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1947 Jammu massacres

After the Partition of India, during October–November 1947 in the Jammu region of the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir, many Muslims were massacred and others driven away to West Punjab. The killings were carried out by extremist Hindus and Sikhs, aided and abetted by the forces of Maharaja Hari Singh.[7] The activists of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) played a key role in planning and executing the riots.[2][8] An estimated 20,000–100,000 Muslims were massacred.[6] Subsequently, many non-Muslims were massacred by Pakistani tribesmen, in the Mirpur region of today's Pakistani administered Kashmir,[a][10] and also in the Rajouri area of Jammu division.[2]

1947 Jammu massacres
DateOctober 1947 – November 1947
Location
Jammu province, Princely state of Jammu and Kashmir
GoalsGenocide,[1] ethnic cleansing[2][3][4][5]
MethodsRioting, pogrom, arson, mass rape
Casualties
Death(s)
  • 20,000–100,000 Muslims[6]
  • A large number of Hindus and Sikhs in Rajouri,[2] and in Mirpur.[6]
The Jammu province of the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir (1946) consisted of the Poonch, Mirpur, Riasi, Jammu, Kathua, and Udhampur districts

Background

At the time of the Partition of India in 1947, the British abandoned their suzerainty over the princely states, which were left with the options of joining India or Pakistan or remaining independent. Hari Singh, the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir, the Maharaja indicated his preference to remain independent of the new dominions. All the major political groups of the state supported the Maharaja's decision, except for the Muslim Conference, which declared in favour of accession to Pakistan on 19 July 1947.[11] The Muslim Conference was popular among Muslims in the Jammu province of the state, while the National Conference was popular in the Kashmir region.[12]

With the support of Mian Iftikharuddin, Muslim Conference leader Sardar Ibrahim met Pakistan Colonel Akbar Khan for the 1947 Poonch Rebellion. Sardar Ibrahim requested and received arms for the rebels.[13] Establishing a base in Murree in Pakistan Punjab, arms and ammunition were attempted to be purchased in NWFP which were to be smuggled into Jammu and Kashmir.[14][15] Meanwhile, the Maharaja was informed of 400 armed Muslims who had infiltrated from Kahuta for the purpose of terrorising Hindu and Sikh minorities. Pakistan was informed and urged to control the infiltration.[16][17]

On 12 September 1947, then prime minister and defense minister of Pakistan Liaquat Ali Khan approved two plans for an invasion of Kashmir prepared by Colonel Akbar Khan and Sardar Shaukat Hayat Khan. Pashtun tribes were mobilized for an armed attack.[18][19]

Roughly 100,000 Muslims and non-Muslims from East Punjab and West Punjab respectively were safely escorted through Jammu by Jammu and Kashmir State Forces.[20]

Violence against Jammu Muslims

Unlike the Kashmir valley which remained mostly calm during this transition period, the Jammu province which was contiguous to Punjab, experienced mass migration that led to violent inter-religious activity. Large numbers of Hindus and Sikhs from Rawalpindi and Sialkot started arriving since March 1947, bringing "harrowing stories of Muslim atrocities in West Punjab". According to scholar Ilyas Chattha, this provoked counter-violence on Jammu Muslims, which had "many parallels with that in Sialkot". He writes, "the Kashmiri Muslims were to pay a heavy price in September–October 1947 for the earlier violence of West Punjab."[21][5]

According to scholar Ian Copland, the administration's pogrom against its Muslim subjects in Jammu was undertaken partly out of revenge for the Poonch rebellion that started earlier.[22]

Observers state that a main aim of Hari Singh and his administration was to alter the demographics of the region by eliminating the Muslim population, in order to ensure a Hindu majority in the region.[2][3][5]

Scholar Ilyas Chattha and Jammu journalist Ved Bhasin blame the mishandling of law and order by Maharaja Hari Singh and his armed forces in Jammu, for the large scale communal violence in the region.[5][2]

Massacres

On 14 October, the RSS activists and the Akalis attacked various villages of Jammu district—Amrey, Cheak, Atmapur and Kochpura—and after killing some Muslims, looted their possessions and set their houses on fire.[23] There was mass killing of Muslims in and around Jammu city. The state troops led the attacks. The state officials provided arms and ammunition to the rioters. The administration had demobilised many Muslim soldiers in the state army and had discharged Muslim police officers.[24][b] Most of the Muslims outside the Muslim dominated areas were killed by the communal rioters who moved in vehicles with arms and ammunition, though the city was officially put under curfew.[c] Many Gujjar men and women who used to supply milk to the city from the surrounding villages were reportedly massacred en route. It is said that the Ramnagar reserve in Jammu was littered with the dead bodies of Gujjar men, women and children. In the Muslim localities of Jammu city, Talab Khatikan and Mohalla Ustad, Muslims were surrounded and were denied water supply and food. The Muslims in Talab Khatikan area had joined to defend themselves with the arms they could gather, who later received support from the Muslim Conference. They were eventually asked to surrender and the administration asked them to go to Pakistan for their safety. These Muslims and others who wanted to go to Sialkot, in thousands, were loaded in numerous trucks and were escorted by the troops in the first week of November. When they reached the outskirts of the city, they were pulled out and killed by armed Sikhs and RSS men, while abducting the women.[2][23][25]

There were also reports of large-scale massacres of Muslims in Udhampur district, particularly in proper Udhampur, Chenani, Ramnagar, Bhaderwah and Reasi areas. Killing of numerous Muslims was reported from Chhamb, Deva Batala, Manawsar and other parts of Akhnoor with many people fleeing to Pakistan or moving to Jammu. In Kathua district and Billawar area, there was extensive killing of Muslims with women being raped and abducted.[2][27]

On 16 November 1947, Sheikh Abdullah arrived in Jammu and a refugee camp was set up in Mohalla Ustad.[2]

Observations

"To recall those days of communal orgy my only objective is to point out that a communalist and killer has no religion. It was the humanity that was the victim of communal fanatics... we should better learn appropriate lessons from history and not allow the communal fanatics of one or the other community to vitiate the atmosphere and disturb communal peace and harmony."

