Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Få ubegrenset tilgang til over 9000 magasiner, aviser og premiumhistorier for bare

$149.99
 
$74.99/År

Prøve GULL - Gratis

India, Pakistan theatre of nationalist war

Mail & Guardian

|

May 16, 2025

The Partition's wound has been reopened as the rulers of the two countries resort to violence for their own ends

- Vashna Jagarnath

A tentative ceasefire has been declared between India and Pakistan after one of the most intense cross-border escalations in recent years, with both sides claiming victory and the underlying tensions far from resolved. Those tensions run deep into the region's history back to the very moment of India's birth as an independent postcolonial state, when the British drew borders not to liberate but to exit, quickly and violently.

In 1947, the partition of British India tore through Punjab and Bengal, slicing apart villages, families and centuries of shared life. Cyril Radcliffe, the man assigned to divide the land, had never set foot on the subcontinent. He drew the new boundaries in just five weeks, with no knowledge of the people they would divide.

The Punjab partition on both sides was particularly brutal: more than a million people were killed in pogroms, reprisal attacks and mass forced displacements. Trains arrived full of corpses. Families were severed. Children went missing. Entire villages were razed. The violence was not spontaneous; it was a political catastrophe born of imperial haste and communal mobilisation.

Partition was not simply the creation of two states. It was the violent birth of religious nationalism in South Asia. The demand for Pakistan, led by Muhammad Ali Jinnah and the Muslim League, had initially emerged as a response to the Congress's failure to accommodate Muslim political identity in a united India. But what was tactical soon became existential. New majoritarian identities were forged on both sides of the new border.

The very idea of India as a secular republic came under attack not only from the Muslim right but from its Hindu counterpart, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) the organisation from which the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) would later emerge.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Mpondoland at the precipice

Its plight echoes a global call to remember who we are and what we stand to lose

time to read

5 mins

M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian

Namibia shifts gears in its journey to women in power

That changed with Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah. When she took the oath of office on 21 March, she did not just become Namibia’s first female president — she recalibrated the country’s idea of who belongs at the top.

time to read

3 mins

M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian

What Multichoice, Canal + deal means

This is the French media company's largest transaction

time to read

2 mins

M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Student wins bullying case

Amara Mooloo says the college launched disciplinary proceedings against her instead of addressing the claims

time to read

5 mins

M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian

Côte d'Ivoire vote relevant for region

Côte d'Ivoire's experience in handling electoral disputes through legal channels demonstrates the rule of law in action

time to read

4 mins

M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Paris, death destination of ambassadors past and present

Last week, as Spring dawned, the 5am news bulletin stopped me mid-step en route to my first cup of piping hot coffee.

time to read

6 mins

M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian

Sex pest teacher: Mom speaks out

Bereaved mother recalled her son's 2022 suicide as a 52-year-old former teacher at the school appeared in court this week on 25 counts of indecent assault and sexual assault of young boys

time to read

5 mins

M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian

Walk with us, President Ramaphosa

As with Marikana, the CR17 bank statements and Phala Phala — the biggest scandal of his presidency — Cyril Ramaphosa yet again finds himself in a pickle.

time to read

2 mins

M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

When the lens sings

Vuyo Giba speaks about archiving South Africa's jazz legacy through black-and-white photography and reflects on Feya Faku's death

time to read

5 mins

M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Odinga: the relentless Pan-Africanist

Kenya's Raila Odinga, a pan-Africanist who dominated politics for half a century

time to read

5 mins

M&G 17 October 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size