SOAS University of London | Hidden Histories #10 – Losing Home: Finding Home @soasuni | Uploaded June 2023 | Updated October 2024, 9 hours ago.
75 years after the Partition of India, who owns the narrative? This question has been pondered at length in different forms on different forums, and the Sindh story has been markedly absent. It’s hard to understand why this is so, as it is a big story affecting a large and diverse population, with many remarkable features.
When Partition gave the province of Sindh intact to Pakistan, it was believed that the non-Muslims would continue as a peaceful and prosperous minority, as they had been for centuries. And when the trouble escalated, they faced their abrupt exile with courage and enterprise.
In these 75 years, Hindu Sindhis – while centred largely in Mumbai and its environs – have made their homes in places all around India as well as other countries around the world. They adapted and integrated, put the past firmly behind them, and indeed have never been seen as people who came from somewhere else.
Perhaps it is the patina of distrust – derision even – at their unmistakable prosperity, which obscures some very interesting facts. Some of these have been showcased in Losing Home, Finding Home a book of personal narratives by Saaz Aggarwal (black-and-white fountain, Pune, 2022) and are presented here.
Speaker:
Saaz Aggarwal has a Master’s degree in Mathematics, but over the years established herself as a writer and artist. Her body of work includes biographies, translations, critical reviews and humour columns, as well as themed painting collections and mixed-media installations. Her books on Sindh are in libraries of the best universities around the world.
Chair:
Navtej Purewal (she/they) is Professor of Political Sociology and Development Studies at SOAS University of London. She has done field-based research over the past two decades in Punjab across India and Pakistan looking at borders, gender, caste and vernacular/popular religion and social change. She is currently AHRC India Fellow and is PI on an AHRC-funded project ‘Border Crossings: Exploring community and history at the 75th anniversary of the partition’.
75 years after the Partition of India, who owns the narrative? This question has been pondered at length in different forms on different forums, and the Sindh story has been markedly absent. It’s hard to understand why this is so, as it is a big story affecting a large and diverse population, with many remarkable features.
When Partition gave the province of Sindh intact to Pakistan, it was believed that the non-Muslims would continue as a peaceful and prosperous minority, as they had been for centuries. And when the trouble escalated, they faced their abrupt exile with courage and enterprise.
In these 75 years, Hindu Sindhis – while centred largely in Mumbai and its environs – have made their homes in places all around India as well as other countries around the world. They adapted and integrated, put the past firmly behind them, and indeed have never been seen as people who came from somewhere else.
Perhaps it is the patina of distrust – derision even – at their unmistakable prosperity, which obscures some very interesting facts. Some of these have been showcased in Losing Home, Finding Home a book of personal narratives by Saaz Aggarwal (black-and-white fountain, Pune, 2022) and are presented here.
Speaker:
Saaz Aggarwal has a Master’s degree in Mathematics, but over the years established herself as a writer and artist. Her body of work includes biographies, translations, critical reviews and humour columns, as well as themed painting collections and mixed-media installations. Her books on Sindh are in libraries of the best universities around the world.
Chair:
Navtej Purewal (she/they) is Professor of Political Sociology and Development Studies at SOAS University of London. She has done field-based research over the past two decades in Punjab across India and Pakistan looking at borders, gender, caste and vernacular/popular religion and social change. She is currently AHRC India Fellow and is PI on an AHRC-funded project ‘Border Crossings: Exploring community and history at the 75th anniversary of the partition’.