond of every statue and always viewed them as living gods. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges reports Tekchand’s intense emotional attachment to the statues and other things in the museum through the following lines: “To him they were like living creatures; more alive than many people he knew. He felt at home in their midst, for they meant something to him – they held a message for him, a message that was the secret of his life and the next and the many lives that lay beyond” (339). Tekchand’s wife and his daughter kept on urging him to leave for India. Almost, all the Hindus and the Sikhs had left Duriabad, except a few. Even those who were in Duriabad were packing to leave at the earliest. He sobbed 140 and mourned whenever he thought of parting Duriabad. The thought of his son, Debi-dayal often came to his mind. He had not seen him for the last eight years. He wished that his son was with him. If Debi was with him, he would have brought some relief to the family. He longed for Debi’s presence. Gian reached his house like a saviour in order to rescue them safely to India. Tekchand yielded to the petition of his family and agreed to leave Duriabad. When they were about to unhouse, Shafi along with three other men came to Tekchand’s house in order to ransack the things and take away Sundari. There was a tussle between Shafi’s group and Tekchand’s family. At the end, Shafi killed Tekchand’s wife with his revolver. Sundari took an idol of Shiva and started beating Shafi. She gave blow after blow until he died. Gian urged Tekchand and Sundari to get at once into the car to join the convoy that had already left for India. Tekchand left his dead wife in the house itself and left Duriabad with indescribable agony. He could not pull himself with a burdened heart. He cried and wailed throughout the journey. He kept on murmuring at the loss of his wife. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges presents Tekchand’s desolation that he told to Sundari: “I have left your mother all alone. She would never have left me … I am running away from it. Leaving my wife alone – just lying in that room” (380). After a short halt on the way, the convoy resumed its journey. Tekchand sunk with sorrow, could not continue his journey. He got lost on the way. Gian and Sundari continued their journey leaving Tekchand. Where did Tekchand go? Did he reach India or remained in 141 Pakistan? Was he alive or dead? Though the author does not provide answer to these questions, the readers can clearly conjecture the fate of Tekchand. The next prey in Tekchand’s family was his only son Debi-dayal. Debi who was away from his family for the last eight years, yearned to join his family in Duriabad. He was certain of the vulnerabilities both for himself and for his parents. He wanted to help his parents and sister from the communal violence that engulfed in the region. The entire Punjab was in doom and disaster. Maddened mob were found everywhere with spears and guns. All the trains those plied between India and Pakistan were packed full – even the roof tops were crowded. In A Bend in the Ganges, Malgonkar accounts the condition of the bleeding Punjab: “A week ago, they had all been citizens of India; men and women jubilant at the advent of the long-awaited, long-foughtfor freedom. Today they were just a small section of seething movement of humanity” (345). The trains were stopped at many places. People who travelled in trains suffered a lot without water, food, light and safety. Trains were attacked by armed mob every now and then. Debi and Mumtaz got into one such a train to reach Duriabad. There was panic and fear in the face of every traveller. The train was stopped a few miles away from Duriabad; and the travellers were asked to walk up to the next station. All of a sudden, a mob gathered on both the sides of the track. They had axes, swords and shotguns. They hunted for Hindus among the travellers and killed them mercilessly. Finally their 142 suspicion fell on Debi. Debi’s wife Mumtaz pleaded that he was her husband and his name was Karim Khan. The mob removed off his dress and found that he was a Hindu. Some men dragged away Mumtaz naked and others pierced their knives on Debi. Helpless Mumtaz screamed pathetically at the sight. Malgonkar’s A Bend in the Ganges portrays the physical and emotional aspects of partition through Tekchand and his family. Tekchand, his wife Radha, his daughter Sundari and his son Debi endured immense emotional turmoil due to partition. They experienced agony after agony before they were completely destroyed. Only Sundari was able to reach India with a broken heart – leaving all her family members dead in the newly created Pakistan. Through Tekchand, Malgonkar voices the psychological trauma suffered by millions of people at the wake of partition violence. Psychologically, partition brought a huge human crack among the people. Human bonds like the ties of love, fellowship and brotherhood were utterly lost in the tumult of partition. The entire frontier wore a heartbreaking look. There were whimpers everywhere. People who had their deep emotional attachment to their land, home, friends, animals and property were driven away from their natives and were forced to seek shelter hither and thither. Long established communities were shattered and lost their uniqueness and identity beyond redemption. Chaman Nahal’s Azadi discloses the unpalatable human suffering endured by the people of the frontier region at the time of partition. Azadi has 143 been acclaimed as one of the best novels on the theme of