Ved Bhasin, who witnessed the Jammu violence in 1947.[2]

Mahatma Gandhi commented on the situation in Jammu on 25 December 1947 in his speech at a prayer meeting in New Delhi: "The Hindus and Sikhs of Jammu and those who had gone there from outside killed Muslims. The Maharaja of Kashmir is responsible for what is happening there…A large number of Muslims have been killed there and Muslim women have been dishonoured."[28]

According to Ved Bhasin and scholar Ilyas Chattha, the Jammu riots were executed by members of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) who were joined by the refugees from West Pakistan, and were supported strongly by Hari Singh and his administration with a main aim to change the demographic composition of Jammu region and ensure a non-Muslim majority. Bhasin states, the riots were "clearly" planned by the activists of RSS.[2][29] Observers have noted that the Akali Sikhs and some former members of the Indian National Army (INA) also participated in this violence along with the RSS and state forces.[30][31][32][33]

Bhasin says that the massacres took place in the presence of the then Jammu and Kashmir's Prime Minister Mehr Chand Mahajan and the governor of Jammu, Lala Chet Ram Chopra, and that some of those who led these riots in Udhampur and Bhaderwah later joined the National Conference with some of them also serving as ministers.[2][d]

Estimates of people killed and displaced

An early official calculation made in Pakistan, using headcount data, estimated 50,000 Muslims killed.[34] A team of two Englishmen jointly commissioned by the governments of India and Pakistan investigated seven major incidents of violence between 20 October – 9 November 1947, estimating 70,000 deaths.[35] Scholar Ian Copland estimated total deaths to be around 80,000,[36] while Ved Bhasin estimated them to be around 100,000.[27] Scholar Christopher Snedden says, the number of Muslims killed were between 20,000 and 100,000.[6] Justice Yusuf Saraf estimates them to be between 20,000 and 30,000.[37]

Much higher figures were reported by newspapers at that time. A report by a special correspondent of The Times, published on 10 August 1948, stated that a total of 237,000 Muslims were either killed or migrated to Pakistan.[7][e] The editor of The Statesman Ian Stephens claimed that 500,000 Muslims, "the entire Muslim element of the population", was eliminated and 200,000 "just disappeared".[40] Scholar Ian Copland finds these figures dubious.[f]

The Pakistani newspaper Nawa-i-Waqt reported that more than 100,000 Jammu refugees had arrived in Sialkot by 20 November 1947.[41] Snedden, on the other hand, cites a "comprehensive report" in Dawn, which said that 200,000 Muslims went as refugees to Pakistan in October–November 1947.[9] An unidentified organisation in Pakistan counted refugees from Jammu and Kashmir during May–July 1949, and found 333,964 refugees from the Indian-held parts of the state.[42] Of these, an estimated 100,000 refugees returned to their homes in 1949–1950, leaving an estimated 233,964 refugees in Pakistan.[43] Based on the electoral rolls of Pakistan-administered Kashmir in 1970, the number that remained in Pakistan is estimated to be in the range 219,718 – 259,047.[44]

Violence against Hindus and Sikhs in Rajouri and Mirpur

Muslims in the western districts of Poonch jagir began an agitation against taxes in mid-1947, which escalated into an armed rebellion against Hari Singh's government, and expanded to Mirpur district.[12] In October 1947, a force of Pathan tribesman crossed into Kashmir from Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province and the adjoining princely states and tribal areas.[45] The rebels took control of most of the countryside in these districts by the end of the month, driving non-Muslims to seek shelter in towns where the State troops were garrisoned. Beginning on 24 October, the towns themselves fell to the rebels: Bhimber (24 October), Rajauri (7 November), and Mirpur (25 November).[10]

Rajouri

Rajouri was held by the "Azad Kashmir forces", or rebels from Poonch, and the raiders, until April 1948, when the town was taken by the Indian armed forces.[45] The town was surrounded by Muslim mobs who carried out extensive killings, loot and rapes of Hindu residents.[2] The Hindus facing this persecution included the town's residents as well as refugees.[45] Some Hindus were able to escape, while others were sheltered by sympathetic Muslims.[45] Mass suicides and killings, including by beheading or poisoning, occurred among women, sometimes at the hands of men in their family. These were the result of fears that they would be sexually abused by the raiders.[45] The capture of Rajouri from the raiders is commemorated on 13 April,[46] and a monument honoring the incident was erected in the town.[45]

Mirpur

After the Indian army repelled the Pashtun raiders from near Srinagar on 25 November, the raiders turned to Mirpur, in present-day Azad Kashmir.[47] Political scientist Christopher Snedden writes of unverifiable allegations that 20,000 non-Muslims were killed on and shortly after 25 November in Mirpur, and a further 2500 were abducted.[9][6] In the district of Mirpur and nearby regions of Poonch, Hindu and Sikh women were also raped and abducted.[6] November 25 is now commemorated as "Mirpur Day" in Indian-administered Kashmir.[48]

Population figures

The table below compares the 1941 percentage of Muslim population with the present percentage for the Indian-administered part of the Jammu province and gives figures for estimated 'loss' of Muslims, due to deaths as well as migration.

Region 1941 Population[49] 1941 Muslim proportion[49] 2011 Muslim proportion[50] Loss of Muslims (est)[g]
Jammu District[h] 431,362 39.6% 7.1% 151,010
Kathua District 177,672 25.3% 10.4% 29,567
Udhampur District (inc. Chenani)[i] 306,013 42.7% 41.5% 5,975
Reasi District[j] 257,903 68.1% 58.4% 59,804
Jammu province (exc. Poonch and Mirpur) 1,172,950 44.5% 27.9% 246,356
Poonch jagir 421,828 90.0% 90.4%
 
Present day district map of Jammu and Kashmir

Scholar Ian Copland tries to estimate how many Muslims might have been killed in the Jammu violence based on demographic data. If the headcount figure of 333,964 refugees from the Indian-administered parts of the state[42] is used to calculate an estimate, one ends up with a surplus rather than a deficit.[36][k] However, Justice Yusuf Saraf estimates that 100,000 Jammu refugees returned to their homes in 1949–1950.[43][l] If we deduct this 100,000 from the original headcount figure, the estimate of Muslims killed would be a few tens of thousands.[37][6]

The table below compares the 1941 percentage of 'Hindu & Sikh' population (H/S population) with that in 1951 for the areas of Pakistan-administered Azad Kashmir (comprising 89 per cent of the Mirpur District, 60 per cent of the Poonch Jagir and 87 per cent of the Muzaffarabad District[6]).

