fbpx
Wikipedia

Violence against women during the Partition of India

During the Partition of India, violence against women occurred extensively.[1] It is estimated that during the partition between 75,000[2] and 100,000[3] women were kidnapped and raped.[4] The rape of women by men during this period is well documented,[5] with women sometimes also being complicit in these attacks.[5][6] In March 1947, systematic violence against women started in Rawalpindi where Sikh women were targeted by Muslim mobs.[7][8] Violence was also perpetrated on an organized basis, with Pathans taking Hindu and Sikh women from refugee trains while one alleged that he witnessed armed Sikhs periodically dragging Muslim women.[9]

It has been estimated that in the Punjab alone, the number of abducted Muslim women was double the number of abducted Hindu and Sikh women, because of the actions of coordinated Sikh jathas[10] who were aided and armed by Sikh rulers of the 16 semi-autonomous princely states in Punjab which overlapped the expected partition border, and had been preparing to oust the Muslims from East Punjab in case of partition.[11] India and Pakistan later worked to repatriate the abducted women. Muslim women were to be sent to Pakistan and Hindu and Sikh women to India.[10]

Background edit

During partition Punjabi society was affected at all levels by murder, displacement and assault. Rival communities targeted women to humiliate them and actions against women included rape, abduction and forcible conversions. Violence against women also occurred in Jammu and Kashmir and the Rajputana states.[12]

Violence edit

In contrast to earlier riots, women were victimised in the direct action day riots in Calcutta.[13] Many Hindu women were kidnapped during the Noakhali violence.[14] Anti-women violence occurred during the 1946 massacres of Muslims in Bihar. Thousands were kidnapped just in Patna district.[15] Muslim women in Bihar committed suicide by jumping into wells.[16] In November 1946, Muslim women were subjected to stripping, nude processions and rape by Hindu mobs in the town of Garhmukteshwar.[17][18] In Amritsar, Sikhs paraded naked Muslim women, who were then publicly raped before being set fire to in the street.[19]

Systematic violence against women started in March 1947 in Rawalpindi where Sikh women were targeted by Muslim mobs.[7] Numerous Hindu and Sikh villages were wiped out. Huge numbers of Hindus and Sikhs were killed,[20] forcibly converted, children were kidnapped and women were abducted and raped publicly.[21][22] The official figure of death in Rawalpindi stood at 2,263.[22] Before further attacks many Sikh women committed suicide by jumping in water wells to save honour and avoid conversion.[23][8]

Sikh political leaders had considered plans for the eventual expulsion of Muslims from East Punjab in case of a partition leading up to the event. Tara Singh, a member of Shiromani Akali Dal and principle Sikh leader during the partition said “We took the decision to turn the Muslims out" years before the event. Intending to oust the Muslims in East Punjab to provide lands for the incoming Sikh population from West Punjab. Several districts in Punjab, including Patiala, Faridkot and Nabha were governed by Sikh leaders and reported to have been arming and providing safe haven for Sikh marauding groups in anticipation of partition.[11]

Violence was also perpetrated on an organized basis, with local men taking Hindu and Sikh women from refugee trains while one observer witnessed armed Sikhs periodically dragging Muslim women from their refugee column and killing any men who resisted, while the military sepoys guarding the columns did nothing.[9]

Both Sikh and Muslim communities also cited revenge as a reason for their attacks. The scholar Andrew Major notes that the large-scale abduction and rape of girls seemed to have been a part of systematic 'ethnic cleansing' in the Gurgaon region on the outskirts of Delhi.[24] There was a nude procession of Muslim women in Amritsar.[25]

Although many influential men such as deputy commissioners and police officials tried to prevent abductions or rescue the victims, many other men abused their positions of authority, such as the Maharaja of Patiala who was holding a Muslim girl from a reputable family. Known perpetrators included police officials, landed magnates and Muslim League members as well as criminal elements. Armed Pathans in particular were considered the worst offenders, particularly in the Rawalpindi district. a large number of non-Muslim women from Kashmir were abducted and sold in West Punjab and these sold women often ended up as 'slave girls' in factories. By early 1948, Pathans started abducting even Muslim women.[26]

In East Punjab, local police and the Indian military frequently engaged in the abduction and distribution of Muslim women besides the Sikh jathas and refugees from West Punjab. According to Anis Kidwai, the 'better stuff' would be distributed among the police and army while the remaining were distributed among the rest of the attackers.[27] In the villages around Delhi, police and army soldiers participated in the rape of Muslim women.[28]