partition. It faithfully documents the physical, mental and emotional agonies of the Hindus, the Sikhs and the Muslims. Nahal expresses the anguished state of millions of migrants through Lala Kanshi Ram and his neighbours. Nahal has woven a true picture of partition in Azadi. Like Lala Kanshi Ram, the protagonist of the novel; Nahal and his family migrated from Sialkot to Delhi in 1947. Nahal and the other migrants were as desperate as Lala Kanshi Ram. S.C. Singh’s article, “Chaman Nahal’s Azadi: An Appraisal” records one of interviews given by Nahal about his state of mind at the time of partition: “Many of us…were angry young men who had lost everything in Pakistan, including the dear ones who were assassinated in the riots” (2). Lala Kanshi Ram and his neighbours encountered many ordeals and psychological distress because of partition. His shop was looted by the Muslims; he and his neighbours were forced to leave their houses and seek shelter in the refugee camp; his daughter and son-in-law were killed; he suffered a lot during the migration; and he underwent humiliation and suffering to find a living in Delhi. His son Arun too had emotional shocks and sufferings. All his neighbours – Bibi Amar Vati, Suraj Prakash, Sunanda, Niranjan Singh, Isher Kaur, Sardar Jodha Singh, Padmini, Chandini and Mukanda’s mother had intolerable emotional crunches in their heart. Communal revulsion began to shake Sialkot as soon as the Viceroy Lord Mountbatten made his pronouncement of the partition of the Indian sub- 144 continent. The partition proclamation disillusioned the Hindus and the Sikhs of Sialkot. They were sure that the Muslims will not spare their lives. Many Hindu and Sikh families began to vacate their houses. The Muslims of Sialkot began to loot and set fire to the houses and properties of the Hindus and the Muslims. Since the atrocities increased day by day, the Hindus and the Sikhs of Sialkot were evacuated to a refugee camp. Lala Kanshi Ram could not sleep for several days. He heard pathetic human cries every night. He brooded over the future and the safety of his family. A gang of Muslims looted his grain shop, which fulfilled the economic requirements of his family. Lala Kanshi Ram was inconsolable at the loss of his shop. As he was grieving, his friend Chaudhri Barkat Ali, informed him of the impending attack on their mohalla that night by the Muslims. The entire mohalla, which enclosed the families of Hindus and Sikhs had only six hours to evacuate their houses. There was an enormous commotion in the entire mohalla. There were weeping and wailing at the thought of parting their beloved place. They were not sure whether they would be back to posses their belongings and houses. Every house was busy packing their things to reach the refugee camp. Lala Kanshi Ram’s face turned pale at the thought of leaving the house. He felt that he was going to lose all that he earned for thirty years through hard work. At the age of fifty, it was hard for him to earn the lost fortunes once again. He could not even extract his cash from the bank, due to the short span of time that was available. The thought of 145 going to a refugee camp killed him alive. Nahal points out the emotional outburst of Lala Kanshi Ram in Azadi: “I was born around here, this is my home – how can I be a refugee in my own town?” (130). Tears began to role in his eyes when his hand moved on the walls of the house. As his wife packed the things, he felt that he was stripped bare like the house. They filled only a steel trunk and a bedroll. All the other things were left in the house itself. In Azadi Nahal records the emotional rage showed by Lala Kanshi Ram to Bill Davidson, a British officer who came to help them: “All that I had – all that I had taken nearly thirty years to build is being lost because you refuse to protect me” (147). He wanted to come back and die and be buried in Sialkot. The entire edifice in which they lived for many decades looked like a phantom house when the people left for the refugee camp. Each one longed to occupy their houses once again and live there till they died. They had the saddest departure in their lives. Everyone had burdened heart to leave the houses in which they were born and brought up. Finally they all reached the refugee camp. They were given small tents to live. Sometimes two or three families shared a lone tent. Life in the camp was distressing and pathetic. They were provided a bare minimum of ration. As the communal violence was turning from bad to worse, there was a heavy flow of refugees on both the sides of the border. They waited for the Indian escort to take them safely to India. Lala Kanshi Ram’s hope of returning back to Sialkot became futile. 146 The subsequent shock that shattered Lala Kanshi Ram was the butchery of his daughter Madhu Bala and his son-in-law Rajiv. They were killed by Muslim hooligans while they were travelling from Wazirabad to Sialkot to join Lala Kanshi Ram’s family. The entire family stood in tears at this terrific incident. All the people tried to console them. The brutal death of Madhu Bala and her husband was one of the greatest losses that the family suffered. The death of Madhu made Lala Kanshi Ram to leave for India at the earliest. On twenty-fourth September, 1947 the convoy containing twenty thousand migrants left Sialkot. It was escorted by Indian soldiers. Chaudhri Barkat Ali and his son Munir reached the camp to bid farewell to Lala Kanshi Ram and his family. It was a pathetic moment for the entire camp to leave Sialkot forever in their lives. Nahal’s Azadi illustrates the