Region 1941 Population[49] 1941 H/S proportion[49] 1951 Population[53][m] 1951 H/S proportion[54] Loss of Hindus/Sikhs (est)
Mirpur District 386,655 19.6% 371,459
Poonch Jagir 421,828 10.0% 293,723
Muzaffarabad District 264,671 7.1% 220,971
Azad Kashmir Districts[n] 1,073,154 12.7% 886,153 0.09% 113,210

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Christopher Snedden writes of unverifiable allegations of 20,000 non-Muslims killed in Mirpur.[9]
  2. ^ According to the accounts of refugees, the Maharaja was "in person commanding all the forces which were ethnically cleansing the Muslims".[25][26]
  3. ^ Ved Bhasin (17 November 2015), Jammu 1947, Kashmir Life: "The curfew, it appeared, was meant only to check the movement of Muslims."
  4. ^ Ved Bhasin (17 November 2015), Jammu 1947, Kashmir Life: "Another incident that I recall is about Mr Mehr Chand Mahajan who told a delegation of Hindus who met him in the palace when he arrived in Jammu that now when the power is being transferred to the people they should better demand parity. When one of them associated with National Conference asked how can they demand parity when there is so much difference in population ratio. Pointing to the Ramnagar rakh below, where some bodies of Muslims were still lying he said “the population ratio too can change”.
  5. ^ To quote 10 August 1948 report published in The Times:

    "237,000 Muslims were systematically exterminated – unless they escaped to Pakistan along the border – by the forces of the Dogra State headed by the Maharaja in person and aided by Hindus and Sikhs. This happened in October 1947, five days before the Pathan invasion and nine days before the Maharaja’s accession to India."

    The number of 237,000 was out of 411,000 Muslims said to have lived in the 'eastern Jammu' province. No calculations for the exact figure were given and the figure was not broken down into deaths and escapes. The 'Special Correspondent' that authored the report is later identified as Frederick Paul Mainprice, the former Assistant Political Agent of the Gilgit Agency, who worked as a Deputy Secretary for the Pakistan government during 1948–49 "specialising on the Kashmir problem".[38][39]
  6. ^ Copland, State, Community and Neighbourhood 2005, p. 153: "None of these figures, however, are authoritative.... And the Times man, too, seems to have harboured Pakistani sympathies and, more importantly, offers no clues as to the source of his information."
  7. ^ These figures are notional. They represent the number of Muslims lost to the state, due to either deaths or out-migration, so that the 2011 demographic percentage could have been obtained. It is derived by multiplying the 1941 population figure by the factor (1941 percentage – 2011 percentage)/(100 – 2011 percentage). If there was in-migration of Muslims or if the Muslim population grew at faster rate than the rest, these figures would be underestimates. If there was in-migration of non-Muslims, these figures would be overestimates.
  8. ^ The 1947 Jammu district is now divided into Jammu and Samba districts
  9. ^ The 1947 Udhampur district is now divided into Ramban, Udhampur, Doda and Kishtwar districts
  10. ^ The 1947 Reasi district is now divided into Reasi and Rajouri districts
  11. ^ An even higher figure of 500,000 Muslim refugees was reported in Dawn on 2 January 1951.[42] Scholar Ilyas Chattha has claimed that over 1 million Muslims were uprooted owing to the violence.[51] Evidently, such high figures are not supported by the demographic data.
  12. ^ Jammu and Kashmir government has claimed that 200,000 refugees returned.[52]
  13. ^ Figures from the 1951 census of Pakistan. They only cover the areas that came under Pakistani control.
  14. ^ Mirpur and Poonch were part of the Jammu province in the princely state whereas Muzaffarabad was part of the Kashmir province.