Estimates of abductions edit

The exact figures of abducted women are unknown and estimates vary. Leonard Mosley wrote that in total 100,000 girls were abducted on all sides. The Indian government estimated that there were 33,000 Hindu and Sikh women in Pakistan and the Pakistani government estimated that there were 50,000 Muslim women abducted in India.[29] Andrew Major estimates that 40-45,000 women in total were abducted in Punjab during the Partition riots, with approximately twice as many Muslim women as Hindu and Sikh women having been abducted.[30] Masroor estimates that 60,000 Muslim women were abducted while Begum Tassaduq Hussain estimated that 90,000 Muslim women were abducted.[31]

Others estimate that more Hindu and Sikh women were victims of violence as compared to Muslim women, for instance Urvashi Butalia, who specializes in Partition violence against women, says that anywhere from 25,000 to 29,000 Hindu and Sikh women were concerned as compared to 12,000 to 15,000 Muslim women,[32] numbers which have been endorsed by Indian scholars Roshni Sharma and Priyanca Mathur Velath[33] as well by historian Anwesha Sengupta.[34]

Recoveries edit

In September 1947 both the Indian Prime Minister Nehru and Pakistani Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan vowed not to recognize the forced marriages and both countries ratified this agreement in the Inter-Dominion Conference in December which established the recovery procedure.[35]

The job of compiling claims for abducted women by their relatives fell on the Central Recovery Offices in both countries. The task of locating abducted women was given to local police who would be assisted with the guidance of the abducted women's relatives. Social workers and District Liaison Officers who were appointed by the Liaison Agency of the opposite Punjab government also provided much assistance. Non-Muslim women recovered from Pakistan were housed in District transit camps, the Central camp being in Lahore. A similar camp was established for Muslim women in Jalandhar. The Indian and Pakistani Military Evacuation Organization were established to guard and escort women to their respective countries.[35]

Recoveries eventually slowed down with Nehru admitting in January 1948, "Neither side has really tried hard enough to recover them". Because Hindu and Sikh refugees in India mistakenly thought that the number of abducted non-Muslim women exceeded the number of abducted Muslim women they mounted a public campaign and demanded that Muslim women be held up from recoveries as hostages. Eventually the two countries agreed to not publicize the figures of women repatriated. India and Pakistan's rivalry also slowed the pace of recoveries.[36]

Pakistan claimed that the slow recoveries were because many Hindus and Sikhs refused to take back their women as they considered them 'defiled', an argument which Nehru accepted while accusing Pakistan of being uncooperative. Heavy rains and flooding also slowed the pace of recoveries in West Punjab and in January 1948 Pakistan prohibited Indian officials from entering those districts of Punjab which bordered Kashmir. [37]

Many women also refused to be recovered, fearing being shamed and rejected by their families and communities while some women had adjusted to their new 'families' and hence refused to return. By 1954 both governments agreed that women should not be forcibly repatriated.[38]

Number of recoveries edit

Between December 1947 and December 1949, 6000 women were recovered from Pakistan and 12,000 from India. Most recoveries were made, in order of succession, from East and West Punjab, Jammu, Kashmir and Patiala. Over the eight-year period 30,000 women had been repatriated by both governments. The number of Muslim women recovered was significantly higher; 20,728 against 9,032 non-Muslim women. Most recoveries were made in the period between 1947 and 1952. although some recoveries were made as late as 1956.[39]

Between 6 December 1947 and 31 March 1952, the number of non-Muslim women recovered from Pakistan was 8,326. 5,616 of them were from Punjab, 459 from NWFP, 10 from Balochistan, 56 from Sind and 592 from Bahawalpur. After 21 January 1949, 1,593 non-Muslim women were recovered from Jammu and Kashmir.[40]