shattered emotional state of Lala Kanshi Ram: “As the city vanished from his sight, he became more concerned about what lay ahead. The problems that loomed in the future were a thousand fold more complex and bewildering than what he had gone through” (274). Chaudhri Barkat Ali and his son Munir walked with them for six miles. Finally, the lifelong friends – Lala Kanshi Ram and Chaudhri Barkat Ali parted in two different directions for two different nations with the hope that they would at least meet once in their life time. The convoy suffered a number of horrors on the way. Often it was ambushed by gangs of Muslims. A number of women were seized during the exodus. Sunanda was raped and her husband was killed. The abducted women 147 were humiliated and spitted upon. They were insulted by making them to parade naked in the streets. When the convoy reached India, the people were emotionally empty. They could not rejoice their arrival. Everyone’s hearts was filled with sorrows and sufferings. After reaching India, the convoy parted in different directions to find out their own living. In the article “Curate’s Egg: Chaman Nahal’s Azadi” Parvati N Rao surveys, “Tired and worn out, the batch of travellers arrive in India and have a sigh of relief. But this is the end of one trouble for them and the beginning of another” (49). Lala Kanshi Ram and his family along with Sunanda’s family decided to go to Delhi. Delhi was pouring with refugees. The refugee officials notified that there were about six hundred thousand Hindu and Sikh refugees in Delhi alone. A number of refugee camps were set up in Delhi to accommodate the Hindu and the Sikh migrants from Pakistan and to transport the Muslim refugees securely to Pakistan. Lala Kanshi Ram, losing all his pride and shame pleaded to the rehabilitation officials to grant him some shelter in Delhi. In Azadi, Nahal recounts the emotional outpouring of Lala Kanshi Ram to the officials: “Sir, I’ll be ruined if you don’t come to my rescue. I only want a small flat and a small little shop to be allotted to me” (342). Finally, they were given a small brick hutment in Kingsway Camp, where they started their lives again after a huge loss and emotional scares. Lala Kanshi Ram setup a small petty shop in front of his hutment and Sunanda started earning by sewing clothes. 148 Lala Kanshi Ram’s son Arun Kumar and Isher Kaur’s Husband Niranjan Singh were part of the millions who faced emotional disaster due to partition. Arun, who was in love with Nurul Nisar, the daughter of Chaudhri Barkat Ali was utterly shattered when he left Sialkot. He promised Nur that he would even embrace Islam for her sake; but the thought of his aged parents and their resettlement in India made him to leave Sialkot. He still had the hope that one day he would come back to marry Nur. When Arun along with his family left the refugee camp, Munir brought a love letter written by Nur. It was filled with her tears. Nahal’s Azadi describes the broken heart of Nur through her letter: “I’m weeping when I write this to you… will I ever see you again? God alone knows why people are so full of hate. I wish they were not to part souls that love each other” (266). The parting of lovers caused suffering, both for Arun and Nur. Arun left Sialkot with a wounded heart. The next excruciating shock to Arun came through the death of his sister Madhu Bala. Madhu was like a friend to Arun, who taught him the behaviours of adulthood. The death of Madhu and her husband caused a vacuum in his heart. He, along with Chaudhri Barkat Ali, Munir and others set to find out the dead bodies of Madhu and Rajiv. But their bodies had been put into fire, before they reached Nizamabad, where the massacre took place. He vainly searched for Madhu’s dead body among the burning corpses; but he could not identify Madhu’s dead body among the burning corpses. He sadly returned to the camp. 149 The thought of his beloved Nur and his sister Madhu ached his heart. In order to reroute himself from his emotional disaster, he began to love Chandini, the daughter of Padmini. He often met her in the nights and conveyed his love for her. He wanted to marry her and he openly expressed his craving to his mother of his proposed marriage with Chandini after they reached India. The next great tragedy came to Arun at Narowal. The refugee convoy halted at Narowal, before it headed for its last phase. On the third day of their stay at Narowal, a massive unexpected attack took place on the refugee camp. It was done by the local Muslims with the help of Pakistan soldiers. The ambush left hundreds of people dead and a large number of women were abducted. Sunanda was raped and her husband Suraj Prakash was killed. Arun’s beloved Chandini was carried away by the Muslims. Arun could not bear the loss of Chandini. Nahal shows his disillusioned state in the following manner in Azadi: “Chandini had come his second self. She moved with him, ate with him, went to sleep with him. Only she ever remained a little apart. And he ached so because he couldn’t shorten that distance” (365). With three disasters – the death of Madhu and the loss of Nur and Chandini, Arun reached India completely beaten up with incalculable woes in his heart. The humiliations underwent by Niranjan Singh was different. The Sikhs always had their highest preference for their religion. They considered their religious duties as the first and foremost ones. Since their beard and head clearly exposed their religion they were easily spotted and killed. His wife, 150 father-in-law and his friends and relatives requested him to shave off