References

  1. ^ Copland, The Abdullah Factor, p. 254 (citation 119): "... the census reveals that the Muslim population of Jammu dropped (as a result of emigration, genocide and other factors) from 61 per cent to 38 per cent between 1941 and 1961."
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Ved Bhasin (17 November 2015). "Jammu 1947". Kashmir Life. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
  3. ^ a b Chattha, Partition and its Aftermath 2009, p. 179, 183.
  4. ^ Chattha, The Long Shadow of 1947 2016, p. 150.
  5. ^ a b c d Noorani, A.G. (25 February 2012). "Horrors of Partition". Frontline. Vol. 29, no. 4.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Snedden 2015, p. 167.
  7. ^ a b Snedden, What happened to Muslims in Jammu? 2001.
  8. ^ Chattha, Partition and its Aftermath 2009, pp. 182, 183; Chattha, The Long Shadow of 1947 2016, p. 149
  9. ^ a b c Snedden, Kashmir: The Unwritten History 2013, p. 56.
  10. ^ a b Das Gupta, Jammu and Kashmir 2012, p. 97.
  11. ^ Puri, Balraj (November 2010), "The Question of Accession", Epilogue, 4 (11): 4–6, Eventually they agreed on a modified resolution which 'respectfully and fervently appealed to the Maharaja Bahadur to declare internal autonomy of the State... and accede to the Dominion of Pakistan... However, the General Council did not challenge the maharaja's right to take a decision on accession, and it acknowledged that his rights should be protected even after acceding to Pakistan.
  12. ^ a b Snedden 2015, pp. 164–167.
  13. ^ Bhattacharya, What Price Freedom 2013, pp. 25–27.
  14. ^ Snedden, Kashmir: The Unwritten History (2013), p. 44.
  15. ^ Raghavan, War and Peace in Modern India (2010, pp. 105–106);Nawaz (2008, pp. 119–120)
  16. ^ Das Gupta, Jammu and Kashmir 2012, pp. 90–91.
  17. ^ Snedden, Kashmir: The Unwritten History 2013, p. 43.
  18. ^ Raghavan, War and Peace in Modern India 2010, pp. 105–106.
  19. ^ Nawaz 2008, p. 120.
  20. ^ Ankit, Henry Scott 2010, p. 44.
  21. ^ Chattha, Partition and its Aftermath 2009, p. 179.
  22. ^ State, Community and Neighbourhood in Princely North India, c. 1900–1950 By I. Copland. Palgrave Macmillan. 2005. p. 143. ISBN 9780230005983.
  23. ^ a b Puri, Across the Line of Control 2012, pp. 25–26.
  24. ^ Chattha, Partition and its Aftermath 2009, p. 180, 182.
  25. ^ a b Chattha, Partition and its Aftermath 2009, p. 183.
  26. ^ Copland, State, Community and Neighbourhood 2005, p. 156.
  27. ^ a b Ahmad, Khalid Bashir (5 November 2014), "circa 1947: A Long Story", Kashmir Life, retrieved 11 October 2016
  28. ^ "Document Twenty". The second assassination of Gandhi? by Ram Puniyani. Anamika Pub & Distributors. 2003. pp. 91, 92. ISBN 9788174951489.
  29. ^ Chattha, Partition and its Aftermath 2009, p. 182, 183.
  30. ^ Copland, The Abdullah Factor, p. 244.
  31. ^ Hassan, Amtul (2006). Impact of Partition: Refugees in Pakistan: Struggle for Empowerment and State's Response. Regional Centre for Strategic Studies. p. 58. ISBN 9788173046988.
  32. ^ Dutta, Madhusree; Flavia; Adarkar, Neera (1996). The Nation, the State, and Indian Identity. Popular Prakashan. p. 145. ISBN 9788185604091.
  33. ^ Hajari, Nisid (9 June 2015). Midnight's Furies: The Deadly Legacy of India's Partition. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 209. ISBN 9780547669243.
  34. ^ Copland, State, Community and Neighbourhood 2005, pp. 153–154.
  35. ^ Snedden, Kashmir: The Unwritten History 2013, pp. 52–53.
  36. ^ a b Copland, State, Community and Neighbourhood 2005, p. 153.
  37. ^ a b Saraf, Kashmiris Fight for Freedom, Volume 2 2015, p. 133 (1979:841).
  38. ^ Snedden, Kashmir: The Unwritten History 2013, pp. 55, 330.
  39. ^ MAINPRICE PAPERS, South Asian Studies Archive, University of Cambridge, retrieved 31 March 2017
  40. ^ Snedden, What happened to Muslims in Jammu? 2001, p. 121.
  41. ^ Chattha, Partition and its Aftermath 2009, p. 185.
  42. ^ a b c Snedden, What happened to Muslims in Jammu? 2001, p. 125.
  43. ^ a b Saraf, Kashmiris Fight for Freedom, Volume 2 2015, p. 481: "Towards the middle of 1949, a movement for return started on a small scale which gained momentum by the end of 1950. A fair estimate of the returnees is about a hundred thousand. Sheikh Abdullah's Government re-settled them on their abandoned properties, advanced taqqavi loans and appointed a special staff to look after their problems."
  44. ^ Saraf, Kashmiris Fight for Freedom, Volume 2 2015, p. 133: "In the 1970 elections for A.K. President as well as the Legislative Assembly, the number of voters from Jammu province, residing in Pakistan, was 2,29,152. The population percentage of voters for Pakistan elections which were held in the same year was about 50%. It would take the population figures of Jammu refugees in Pakistan in 1970 to about five lakhs." Based on the population growth rates of Pakistan given (1941–1951: 17.9%, 1951–1961: 26.9%, 1961–1972: 52.1%), this corresponds to a population level of 219,718 in 1941 and 259,047 in 1951.
  45. ^ a b c d e f Bhatia 2020, pp. 80–82.
  46. ^ Maini, K.D. (12 April 2015). "The day Rajouri was recaptured". dailyexcelsior.com. Daily Excelsior. Retrieved 19 October 2020.
  47. ^ Puri 2010, p. 28.
  48. ^ Puri 2010, p. 30.
  49. ^ a b c d Snedden, Kashmir: The Unwritten History 2013, p. 28.
  50. ^ "C-1 Population by religious community (2011 Census)". Census of India Website : Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  51. ^ Chattha, The Long Shadow of 1947 2016, p. 145.
  52. ^ Jammu & Kashmir, 1947–50: An Account of Activities of First Three Years of Sheikh Abdullah's Government, Printed at the Ranbir Government Press, 1951, p. 90
  53. ^ Snedden, Kashmir: The Unwritten History 2013, p. 161.
  54. ^ Snedden 2015: "By 1951, of the former approximately 114,000 non-Muslims who in 1941 had lived in areas that later came to comprise Azad Kashmir... only a paltry 790 non-Muslims remained."

Bibliography

  • Ankit, Rakesh (May 2010). . Epilogue. 4 (5): 44–49. Archived from the original on 10 May 2017. Retrieved 27 February 2017.
  • Bhatia, Mohita (2020). Rethinking Conflict at the Margins: Dalits and Borderland Hindus in Jammu and Kashmir: Going Beyond the Dominant Discourse. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-83602-9.
  • Bhattacharya, Brigadier Samir (2013), NOTHING BUT!: Book Three: What Price Freedom, Partridge Publishing, ISBN 978-1-4828-1625-9
  • Chattha, Ilyas Ahmad (September 2009). Partition and Its Aftermath: Violence, Migration and the Role of Refugees in the Socio-Economic Development of Gujranwala and Sialkot Cities, 1947–1961 (PhD). Centre for Imperial and Post-Colonial Studies, School of Humanities, University of Southampton. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  • Chattha, Ilyas (2016). "The Long Shadow of 1947: Partition, Violence and Displacement in Jammu & Kashmir". In Amritjit Singh; Nalini Iyer; Rahul K. Gairola (eds.). Revisiting India's Partition: New Essays on Memory, Culture, and Politics. Lexington Books. pp. 143–156. ISBN 978-1-4985-3105-4.
  • Copland, Ian (1991). "The Abdullah Factor: Kashmiri Muslims and the Crisis of 1947". In D. A. Low (ed.). Political Inheritance of Pakistan. Springer. ISBN 9781349115563.
  • Copland, Ian (2005). State, Community and Neighbourhood in Princely North India, c. 1900-1950. Palgrave Macmillan UK. pp. 153–. ISBN 978-0-230-00598-3.
  • Das Gupta, Jyoti Bhusan (2012) [first published 1968]. Jammu and Kashmir. Springer. ISBN 978-94-011-9231-6.
  • Nawaz, Shuja (May 2008), "The First Kashmir War Revisited", India Review, 7 (2): 115–154, doi:10.1080/14736480802055455, S2CID 155030407
  • Puri, Luv (2012). Across the Line of Control: Inside Pakistan-administered Jammu and Kashmir. Hurst. ISBN 9781849041737.
  • Raghavan, Srinath (2010), War and Peace in Modern India: A Strategic History of the Nehru Years, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 978-1-137-00737-7
  • Saraf, Muhammad Yusuf (2015) [first published 1979 by Ferozsons]. Kashmiris Fight for Freedom, Volume 2. Mirpur: National Institute Kashmir Studies.
  • Snedden, Christopher (2001). "What happened to Muslims in Jammu? Local identity, '"the massacre" of 1947' and the roots of the 'Kashmir problem'". South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies. 24 (2): 111–134. doi:10.1080/00856400108723454. S2CID 143991832.
  • Snedden, Christopher (2013) [first published as The Untold Story of the People of Azad Kashmir, 2012]. Kashmir: The Unwritten History. HarperCollins India. ISBN 978-9350298985.
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External links