In the same time period the number of Muslim women recovered from India had been 16,545. Of them 11,129 were from Punjab, 4,934 from Patiala and East Punjab Union and after 21 January 1949 the number of Muslim women recovered from Jammu and Kashmir was 482.[40] The number of Muslim women recovered from Delhi was 200.[41][42]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Žarkov, Dubravka (2007). The Body of War: Media, Ethnicity, and Gender in the Break-Up of Yugoslavia. Duke University Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-0822339663.
  2. ^ Aftab, Tahera (30 November 2007). Inscribing South Asian Muslim Women: An Annotated Bibliography & Research Guide (Annotated ed.). Brill. p. 224. ISBN 978-9004158498.
  3. ^ Ian Talbot; Gurharpal Singh (23 July 2009). The Partition of India. Cambridge University Press. pp. 2–3. ISBN 978-0-521-85661-4.
  4. ^ Butalia, Urvashi (2011). Harsh Dobhal (ed.). Writings on Human Rights, Law and Society in India: A Combat Law Anthology. Human Rights Law Network. p. 598. ISBN 978-81-89479-78-7.
  5. ^ a b Kabir, Ananya Jahanara (25 January 2010). Sorcha Gunne, Zoe Brigley Brigley Thompson (ed.). Feminism, Literature and Rape Narratives: Violence and Violation (1st ed.). Routledge. p. 149. ISBN 978-0415806084.
  6. ^ Chowdhry, Geeta (2000). Sita Ranchod-Nilsson, Mary Ann Tétreaul (ed.). Women, States, and Nationalism: At Home in the Nation? (1st ed.). Routledge. pp. 107–110. ISBN 978-0415221726.
  7. ^ a b Shani, Giorgio (6 December 2007). Sikh Nationalism and Identity in a Global Age. Routledge. p. 89. ISBN 9781134101894.
  8. ^ a b Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 59.
  9. ^ a b Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 60.
  10. ^ a b Barbara D. Metcalf; Thomas R. Metcalf (24 September 2012). A Concise History of Modern India. 2022-12-29 at the Wayback Machine p 226, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-53705-6.
  11. ^ a b Brass, Paul R. (2003-03-01). "The partition of India and retributive genocide in the Punjab, 1946-47: Means, methods, and purposes 1". Journal of Genocide Research. 5 (1): 71–101. doi:10.1080/14623520305657. ISSN 1462-3528. S2CID 14023723.
  12. ^ Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 57–58.
  13. ^ Ian Talbot; Gurharpal Singh (23 July 2009). The Partition of India. Cambridge University Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-521-85661-4.
  14. ^ Ian Talbot; Gurharpal Singh (23 July 2009). The Partition of India. Cambridge University Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-521-85661-4.
  15. ^ Ian Talbot; Gurharpal Singh (23 July 2009). The Partition of India. Cambridge University Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-521-85661-4.
  16. ^ Ian Talbot; Gurharpal Singh (23 July 2009). The Partition of India. Cambridge University Press. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-521-85661-4.
  17. ^ Gyanendra Pandey (22 November 2001). Remembering Partition: Violence, Nationalism and History in India. Cambridge University Press. pp. 104–. ISBN 978-0-521-00250-9.
  18. ^ Ian Talbot; Gurharpal Singh (23 July 2009). The Partition of India. Cambridge University Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-521-85661-4.
  19. ^ Barney White-Spunner (2017). Partition: The Story of Indian Independence and the Creation of Pakistan in 1947. Simon & Schuster. p. 166. ISBN 978-1-4711-4800-2.PDF 2022-02-27 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Page, David (2002). The Partition Omnibus. Oxford University. Almost every village in the Rawalpindi District where non- Muslims lived was attacked and plundered in this manner and Hindus and Sikhs were murdered.
  21. ^ Bina D'Costa (2011). Nationbuilding, Gender and War Crimes in South Asia. Routledge. p. 57. ISBN 9780415565660.
  22. ^ a b Verinder Grover, Ranjana Arora (1998). Partition of India: Indo-Pak Wars and the Uno. Deep and Deep Publications. p. 11. ISBN 9788176290579.
  23. ^ Anjali Gera Roy, Nandi Bhatia (2008). Partitioned Lives: Narratives of Home, Displacement, and Resettlement. Pearson. p. 189.
  24. ^ Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 61.
  25. ^ Ian Talbot; Gurharpal Singh (23 July 2009). The Partition of India. Cambridge University Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-521-85661-4.
  26. ^ Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 62.
  27. ^ Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 63.
  28. ^ "Do women have a country?". The Hindu. 2004-06-06. Retrieved 2017-05-09.[dead link]
  29. ^ Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 68–69.
  30. ^ Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 69.
  31. ^ Kiran, Violence against Muslim Women 2017, p. 163.
  32. ^ Butalia, Urvashi (24 April 1993). "Community, State and Gender: On Women's Agency during Partition". Economic and Political Weekly. 28 (17): WS14. JSTOR 4399641 – via JSTOR.
  33. ^ Sharma, Roshni; Mathur Velath, Priyanca. "Encountering 'Identity': Refugee Women and the Partition of the Subcontinent". Journal of Migration Affairs.
  34. ^ Sengupta, Anwesha. "Looking Back at Partition and Women: A Factsheet" (PDF). Peace Prints.
  35. ^ a b Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 64–65.
  36. ^ Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 65.
  37. ^ Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 66.
  38. ^ Major, Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995, pp. 67–68.
  39. ^ Bina D'Costa (4 October 2016). Children and Violence: Politics of Conflict in South Asia. Cambridge University Press. pp. 24–. ISBN 978-1-316-67399-7.
  40. ^ a b Sukeshi Kamra (2002). Bearing Witness: Partition, Independence, End of the Raj. University of Calgary Press. pp. 316–. ISBN 978-1-55238-041-3.
  41. ^ Anis Kidwai (1 March 2011). In Freedom's Shade. Penguin Books Limited. pp. 183–. ISBN 978-81-8475-152-9.
  42. ^ Ashraf, Ajaz (2017-08-12). "How Sunil Dutt's uncle and Inzamam-ul-Haq's family were saved during Partition violence". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2017-10-24.

