Bengal and its partition : an untold story / Bhaswati Mukherjee
Material type: TextPublication details: India Rupa Publications 2021Description: 213 pISBN:- 9789353339586
- 954.03 MUK-B
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Books | BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 900-999 | General Stack (For lending) | 954.03 MUK-B (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 42981 |
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954.03 HAC Indiapedia : the all-India factfinder / | 954.03 JOS-V India's long road : | 954.03 MOU-F Tears of the Rajas : | 954.03 MUK-B Bengal and its partition : an untold story / | 954.03 NAY-P Days of the Raj : life and leisure in British India / | 954.03 NEV-P Sahibs' India : vignettes from the Raj / | 954.03 PRA-Q Empire in the hills : |
As it revisits the partition—and indeed the long road to it—this book reveals some untold facts for a better understanding of our past, even as it holds a message for the future. My ancestral roots are in Bengal, a region that was left bleeding by the Partition of 1947. This is a narrative about the painful division of a beloved part of undivided India, The Partition of Bengal. I have often wondered if there can ever be closure to the Partition, not only in the generation who lived through the experience, but also the later generations who seem to subconsciously carry the burden of it. I wonder if we will ever be able to finally move on, leaving this painful National legacy behind. Yet, to know the answer to it, We must—like a time-traveller—go back into the past and look at history and historical events as they unfolded themselves to their final tragic conclusion. Bengal and its Partition tells the untold story of this province’s Partition. In the process, it answers profoundly some deeply relevant questions: was this a tragedy waiting to happen? Was Bengal's Partition inherent in its demographic and religious fault lines? Or was it a man-made plot, malicious conceived by the British; played out in Bengal in bloody acts of violence and slaughter? To move on, we can neither ignore nor deny the past which continues to throw a long shadow on our future.
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