  • Khalid Bashir Ahmad, Jammu 1947: Tales of Bloodshed, Greater Kashmir, 5 November 2014.

1947, jammu, massacres, after, partition, india, during, october, november, 1947, jammu, region, princely, state, jammu, kashmir, many, muslims, were, massacred, others, driven, away, west, punjab, killings, were, carried, extremist, hindus, sikhs, aided, abet. After the Partition of India during October November 1947 in the Jammu region of the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir many Muslims were massacred and others driven away to West Punjab The killings were carried out by extremist Hindus and Sikhs aided and abetted by the forces of Maharaja Hari Singh 7 The activists of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh RSS played a key role in planning and executing the riots 2 8 An estimated 20 000 100 000 Muslims were massacred 6 Subsequently many non Muslims were massacred by Pakistani tribesmen in the Mirpur region of today s Pakistani administered Kashmir a 10 and also in the Rajouri area of Jammu division 2 1947 Jammu massacresDateOctober 1947 November 1947LocationJammu province Princely state of Jammu and KashmirGoalsGenocide 1 ethnic cleansing 2 3 4 5 MethodsRioting pogrom arson mass rapeCasualtiesDeath s 20 000 100 000 Muslims 6 A large number of Hindus and Sikhs in Rajouri 2 and in Mirpur 6 The Jammu province of the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir 1946 consisted of the Poonch Mirpur Riasi Jammu Kathua and Udhampur districts Contents 1 Background 2 Violence against Jammu Muslims 2 1 Massacres 2 2 Observations 2 3 Estimates of people killed and displaced 3 Violence against Hindus and Sikhs in Rajouri and Mirpur 3 1 Rajouri 3 2 Mirpur 4 Population figures 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksBackground Maharaja Hari Singh of Jammu and Kashmir At the time of the Partition of India in 1947 the British abandoned their suzerainty over the princely states which were left with the options of joining India or Pakistan or remaining independent Hari Singh the Maharaja of Jammu and Kashmir the Maharaja indicated his preference to remain independent of the new dominions All the major political groups of the state supported the Maharaja s decision except for the Muslim Conference which declared in favour of accession to Pakistan on 19 July 1947 11 The Muslim Conference was popular among Muslims in the Jammu province of the state while the National Conference was popular in the Kashmir region 12 With the support of Mian Iftikharuddin Muslim Conference leader Sardar Ibrahim met Pakistan Colonel Akbar Khan for the 1947 Poonch Rebellion Sardar Ibrahim requested and received arms for the rebels 13 Establishing a base in Murree in Pakistan Punjab arms and ammunition were attempted to be purchased in NWFP which were to be smuggled into Jammu and Kashmir 14 15 Meanwhile the Maharaja was informed of 400 armed Muslims who had infiltrated from Kahuta for the purpose of terrorising Hindu and Sikh minorities Pakistan was informed and urged to control the infiltration 16 17 On 12 September 1947 then prime minister and defense minister of Pakistan Liaquat Ali Khan approved two plans for an invasion of Kashmir prepared by Colonel Akbar Khan and Sardar Shaukat Hayat Khan Pashtun tribes were mobilized for an armed attack 18 19 Roughly 100 000 Muslims and non Muslims from East Punjab and West Punjab respectively were safely escorted through Jammu by Jammu and Kashmir State Forces 20 Violence against Jammu MuslimsUnlike the Kashmir valley which remained mostly calm during this transition period the Jammu province which was contiguous to Punjab experienced mass migration that led to violent inter religious activity Large numbers of Hindus and Sikhs from Rawalpindi and Sialkot started arriving since March 1947 bringing harrowing stories of Muslim atrocities in West Punjab According to scholar Ilyas Chattha this provoked counter violence on Jammu Muslims which had many parallels with that in Sialkot He writes the Kashmiri Muslims were to pay a heavy price in September October 1947 for the earlier violence of West Punjab 21 5 According to scholar Ian Copland the administration s pogrom against its Muslim subjects in Jammu was undertaken partly out of revenge for the Poonch rebellion that started earlier 22 Observers state that a main aim of Hari Singh and his administration was to alter the demographics of the region by eliminating the Muslim population in order to ensure a Hindu majority in the region 2 3 5 Scholar Ilyas Chattha and Jammu journalist Ved Bhasin blame the mishandling of law and order by Maharaja Hari Singh and his armed forces in Jammu for the large scale communal violence in the region 5 2 Massacres On 14 October the RSS activists and the Akalis attacked various villages of Jammu district Amrey Cheak Atmapur and Kochpura and after killing some Muslims looted their possessions and set their houses on fire 23 There was mass killing of Muslims in and around Jammu city The state troops led the attacks The state officials provided arms and ammunition to the rioters The administration had demobilised many Muslim soldiers in the state army and had discharged Muslim police officers 24 b Most of the Muslims outside the Muslim dominated areas were killed by the communal rioters who moved in vehicles with arms and ammunition though the city was officially put under curfew c Many Gujjar men and women who used to supply milk to the city from the surrounding villages were reportedly massacred en route It is said that the Ramnagar reserve in Jammu was littered with the dead bodies of Gujjar men women and children In the Muslim localities of Jammu city Talab Khatikan and Mohalla Ustad Muslims were surrounded and were denied water supply and food The Muslims in Talab Khatikan area had joined to defend themselves with the arms they could gather who later received support from the Muslim Conference They were eventually asked to surrender and the administration asked them to go to Pakistan for their safety These Muslims and others who wanted to go to Sialkot in thousands were loaded in numerous trucks and were escorted by the troops in the first week of November When they reached the outskirts of the city they were pulled out and killed by armed Sikhs and RSS men while abducting the women 2 23 25 There were also reports of large scale massacres of Muslims in Udhampur district