Bibliography edit

  • Major, Andrew (1995), "Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab", South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies, 18 (1), doi:10.1080/00856409508723244
  • Kiran, Naumana (2017), "Punjab Migration 1947: Violence against Muslim Women and the Settlement", South Asian Studies, 32 (1)
  • Ravinder Kaur (2014). "Bodies of Partition: Of Widows, Residue and Other Historical waste". Penn University Press.
Books
  • Barbara D. Metcalf; Thomas R. Metcalf (24 September 2012). A Concise History of Modern India. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-53705-6.
  • Daiya, Kavita (4 February 2011). Violent belongings : partition, gender and postcolonial nationalism in India. Philadelphia, Pa.: Temple University Press. ISBN 978-1592137442.
  • Khan, Yasmin (2008). The great Partition : the making of India and Pakistan. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300143331.
  • Kakar, Sudhir (1996). The colors of violence : cultural identities, religion, and conflict. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226422852.

Further reading edit

  • Talib, Gurbachan Singh; Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (1950). Muslim League Attack on Sikhs and Hindus in the Punjab 1947. Amritsar: Shiromani Gurdwara Parbankhak Committee.

External links edit

  • Whitehead, Andrew Women victims of partition -- Brutalised and humiliated

violence, against, women, during, partition, india, during, partition, india, violence, against, women, occurred, extensively, estimated, that, during, partition, between, women, were, kidnapped, raped, rape, women, during, this, period, well, documented, with. During the Partition of India violence against women occurred extensively 1 It is estimated that during the partition between 75 000 2 and 100 000 3 women were kidnapped and raped 4 The rape of women by men during this period is well documented 5 with women sometimes also being complicit in these attacks 5 6 In March 1947 systematic violence against women started in Rawalpindi where Sikh women were targeted by Muslim mobs 7 8 Violence was also perpetrated on an organized basis with Pathans taking Hindu and Sikh women from refugee trains while one alleged that he witnessed armed Sikhs periodically dragging Muslim women 9 It has been estimated that in the Punjab alone the number of abducted Muslim women was double the number of abducted Hindu and Sikh women because of the actions of coordinated Sikh jathas 10 who were aided and armed by Sikh rulers of the 16 semi autonomous princely states in Punjab which overlapped the expected partition border and had been preparing to oust the Muslims from East Punjab in case of partition 11 India and Pakistan later worked to repatriate the abducted women Muslim women were to be sent to Pakistan and Hindu and Sikh women to India 10 Contents 1 Background 2 Violence 2 1 Estimates of abductions 3 Recoveries 3 1 Number of recoveries 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground editDuring partition Punjabi society was affected at all levels by murder displacement and assault Rival communities targeted women to humiliate them and actions against women included rape abduction and forcible conversions Violence against women also occurred in Jammu and Kashmir and the Rajputana states 12 Violence editIn contrast to earlier riots women were victimised in the direct action day riots in Calcutta 13 Many Hindu women were kidnapped during the Noakhali violence 14 Anti women violence occurred during the 1946 massacres of Muslims in Bihar Thousands were kidnapped just in Patna district 15 Muslim women in Bihar committed suicide by jumping into wells 16 In November 1946 Muslim women were subjected to stripping nude processions and rape by Hindu mobs in the town of Garhmukteshwar 17 18 In Amritsar Sikhs paraded naked Muslim women who were then publicly raped before being set fire to in the street 19 Systematic violence against women started in March 1947 in Rawalpindi where Sikh women were targeted by Muslim mobs 7 Numerous Hindu and Sikh villages were wiped out Huge numbers of Hindus and Sikhs were killed 20 forcibly converted children were kidnapped and women were abducted and raped publicly 21 22 The official figure of death in Rawalpindi stood at 2 263 22 Before further attacks many Sikh women committed suicide by jumping in water wells to save honour and avoid conversion 23 8 Sikh political leaders had