his hair for his safe journey to India. He had unbearable mental agony to part off his hair and his Sikh faith. He was tormented for many days. Finally, he immolated himself rather than losing his faith. For Niranjan faith was more important than mere living. His death brought a deep doom to his entire family. Nahal’s Azadi discloses the pandemonium that was spread in the frontier region at the time of partition. The bitter disheartenment of millions of innocent people is powerfully presented through a small community of Sialkot migrants. S. C. Bhatia in his review of Azadi indicates, “Chaman Nahal’s Azadi is a powerful portrayal of an individual’s torment caused by the workings of certain historical forces. It is in response to these forces that the individual consciousness grows from an obsession with the self to an appreciation of a larger consciousness” (229). Unlike the historical account of partition, the literary aspects of partition have a lot to speak about the emotional and mental trauma faced by millions of people on both the sides of the Radcliffe line. Shiv K Kumar’s A River with Three Banks was published in 1998. Kumar was one among the millions who came to India from Pakistan in 1947. He took nearly fifty years to articulate his uprooted status. He aptly begins the novel with a quotation taken from the book of Jeremiah: “Woe is me because of my hurt! My wound is grievous.” The novel presents a fine love story between Gautam Mehta and Haseena amidst the tensed days of partition. Kumar movingly narrates the 151 ordeals faced by people in the communal frenzy erupted due to partition. Abdul Rahim’s pitiable search for his lost daughter and his cold-blooded murder, Haseena’s torn life in the brothel, the suffering of guiltless abducted girls, innocent people’s painful plight, the uprooted life of Haseena’s mother and sister and the huge migration of the wretched Muslims to Pakistan are vibrantly presented in this novel. Since Kumar’s A River with Three Banks is set in Delhi, Allahabad and its surrounding it records the pain and turmoil experienced by the Muslims, at the same time the writer makes some passing references to crimes committed by Muslim mob against the blameless Hindus. Abdul Rahim was an innocent Muslim of Allahabad. His daughter Haseena was carried away to Delhi by some pimps. He came to Delhi in search of his daughter. In Delhi he underwent a lot of suffering. He often hid himself from the searching eyes of the Hindu fanatics. The account of a Muslim shopkeeper about the abducted girls shocked and terrified Abdul Rahim. In A River with Three Banks, Kumar gives the content of the letter written by Abdul Rahim to his wife Sultana Begum: This morning I talked to a Muslim shopkeeper in Urdu Bazaar, near Jama Masjid. I was shocked to learn that most of the girls abducted from Allahabad, Lucknow and Patna have been brought to Delhi, where they are forced into prostitution. O Allah! And, in this nefarious business, both Hindus and Muslims are operating as close accomplices. I shudder to think of our dear child. (10) 152 Abdul Rahim’s letter clearly shows the mental agony he experienced due to his daughter’s abduction. As a father, it was heart-breaking for him to know that his daughter was forced into prostitution. He did not know the way to save his daughter from the abductors. He feared to go out with beard, because it revealed his Muslim identity. Though a Muslim shopkeeper promised to help him to salvage his daughter through a heavy ransom, Abdul Rahim was not sure of his daughter’s living. As he was madly wandering in search of his daughter, a hysterical mob caught him in front of a church and cruelly murdered him. The woes underwent by Haseena were manyfolded. She was a college student. When she went to college, she was carried away by a pimp from Allahabad to Delhi and she was forced into prostitution. She suffered awfully, whenever a man touched her in the brothel. She was emotionally wrecked for two reasons – the first was her shameful life in the brothel; and the second was the murder of her beloved father. Kumar’s A River with Three Banks notes her terrific feelings shared to Gautam about her life in the brothel: “You took the trouble of writing to my mother. That was very gracious of you. The news would shatter her, I know, but still…And here I am in Delhi – abused, humiliated – and now so brazened to any sense of shame” (79). Gautam with great difficulty rescued her from the brothel and safely left her in her house in Allahabad. Their life slowly bloomed into love. Haseena truly loved Gautam, she often regretted that she could not come to Gautam as a virgin. 153 Women were the worst victims of partition tragedy. They were physically afflicted and mentally humiliated. A River with Three Banks gives a few events which detail the torments endured by women. A boy and a girl, who were going to see their ailing mother was caught by a Muslim gang. They stripped off all the clothes of the girl and publicly exposed her nudity. The timely arrival of the police saved her from any further ill-treatment and humiliation. The mortification faced by young innocent girls in a prostitution house near hotel Neel Kamal was heart-melting. A large number of young girls, who were abducted in India and Pakistan were brought to Delhi and were forced into prostitution. Those who refused were physically tortured with fire and beatings. Based on the information given by Gautam, The police raided the brothel. The police shot Sulieiman Ghani, the leader of the brothel and rescued all the girls from the death cells. The excitement of the freed girls was beyond words. Kumar’s A River with Three Banks observes their happiness: “Like a flock of caged birds, suddenly set free, they fluttered about the courtyard, happy and excited” (180). William Thornton, the police officer who rescued them promised that they all would be taken safely to their homes soon. Haseena’s family had gruesome memories of the partition. Her family was almost devastated and uprooted without any identity. The first bang to the family came in the form of Haseena’s abduction and her being forced into prostitution. The second blow came in the form of her father’s horrid murder. 