particularly in proper Udhampur Chenani Ramnagar Bhaderwah and Reasi areas Killing of numerous Muslims was reported from Chhamb Deva Batala Manawsar and other parts of Akhnoor with many people fleeing to Pakistan or moving to Jammu In Kathua district and Billawar area there was extensive killing of Muslims with women being raped and abducted 2 27 On 16 November 1947 Sheikh Abdullah arrived in Jammu and a refugee camp was set up in Mohalla Ustad 2 Observations To recall those days of communal orgy my only objective is to point out that a communalist and killer has no religion It was the humanity that was the victim of communal fanatics we should better learn appropriate lessons from history and not allow the communal fanatics of one or the other community to vitiate the atmosphere and disturb communal peace and harmony Ved Bhasin who witnessed the Jammu violence in 1947 2 Mahatma Gandhi commented on the situation in Jammu on 25 December 1947 in his speech at a prayer meeting in New Delhi The Hindus and Sikhs of Jammu and those who had gone there from outside killed Muslims The Maharaja of Kashmir is responsible for what is happening there A large number of Muslims have been killed there and Muslim women have been dishonoured 28 According to Ved Bhasin and scholar Ilyas Chattha the Jammu riots were executed by members of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh RSS who were joined by the refugees from West Pakistan and were supported strongly by Hari Singh and his administration with a main aim to change the demographic composition of Jammu region and ensure a non Muslim majority Bhasin states the riots were clearly planned by the activists of RSS 2 29 Observers have noted that the Akali Sikhs and some former members of the Indian National Army INA also participated in this violence along with the RSS and state forces 30 31 32 33 Bhasin says that the massacres took place in the presence of the then Jammu and Kashmir s Prime Minister Mehr Chand Mahajan and the governor of Jammu Lala Chet Ram Chopra and that some of those who led these riots in Udhampur and Bhaderwah later joined the National Conference with some of them also serving as ministers 2 d Estimates of people killed and displaced An early official calculation made in Pakistan using headcount data estimated 50 000 Muslims killed 34 A team of two Englishmen jointly commissioned by the governments of India and Pakistan investigated seven major incidents of violence between 20 October 9 November 1947 estimating 70 000 deaths 35 Scholar Ian Copland estimated total deaths to be around 80 000 36 while Ved Bhasin estimated them to be around 100 000 27 Scholar Christopher Snedden says the number of Muslims killed were between 20 000 and 100 000 6 Justice Yusuf Saraf estimates them to be between 20 000 and 30 000 37 Much higher figures were reported by newspapers at that time A report by a special correspondent of The Times published on 10 August 1948 stated that a total of 237 000 Muslims were either killed or migrated to Pakistan 7 e The editor of The Statesman Ian Stephens claimed that 500 000 Muslims the entire Muslim element of the population was eliminated and 200 000 just disappeared 40 Scholar Ian Copland finds these figures dubious f The Pakistani newspaper Nawa i Waqt reported that more than 100 000 Jammu refugees had arrived in Sialkot by 20 November 1947 41 Snedden on the other hand cites a comprehensive report in Dawn which said that 200 000 Muslims went as refugees to Pakistan in October November 1947 9 An unidentified organisation in Pakistan counted refugees from Jammu and Kashmir during May July 1949 and found 333 964 refugees from the Indian held parts of the state 42 Of these an estimated 100 000 refugees returned to their homes in 1949 1950 leaving an estimated 233 964 refugees in Pakistan 43 Based on the electoral rolls of Pakistan administered Kashmir in 1970 the number that remained in Pakistan is estimated to be in the range 219 718 259 047 44 Violence against Hindus and Sikhs in Rajouri and MirpurMuslims in the western districts of Poonch jagir began an agitation against taxes in mid 1947 which escalated into an armed rebellion against Hari Singh s government and expanded to Mirpur district 12 In October 1947 a force of Pathan tribesman crossed into Kashmir from Pakistan s North West Frontier Province and the adjoining princely states and tribal areas 45 The rebels took control of most of the countryside in these districts by the end of the month driving non Muslims to seek shelter in towns where the State troops were garrisoned Beginning on 24 October the towns themselves fell to the rebels Bhimber 24 October Rajauri 7 November and Mirpur 25 November 10 Rajouri Rajouri was held by the Azad Kashmir forces or rebels from Poonch and the raiders until April 1948 when the town was taken by the Indian armed forces 45 The town was surrounded by Muslim mobs who carried out extensive killings loot and rapes of Hindu residents 2 The Hindus facing this persecution included the town s residents as well as refugees 45 Some Hindus were able to escape while others were sheltered by sympathetic Muslims 45 Mass suicides and killings including by beheading or poisoning occurred among women sometimes at the hands of men in their family These were the result of fears that they would be sexually abused by the raiders 45 The capture of Rajouri from the raiders is commemorated on 13 April 46 and a monument honoring the incident was erected in the town 45 Mirpur After the Indian army repelled the Pashtun raiders from near Srinagar on 25 November the raiders turned to Mirpur in present day Azad Kashmir 47 Political scientist Christopher Snedden writes of unverifiable allegations that 20 000 non Muslims were killed on and shortly after 25 November in Mirpur and a further 2500 were abducted 9 6 In the district of Mirpur and nearby regions of Poonch Hindu and Sikh women were also raped and abducted 6 November 25 is now commemorated as Mirpur Day in Indian administered Kashmir 48 Population figuresThe table below compares the 1941 percentage of Muslim population with the present percentage for the Indian administered part of the Jammu province and gives figures for estimated loss of Muslims due to deaths as well as migration Region 1941 Population 49 1941 Muslim proportion 49 2011 Muslim proportion 50 Loss of Muslims est g Jammu District h 