considered plans for the eventual expulsion of Muslims from East Punjab in case of a partition leading up to the event Tara Singh a member of Shiromani Akali Dal and principle Sikh leader during the partition said We took the decision to turn the Muslims out years before the event Intending to oust the Muslims in East Punjab to provide lands for the incoming Sikh population from West Punjab Several districts in Punjab including Patiala Faridkot and Nabha were governed by Sikh leaders and reported to have been arming and providing safe haven for Sikh marauding groups in anticipation of partition 11 Violence was also perpetrated on an organized basis with local men taking Hindu and Sikh women from refugee trains while one observer witnessed armed Sikhs periodically dragging Muslim women from their refugee column and killing any men who resisted while the military sepoys guarding the columns did nothing 9 Both Sikh and Muslim communities also cited revenge as a reason for their attacks The scholar Andrew Major notes that the large scale abduction and rape of girls seemed to have been a part of systematic ethnic cleansing in the Gurgaon region on the outskirts of Delhi 24 There was a nude procession of Muslim women in Amritsar 25 Although many influential men such as deputy commissioners and police officials tried to prevent abductions or rescue the victims many other men abused their positions of authority such as the Maharaja of Patiala who was holding a Muslim girl from a reputable family Known perpetrators included police officials landed magnates and Muslim League members as well as criminal elements Armed Pathans in particular were considered the worst offenders particularly in the Rawalpindi district a large number of non Muslim women from Kashmir were abducted and sold in West Punjab and these sold women often ended up as slave girls in factories By early 1948 Pathans started abducting even Muslim women 26 In East Punjab local police and the Indian military frequently engaged in the abduction and distribution of Muslim women besides the Sikh jathas and refugees from West Punjab According to Anis Kidwai the better stuff would be distributed among the police and army while the remaining were distributed among the rest of the attackers 27 In the villages around Delhi police and army soldiers participated in the rape of Muslim women 28 Estimates of abductions edit The exact figures of abducted women are unknown and estimates vary Leonard Mosley wrote that in total 100 000 girls were abducted on all sides The Indian government estimated that there were 33 000 Hindu and Sikh women in Pakistan and the Pakistani government estimated that there were 50 000 Muslim women abducted in India 29 Andrew Major estimates that 40 45 000 women in total were abducted in Punjab during the Partition riots with approximately twice as many Muslim women as Hindu and Sikh women having been abducted 30 Masroor estimates that 60 000 Muslim women were abducted while Begum Tassaduq Hussain estimated that 90 000 Muslim women were abducted 31 Others estimate that more Hindu and Sikh women were victims of violence as compared to Muslim women for instance Urvashi Butalia who specializes in Partition violence against women says that anywhere from 25 000 to 29 000 Hindu and Sikh women were concerned as compared to 12 000 to 15 000 Muslim women 32 numbers which have been endorsed by Indian scholars Roshni Sharma and Priyanca Mathur Velath 33 as well by historian Anwesha Sengupta 34 Recoveries editIn September 1947 both the Indian Prime Minister Nehru and Pakistani Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan vowed not to recognize the forced marriages and both countries ratified this agreement in the Inter Dominion Conference in December which established the recovery procedure 35 The job of compiling claims for abducted women by their relatives fell on the Central Recovery Offices in both countries The task of locating abducted women was given to local police who would be assisted with the guidance of the abducted women s relatives Social workers and District Liaison Officers who were appointed by the Liaison Agency of the opposite Punjab government also provided much assistance Non Muslim women recovered from Pakistan were housed in District transit camps the Central camp being in Lahore A similar camp was established for Muslim women in Jalandhar The Indian and Pakistani Military Evacuation Organization were