154 The third shock was the sad departure of Haseena’s Mother Sultana Begum and her sister Salma to an unknown destination in Pakistan. They decided to leave Allahabad, because they were scared that Salma may be abducted like Haseena. They felt that their life was safer in Pakistan than in India. Though, Haseena was secure under the care of Gautam, she lost all her roots. Haseena and Gautam accompanied, Sultana begum and Salma till the international border to bid farewell to them. Kumar’s A River with Three Banks gives Sultana Begum’s tear-filled parting words: “God willing, we’ll meet again” (213). The railway stations were full of refugees and there were many volunteers to help them. Those volunteers were able to nurse only their physical wounds but not their emotional and psychological anguishes and agonies. As Gautam and Haseena stood watching the fading figures of Sultana Begum and Salma, they saw a large number of people pouring into Pakistan. They were all tired and poignant. Every face had a painful woe to narrate. Their only properties were either a handbag or a suitcase. Tears welled up in their eyes when they left their last foot impression from the country where they were born and grew up. CHAPTER - VI CONCLUSION 155 CHAPTER – VI CONCLUSION The partition of the Indian sub-continent is an inerasable incident in the history of modern world. The partition had varied facets in it – political, religious, economical, social, physical, psychological and emotional. The partition came in the company of joy and sorrow. The freedom of India and the birth of a new nation called Pakistan brought joy and celebration; but the economical, physical, religious, psychological and emotional agonies experienced by ten million people were the saddest occurrences in human history. There were between five hundred thousand to one million deaths during the massive population switch over. The 27th October 1947 issue of Time magazine in its cover page carried a self-hurting goddess Kali with the caption “India: Liberty and Death”. A freedom won through non-violence had sadistic partition killing even the victor of non-violence, Mahatma Gandhi. The bangs and horrors experienced by the partition fatalities are still fresh in many hearts. They could not come to terms with the agonies that deformed them. The boundary division based on religion brought pitiable life for several millions. The division of the Indian sub-continent resulted in allocation of a number of things among the two nations. The partition accord clearly stated the division of Indian government resources between Pakistan and India. They included; the division of Indian Civil Service, the Indian 156 Army, the Royal Indian Navy, The Indian railways, the central treasury and other administrative services. The chief component of the partition was the geographical separation of the Indian sub-continent into the Domain of Pakistan (Pakistan) and the Union of India (India). The Bengal Province was divided into East Bengal and West Bengal and was given to Pakistan and India respectively. The Punjab Province was divided into East Punjab and West Punjab. East Punjab was added to India and West Punjab with Pakistan. After the partition, all the princely states were incorporated either with Pakistan or with India. A cloud of enmity and distrust began to surround the two nations after partition. People who lived for many centuries as brothers and sisters in a single nation turned into sworn enemies due to partition. The first of their conflict began immediately after partition in the form of Indo-Pakistan war of 1947. A number of wars, conflicts, terrorist activities, allegations between India and Pakistan have continued since then. The mutual hostility between the two nations is intensely expressed in the cricket matches played between the two nations. No other cricket match draws such an attention like that of a match between India and Pakistan. These matches pull a large crowd apart from huge betting. The cricket rivalry between India and Pakistan is one of the most tensed sports rivalries in the world. The losses of their team have resulted in a number of suicides among the fans. It is observed that an India-Pakistan cricket match 157 attracts nearly three hundred million television viewers. Cricket players like Amir Elahi, Gul Mohammad and Abdul Hafeez Kardar have played cricket matches both for India and Pakistan. They migrated to Pakistan only after a few years of the partition. The present Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh invited his Pakistan counterpart Yosuf Raza Gilani for the World Cup semifinal cricket match that was played between India and Pakistan on March 30, 2011 in Mohali. The fright and shock created by partition still continue to exist between India and Pakistan resulting in a number of untoward incidents. The boundary line between India and Pakistan always remains tensed. The cross-border terrorism has brought menacing experience