431 362 39 6 7 1 151 010Kathua District 177 672 25 3 10 4 29 567Udhampur District inc Chenani i 306 013 42 7 41 5 5 975Reasi District j 257 903 68 1 58 4 59 804Jammu province exc Poonch and Mirpur 1 172 950 44 5 27 9 246 356Poonch jagir 421 828 90 0 90 4 Present day district map of Jammu and Kashmir Scholar Ian Copland tries to estimate how many Muslims might have been killed in the Jammu violence based on demographic data If the headcount figure of 333 964 refugees from the Indian administered parts of the state 42 is used to calculate an estimate one ends up with a surplus rather than a deficit 36 k However Justice Yusuf Saraf estimates that 100 000 Jammu refugees returned to their homes in 1949 1950 43 l If we deduct this 100 000 from the original headcount figure the estimate of Muslims killed would be a few tens of thousands 37 6 The table below compares the 1941 percentage of Hindu amp Sikh population H S population with that in 1951 for the areas of Pakistan administered Azad Kashmir comprising 89 per cent of the Mirpur District 60 per cent of the Poonch Jagir and 87 per cent of the Muzaffarabad District 6 Region 1941 Population 49 1941 H S proportion 49 1951 Population 53 m 1951 H S proportion 54 Loss of Hindus Sikhs est Mirpur District 386 655 19 6 371 459 Poonch Jagir 421 828 10 0 293 723 Muzaffarabad District 264 671 7 1 220 971 Azad Kashmir Districts n 1 073 154 12 7 886 153 0 09 113 210See alsoPersecution of Muslims Violence against Muslims in India Timeline of the Kashmir conflict Kashmir conflict Partition of IndiaNotes Christopher Snedden writes of unverifiable allegations of 20 000 non Muslims killed in Mirpur 9 According to the accounts of refugees the Maharaja was in person commanding all the forces which were ethnically cleansing the Muslims 25 26 Ved Bhasin 17 November 2015 Jammu 1947 Kashmir Life The curfew it appeared was meant only to check the movement of Muslims Ved Bhasin 17 November 2015 Jammu 1947 Kashmir Life Another incident that I recall is about Mr Mehr Chand Mahajan who told a delegation of Hindus who met him in the palace when he arrived in Jammu that now when the power is being transferred to the people they should better demand parity When one of them associated with National Conference asked how can they demand parity when there is so much difference in population ratio Pointing to the Ramnagar rakh below where some bodies of Muslims were still lying he said the population ratio too can change To quote 10 August 1948 report published in The Times 237 000 Muslims were systematically exterminated unless they escaped to Pakistan along the border by the forces of the Dogra State headed by the Maharaja in person and aided by Hindus and Sikhs This happened in October 1947 five days before the Pathan invasion and nine days before the Maharaja s accession to India The number of 237 000 was out of 411 000 Muslims said to have lived in the eastern Jammu province No calculations for the exact figure were given and the figure was not broken down into deaths and escapes The Special Correspondent that authored the report is later identified as Frederick Paul Mainprice the former Assistant Political Agent of the Gilgit Agency who worked as a Deputy Secretary for the Pakistan government during 1948 49 specialising on the Kashmir problem 38 39 Copland State Community and Neighbourhood 2005 p 153 None of these figures however are authoritative And the Times man too seems to have harboured Pakistani sympathies and more importantly offers no clues as to the source of his information These figures are notional They represent the number of Muslims lost to the state due to either deaths or out migration so that the 2011 demographic percentage could have been obtained It is derived by multiplying the 1941 population figure by the factor 1941 percentage 2011 percentage 100 2011 percentage If there was in migration of Muslims or if the Muslim population grew at faster rate than the rest these figures would be underestimates If there was in migration of non Muslims these figures would be overestimates The 1947 Jammu district is now divided into Jammu and Samba districts The 1947 Udhampur district is now divided into Ramban Udhampur Doda and Kishtwar districts The 1947 Reasi district is now divided into Reasi and Rajouri districts An even higher figure of 500 000 Muslim refugees was reported in Dawn on 2 January 1951 42 Scholar Ilyas Chattha has claimed that over 1 million Muslims were uprooted owing to the violence 51 Evidently such high figures are not supported by the demographic data Jammu and Kashmir government has claimed that 200 000 refugees returned 52 Figures from the 1951 census of Pakistan They only cover the areas that came under Pakistani control Mirpur and Poonch were part of the Jammu province in the princely state whereas Muzaffarabad was part of the Kashmir province References Copland The Abdullah Factor p 254 citation 119 the census reveals that the Muslim population of Jammu dropped as a result of emigration genocide and other factors from 61 per cent to 38 per cent between 1941 and 1961 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Ved Bhasin 17 November 2015 Jammu 1947 Kashmir Life Retrieved 4 June 2017 a b Chattha Partition and its Aftermath 2009 p 179 183 Chattha The Long Shadow of 1947 2016 p 150 a b c d Noorani A G 25 February 2012 Horrors of Partition Frontline Vol 29 no 4 a b c d e f g h Snedden 2015 p 167 a b Snedden What happened to Muslims in Jammu 2001 Chattha Partition and its Aftermath 2009 pp 182 183 Chattha The Long Shadow of 1947 2016 p 149 a b c Snedden Kashmir The Unwritten History 2013 p 56 a b Das Gupta Jammu and Kashmir 2012 p 97 Puri Balraj November 2010 The Question of Accession Epilogue 4 11 4 6 Eventually they agreed on a modified resolution which respectfully and fervently appealed to the Maharaja Bahadur to declare internal autonomy of the State and accede to the Dominion of Pakistan However the General Council did not challenge the maharaja s right to take a decision on accession and it acknowledged that his rights should be protected even after acceding to Pakistan a b Snedden 2015 pp 164 167 Bhattacharya What Price Freedom 2013 pp 25 27 Snedden Kashmir The Unwritten History 2013 p 44 Raghavan War and Peace in Modern India 2010 pp 105 106 Nawaz 2008 pp 119 120 Das Gupta Jammu and Kashmir 2012 pp 90 91 Snedden Kashmir The Unwritten History 