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Firestorm In Punjab : Rawalpindi, Colonial Rule And The Mayhem Of Partition
- Writer: Misbah Umar
- Category: English
- Pages: 244
- Stock: In Stock
- Model: STP-15528
Rs.3,500
Rs.4,490
The partition of India in 1947 was marked by brutal violence and mass
migration, with Punjab at its epicentre. The Rawalpindi division
experienced an early and brutal eruption of violence in the month of
March. The “Rawalpindi massacre,” with killings, arson, looting, and
violence-induced migration as prevalent forms of violence against Sikhs
and Hindus, constitutes a crucial yet unexplored chapter in partition
studies, as it significantly shaped the subsequent political and
communal landscape of the Punjab. By examining the socio-political
organisation of the Rawalpindi division, including the role of
rural-military elites as British allies in providing military manpower
and maintaining local authority, this research demonstrates how the
dissolution of the link between the state and these rural-military
elites contributed to the unprecedented escalation of violence. The
study argues that the “Rawalpindi massacre” is not a peripheral
occurrence but rather a constitutive episode of violence that set the
stage for further gruesome bloodshed in August and September 1947. The
Sikhs were greatly agitated and began mobilisation of their community to
avenge the “Rawalpindi massacre.” The dispossession of land following
the Punjab’s partition intensified their resolve for revenge and
retaliation. Amid the chaos of partition, this mobilisation culminated
in organised and dreadful attacks on Muslims in East Punjab, thereby
forcing them to flee westward. Through detailed archival analysis, this
research situates the Rawalpindi division as a critical flashpoint,
whose events were integral to the broader narrative of violence in the
Punjab in 1947.
| Book Attributes | |
| Pages | 244 |