to the people. Large number of unreceptive incidents have taken place within India among Hindus and Muslims. Tension surmounts the entire atmosphere, whenever a religious festival is celebrated either by the Hindus or by the Muslims. The partition riots and killings created a psychological hostility between the two nations. The politicians and the people of both the nations began to look at each other as rivals. The issue of Kashmir still remains an unsettled event. Three wars were fought between Pakistan and India over Jammu and Kashmir. The first Indo-Pakistan War took place in 1947. It was fought between Pakistani backed tribal-army and Indian troops over the annexation of Kashmir with Pakistan. The second Indo-Pakistan war took place in 1965. It was fought by India to stop the Pakistan-backed guerrillas from invading 158 Indian administered Kashmir. The third Indo-Pakistan war took place in 1971. This war helped the formation of another new nation called Bangladesh. The Kargil war that took place in 1999 was a minor one. The Indian army chased away the Pakistani troops and Kashmiri insurgents who infiltrated the Indian administered Kashmir during winter. There were also a few nuclear clashes between India and Pakistan. Pokhran-I known as Smiling Buddha was detonated by India on May 18, 1974. To give a reply to India’s nuclear test, Pakistan conducted a series of twentyfour different tests known as Kirana-I. India’s the second nuclear test PokhranII (Operation Shakti) was conducted on May 11, 1998. In order to reciprocate India, Pakistan conducted another two tests – Chagai-I on May 28, 1998 and Chagai-II on May 30, 1998. The cross-border terrorism raised by Pakistan led to a number of bombings, violence, riots and clashes between Hindus and Muslims in India. Among the perennial riots, the demolition of Babir Masjid created a prolonged violence and stress in many parts of India. The sixteenth century mosque of Babri Masjid in Ayodhya was demolished by Hindu Karsevaks on December 6, 1992. The demolition led to several months of inter-communal rioting between the Hindus and the Muslims of India. Over two thousand people were killed and in Mumbai alone properties worth nine thousand crore rupees were destroyed. The Muslims carried retaliatory attacks on the Hindus in Pakistan, Bangladesh and in many other Muslim countries. The students of Quaid-i- 159 Azam University, Islamabad called for holy war against the Hindus. In Bangladesh, the Muslim mobs attacked the Hindu temples, shops and houses. The demolition of Babri Masjid led to a number of consequent violence which created a hostile ambiance between the Hindus and the Muslims. Many bombings were carried out in Mumbai in retaliation for the enormous Muslim casualties of the Babri Masjid demolition riots. All the explosions in Mumbai were believed to have been executed by the terrorists trained and supported by Pakistan. The first of its type was the bombing of Mumbai on March 12, 1993. A series of thirteen bombs were exploded under the mastermind of Dawood Ibrahim. It left two hundred and fifty dead and seven hundred wounded. Most of those bombers were tutored in Pakistan and in Dubai. Another bomb was exploded on December 6, 2002 in Mumbai to mark the tenth anniversary of Babri Masjid demolition. On August 25, 2003 twin car bombing rocked Mumbai. It left fifty-four dead and two hundred and forty-four wounded. There was another bomb attack in Mumbai on July 7, 2006. Bombs were planted in trains. In the explosion two hundred and nine were killed and seven hundred were injured. As reported by the Mumbai police, this explosion was carried out by Lashker-e-Toiba and Students’ Islamic Movement of India (SIMI). Another terrific attack on Mumbai fell on November 26, 2008. It is often referred as 26/11. It was carried out by Islamic terrorists, who came from Pakistan through sea route to Mumbai. The attackers began their operation on November 26, 2008 and it lasted until November 29, 2008. The attackers 160 targeted eight places. Ajmal Kasab was the only attacker who was captured alive. He later confessed that the attack was operated with the support of Pakistan’s ISI. This attack left one hundred and sixty-four dead and three hundred and eight wounded. The next detonation took place on July13, 2011. In this attack a series of three coordinated bombs were exploded in Mumbai. It killed twenty-six people and injured hundred and thirty. The state of Gujarat was marred by a series of riots and violence between the Hindus and the Muslims in 2002. The Sabarmati Express train, which came from Ayodhya with Hindu pilgrims was attacked and burnt by a large Muslim mob at Godhra. In this pre-planned attack, fifty-eight pilgrims were killed. The angered Hindus started their retaliatory attacks on the Muslims. Communal violence and riots engulfed the entire state. This tragedy left seven hundred and ninety Muslims and two hundred and fifty-four Hindus dead and two hundred and twenty-three were reported missing. A vast damage was done to houses, shops and places of worship. The tension and panic that prevails between India and Pakistan and also between the Hindus and the Muslims of India is as old as partition itself. The seeds of vengeance, hatred and hooliganism were sowed at the time of partition and it still continues in varied forms between India and Pakistan. The intrusion of terrorists into Jammu and Kashmir creates persistent disturbance and disorder in the valley. Despite the continued bilateral talks between India and 161 Pakistan, tension between the two countries continues to