2013 p 43 Raghavan War and Peace in Modern India 2010 pp 105 106 Nawaz 2008 p 120 Ankit Henry Scott 2010 p 44 Chattha Partition and its Aftermath 2009 p 179 State Community and Neighbourhood in Princely North India c 1900 1950 By I Copland Palgrave Macmillan 2005 p 143 ISBN 9780230005983 a b Puri Across the Line of Control 2012 pp 25 26 Chattha Partition and its Aftermath 2009 p 180 182 a b Chattha Partition and its Aftermath 2009 p 183 Copland State Community and Neighbourhood 2005 p 156 a b Ahmad Khalid Bashir 5 November 2014 circa 1947 A Long Story Kashmir Life retrieved 11 October 2016 Document Twenty The second assassination of Gandhi by Ram Puniyani Anamika Pub amp Distributors 2003 pp 91 92 ISBN 9788174951489 Chattha Partition and its Aftermath 2009 p 182 183 Copland The Abdullah Factor p 244 Hassan Amtul 2006 Impact of Partition Refugees in Pakistan Struggle for Empowerment and State s Response Regional Centre for Strategic Studies p 58 ISBN 9788173046988 Dutta Madhusree Flavia Adarkar Neera 1996 The Nation the State and Indian Identity Popular Prakashan p 145 ISBN 9788185604091 Hajari Nisid 9 June 2015 Midnight s Furies The Deadly Legacy of India s Partition Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 209 ISBN 9780547669243 Copland State Community and Neighbourhood 2005 pp 153 154 Snedden Kashmir The Unwritten History 2013 pp 52 53 a b Copland State Community and Neighbourhood 2005 p 153 a b Saraf Kashmiris Fight for Freedom Volume 2 2015 p 133 1979 841 Snedden Kashmir The Unwritten History 2013 pp 55 330 MAINPRICE PAPERS South Asian Studies Archive University of Cambridge retrieved 31 March 2017 Snedden What happened to Muslims in Jammu 2001 p 121 Chattha Partition and its Aftermath 2009 p 185 a b c Snedden What happened to Muslims in Jammu 2001 p 125 a b Saraf Kashmiris Fight for Freedom Volume 2 2015 p 481 Towards the middle of 1949 a movement for return started on a small scale which gained momentum by the end of 1950 A fair estimate of the returnees is about a hundred thousand Sheikh Abdullah s Government re settled them on their abandoned properties advanced taqqavi loans and appointed a special staff to look after their problems Saraf Kashmiris Fight for Freedom Volume 2 2015 p 133 In the 1970 elections for A K President as well as the Legislative Assembly the number of voters from Jammu province residing in Pakistan was 2 29 152 The population percentage of voters for Pakistan elections which were held in the same year was about 50 It would take the population figures of Jammu refugees in Pakistan in 1970 to about five lakhs Based on the population growth rates of Pakistan given 1941 1951 17 9 1951 1961 26 9 1961 1972 52 1 this corresponds to a population level of 219 718 in 1941 and 259 047 in 1951 a b c d e f Bhatia 2020 pp 80 82 Maini K D 12 April 2015 The day Rajouri was recaptured dailyexcelsior com Daily Excelsior Retrieved 19 October 2020 Puri 2010 p 28 Puri 2010 p 30 a b c d Snedden Kashmir The Unwritten History 2013 p 28 C 1 Population by religious community 2011 Census Census of India Website Office of the Registrar General amp Census Commissioner India Retrieved 8 May 2018 Chattha The Long Shadow of 1947 2016 p 145 Jammu amp Kashmir 1947 50 An Account of Activities of First Three Years of Sheikh Abdullah s Government Printed at the Ranbir Government Press 1951 p 90 Snedden Kashmir The Unwritten History 2013 p 161 Snedden 2015 By 1951 of the former approximately 114 000 non Muslims who in 1941 had lived in areas that later came to comprise Azad Kashmir only a paltry 790 non Muslims remained BibliographyAnkit Rakesh May 2010 Henry Scott The forgotten soldier of Kashmir Epilogue 4 5 44 49 Archived from the original on 10 May 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2017 Bhatia Mohita 2020 Rethinking Conflict at the Margins Dalits and Borderland Hindus in Jammu and Kashmir Going Beyond the Dominant Discourse Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 83602 9 Bhattacharya Brigadier Samir 2013 NOTHING BUT Book Three What Price Freedom Partridge Publishing ISBN 978 1 4828 1625 9 Chattha Ilyas Ahmad September 2009 Partition and Its Aftermath Violence Migration and the Role of Refugees in the Socio Economic Development of Gujranwala and Sialkot Cities 1947 1961 PhD Centre for Imperial and Post Colonial Studies School of Humanities University of Southampton Retrieved 16 February 2016 Chattha Ilyas 2016 The Long Shadow of 1947 Partition Violence and Displacement in Jammu amp Kashmir In Amritjit Singh Nalini Iyer Rahul K Gairola eds Revisiting India s Partition New Essays on Memory Culture and Politics Lexington Books pp 143 156 ISBN 978 1 4985 3105 4 Copland Ian 1991 The Abdullah Factor Kashmiri Muslims and the Crisis of 1947 In D A Low ed Political Inheritance of Pakistan Springer ISBN 9781349115563 Copland Ian 2005 State Community and Neighbourhood in Princely North India c 1900 1950 Palgrave Macmillan UK pp 153 ISBN 978 0 230 00598 3 Das Gupta Jyoti Bhusan 2012 first published 1968 Jammu and Kashmir Springer ISBN 978 94 011 9231 6 Nawaz Shuja May 2008 The First Kashmir War Revisited India Review 7 2 115 154 doi 10 1080 14736480802055455 S2CID 155030407 Puri Luv 2012 Across the Line of Control Inside Pakistan administered Jammu and Kashmir Hurst ISBN 9781849041737 Raghavan Srinath 2010 War and Peace in Modern India A Strategic History of the Nehru Years Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 00737 7 Saraf Muhammad Yusuf 2015 first published 1979 by Ferozsons Kashmiris Fight for Freedom Volume 2 Mirpur National Institute Kashmir Studies Snedden Christopher 2001 What happened to Muslims in Jammu Local identity the massacre of 1947 and the roots of the Kashmir problem South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies 24 2 111 134 doi 10 1080 00856400108723454 S2CID 143991832 Snedden Christopher 2013 first published as The Untold Story of the People of Azad Kashmir 2012 Kashmir The Unwritten History HarperCollins India ISBN 978 9350298985 Snedden Christopher 2015 Understanding Kashmir and Kashmiris Oxford University Press ISBN 9781849046213 External linksKhalid Bashir Ahmad Jammu 1947 Tales of Bloodshed Greater Kashmir 5 November 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1947 Jammu massacres amp oldid 1124610922, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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