remain a great concern. The psychic wounds created by partition still haunt its victims. Their wounded souls were voiced in the form of paintings, songs, poems, films, stories, memoirs and novels. The genre known as Indian partition literature keeps on growing with new additions every now and then. This research study is focused only on four select novels written on the theme of partition. Each of these novels was written with the gap of around ten years. Three of these novels were written by authors who were the real victims of partition holocaust. Kushwant Singh, Chaman Nahal and Shiv K Kumar were born and educated in Pakistan. They along with their families migrated to India in 1947, due to the partition of the Indian sub-continent. They witnessed the horrors and heard the cries of pain with their own eyes and ears. They eyewitnessed the massacre of their friends and family members. These three writers were part of the ten million who ran away towards new destinations with uncountable sufferings. Manohar Malgonkar was an army officer, who eye witnessed the horrors of partition. These four authors have recreated what they went through in their lives in a magnificent manner through their novels. Prafulla C. Kar’s article “Khushwant Singh: Train to Pakistan” remarks, “Some novelists, who actually suffered due to partition, have used the incident as aesthetic compensation for their loss; those who did 162 not suffer have used the occasion as a watershed in history to suggest that fiction can re-live the event which history tends to distort” (90). Khushwant Singh was born in Hadali (now in Pakistan) in 1915. After his education in Lahore, Delhi and London, he started practicing law in Lahore. His career was cut short due to the partition. He along with his family left all the belongings and properties in Lahore itself and migrated to India. Nine years after the holocaust, in 1956 he published Train to Pakistan. N. Radhakrishnan notes the view of Singh in his article “Partition”: “…I think it (Train to Pakistan) is a documentary of the partition of India, an extremely tragic event which hurt me very much. I had no animosity against either Muslims or the Pakistanis but I felt that I should do something to express that point of view” (43). Train to Pakistan was the first novel written on the theme of partition by an Indian in English. It received high acclaim and appreciation from every quarter. It is set in an archetypal Indian village called Mano Majra. The novel has a fine merge of characters – officials, ordinary people, a political worker, some rationalist and goons. Juggut Singh, the protagonist of the novel is a blend of a hero and a villain. The names created by Singh are suggestive and have got allegorical significance. ‘Imam’ means religious, ‘Meet’ means affectionate, ‘Iqbal’ means fortune, ‘Hukum’ means order, ‘Nooran’ means luster and ‘Haseena’ means beautiful. 163 Singh’s Train to Pakistan does not aim to give a mere picture of partition horrors but it is concerned with humanity. He wants people to realize the mistakes of partition and not to replicate such a mistake again. In the preface to Train to Pakistan, Singh writes, “The only conclusion that we can draw from the experience of the partition in 1947 is that such things must never happen again. And the only way to prevent their recurrence is to promote closer integration of people of different races, religions and castes living in the subcontinent” (xvv). He is objective in his approach and does not blindly charge any sect. He has given a dramatic closing to the novel. Suja Alexander’s article “Personal Concerns Go Public in Khushwant Singh’s – Train to Pakistan” applauds by saying, “Train to Pakistan is a nightmare with an exciting finish; one closes the novel with a sense of relief. A novel unbeatable in its extraordinary power and unrelenting realism” (50). Parting a beloved person or a thing or a place will cause a great woe in the heart. Manohar Malgonkar evokes the agonies faced by Tekchand and his family members through their forced parting in A Bend in the Ganges. Malgonkar who saw the pathetic plight of millions of partition victims, has clearly voiced his anguish through this novel. Since, Malgonkar had experience in diverse fields; he could easily spin a fine story. Unlike the other partition novels, A Bend in the Ganges slowly rises to the tension of partition. The characters of the novel are commonplace and down to earth. They have their own ups and downs; and fortunes and misfortunes. Some become good and 164 some others turn bad in the course of their lives. M. Rajagopalachary’s article “Malgonkar’s Idea of Novel” surveys, “…, the characters emerge in flesh and blood, asserting their identity in their interaction with events” (115). Malgonkar’s sense of history and the way he handles it are highly lauded by all. He is known for creating suspense and making the readers to grip in his stories. The novel focuses on two important issues in the history of India. The first is the ousting of the British from the Indian soil and the second is the communal toxin that seeped into fanatics leaving a great holocaust at the time of partition. A Bend in the Ganges stands as a masterpiece chronicling the forgotten humanity during the partition of the Indian sub-continent. Chaman Nahal was born and brought up in Sialkot (now in Pakistan). He had great attachment to the city of Sialkot. The partition uprooted and forced him to flee from Pakistan to India. He was one among the millions of wretched men who reached India with bitter experiences. His sorrow soaked heart is rendered in the form of Azadi. He uses the title Azadi (freedom) in an ironic way. His characters did not celebrate freedom but mourned on the day of freedom. Though he left Sialkot in 1947 as an angry young man, he slowly developed his mental maturity. Azadi was written in 1975 – nearly after twenty-eight years of his migration. It does not reveal the author’s whims and fancies anywhere. He shows his national and humanistic concerns throughout the novel. 165 The humiliations and horrors of partition are graphically woven by Nahal. No other Indian author has shown such perfection in their narration. He does not deviate and confuse the readers. The death of Madhu, the suicide of Niranjan Singh, abduction of numerous women during the migration and the naked parade of Narowal linger in the minds of the readers for a long time. Even the love between Arun and Nur is passionate and realistic. The friendship between Lala Kanshi Ram and Chaudhri Barkat Ali shows the power of true relationship. O. P. Mathur in his article “Chaman Nahal” quotes Nahal’s words of hope: “I don’t have a commitment with a slant. I am only committed to the affirmation of life. Life consists in taking on the challenges. I’m essentially an affirmationist” (96). Shiv K Kumar’s A River with Three Banks was published in 1998. The novel consists of agony and ecstasy. The agony he depicts is the uprooted feeling he and his family witnessed in their native soil – Pakistan at the time of partition. The ecstasy is his finding a new root in India. He was a victim of partition, who waited nearly fifty one years to share his anguished heart. His novel probes the maddened atmosphere of partition in Delhi and Allahabad. He believes that meaninglessness of life was the outcome of lack of love and understanding. So, his novel carries a faithful love story to spread the message of love and compassion that was missing at the time of partition. The novel has many good Samaritans go risked their lives to save the lives of others. Kumar wrote A River with Three Banks with a clear vision. He echoes his vision 166 through Gautam in the novel: “Yes, we’ll start a new race – sans caste, sans religion, sans nationality” (214). The novel is poetic, romantic and evocative. It does not show any single speck of dirt on any particular community or religion. Kumar sees a ray of hope from the tumultuous days of partition. S. Robert Gnanamony in his work Literary Polyrhythms: New voices in New Writings in English observes the message of the novel: “…put into practice the Gandhian demand to seek love in hatred, peace in the midst of turmoil, light in darkness and hope in despair” (29). All the partition works aim to renew universal brotherhood, unify the broken souls and wish that no such malevolence should ever touch humanity in future. The partition of the Indian sub-continent is an ineffaceable event in the history of modern world. It greatly affected the fate of three nations – India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. The partition shock has found a strong footing in the literatures of all the three nations. This enormous creation of partition literature has a fine prospect for the researchers who aspire to make their future study. Since Punjab suffered the worst, a good number of Punjabi writers have written novels and poems on the theme of partition. They include Khushwant Singh, Raj Gill, H.S. Gill, Amrita Pritam, Gurcharan Das and so on. Research on the Punjabis’ experience of partition could be worth studying. Similarly many Bengali writers (East and West Bengal) have voiced their wounded emotions through their writings. Studies can be done on the Bengalis’ experience of partition. 167 The physical and mental trauma underwent by women at the time of partition was heart-rending. The partition experience of women could be a fine subject for future research. Similarly, a number of women writers like, Padmini Sengupta, Attia Hosain, Anita Desai, Amrita Pritam and so on have written excellent literary works on partition. Women writers’ perspectives of partition can be analysed through their novels. Saadat Hasan Manto, Ismat Chughtai and Qurratulain Hyder are some of the eminent Urdu writers who wrote on partition. Their works too can be explored for study. Pakistani writers’ approach to partition could be discovered through the works of Bapsi Sidhwa, Mahmud Sipra and others. Partition – a division based on religion has created enough disputes and troubles among the South Asian countries. The communal riots and massacres of partition days are often repeated in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. All the writers who wrote on partition had only one vision. They had a clear visualization that such barbaric times should never be repeated in the history. Despite the violence and the horror, all the writers reveal inter communal love to show humanism and affirmative vision. In Train to Pakistan a Sikh boy falls in love with a Muslim girl; in A Bend in the Ganges a Hindu boy loves a Muslim girl; in Azadi a Muslim girl and a Hindu boy are in passionate love with each other and in A River with Three Banks a Hindu boy rescues an abducted Muslim girl and finally marries her. Pramod Kapoor’s preface to Singh’s Train to Pakistan gives the intention of the novel: “This book (Train to 168 Pakistan), … is an exercise in perpetuating the memory of those perished and a lesson for future generations to prevent a recurrence of this tragic chapter in our history” (xiii). WORKS CITED 169 WORKS CITED After Partition. 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