established to guard and escort women to their respective countries 35 Recoveries eventually slowed down with Nehru admitting in January 1948 Neither side has really tried hard enough to recover them Because Hindu and Sikh refugees in India mistakenly thought that the number of abducted non Muslim women exceeded the number of abducted Muslim women they mounted a public campaign and demanded that Muslim women be held up from recoveries as hostages Eventually the two countries agreed to not publicize the figures of women repatriated India and Pakistan s rivalry also slowed the pace of recoveries 36 Pakistan claimed that the slow recoveries were because many Hindus and Sikhs refused to take back their women as they considered them defiled an argument which Nehru accepted while accusing Pakistan of being uncooperative Heavy rains and flooding also slowed the pace of recoveries in West Punjab and in January 1948 Pakistan prohibited Indian officials from entering those districts of Punjab which bordered Kashmir 37 Many women also refused to be recovered fearing being shamed and rejected by their families and communities while some women had adjusted to their new families and hence refused to return By 1954 both governments agreed that women should not be forcibly repatriated 38 Number of recoveries edit Between December 1947 and December 1949 6000 women were recovered from Pakistan and 12 000 from India Most recoveries were made in order of succession from East and West Punjab Jammu Kashmir and Patiala Over the eight year period 30 000 women had been repatriated by both governments The number of Muslim women recovered was significantly higher 20 728 against 9 032 non Muslim women Most recoveries were made in the period between 1947 and 1952 although some recoveries were made as late as 1956 39 Between 6 December 1947 and 31 March 1952 the number of non Muslim women recovered from Pakistan was 8 326 5 616 of them were from Punjab 459 from NWFP 10 from Balochistan 56 from Sind and 592 from Bahawalpur After 21 January 1949 1 593 non Muslim women were recovered from Jammu and Kashmir 40 In the same time period the number of Muslim women recovered from India had been 16 545 Of them 11 129 were from Punjab 4 934 from Patiala and East Punjab Union and after 21 January 1949 the number of Muslim women recovered from Jammu and Kashmir was 482 40 The number of Muslim women recovered from Delhi was 200 41 42 See also editThe 1947 Partition Archive Opposition to the partition of IndiaReferences edit Zarkov Dubravka 2007 The Body of War Media Ethnicity and Gender in the Break Up of Yugoslavia Duke University Press p 172 ISBN 978 0822339663 Aftab Tahera 30 November 2007 Inscribing South Asian Muslim Women An Annotated Bibliography amp Research Guide Annotated ed Brill p 224 ISBN 978 9004158498 Ian Talbot Gurharpal Singh 23 July 2009 The Partition of India Cambridge University Press pp 2 3 ISBN 978 0 521 85661 4 Butalia Urvashi 2011 Harsh Dobhal ed Writings on Human Rights Law and Society in India A Combat Law Anthology Human Rights Law Network p 598 ISBN 978 81 89479 78 7 a b Kabir Ananya Jahanara 25 January 2010 Sorcha Gunne Zoe Brigley Brigley Thompson ed Feminism Literature and Rape Narratives Violence and Violation 1st ed Routledge p 149 ISBN 978 0415806084 Chowdhry Geeta 2000 Sita Ranchod Nilsson Mary Ann Tetreaul ed Women States and Nationalism At Home in the Nation 1st ed Routledge pp 107 110 ISBN 978 0415221726 a b Shani Giorgio 6 December 2007 Sikh Nationalism and Identity in a Global Age Routledge p 89 ISBN 9781134101894 a b Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 59 a b Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 60 a b Barbara D Metcalf Thomas R Metcalf 24 September 2012 A Concise History of Modern India Archived 2022 12 29 at the Wayback Machine p 226 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 53705 6 a b Brass Paul R 2003 03 01 The partition of India and retributive genocide in the Punjab 1946 47 Means methods and purposes 1 Journal of Genocide Research 5 1 71 101 doi 10 1080 14623520305657 ISSN 1462 3528 S2CID 14023723 Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 57 58 Ian Talbot Gurharpal Singh 23 July 2009 The Partition of India Cambridge University Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 521 85661 4 Ian Talbot Gurharpal Singh 23 July 2009 The Partition of India Cambridge University Press p 71 ISBN 978 0 521 85661 4 Ian Talbot Gurharpal Singh 23 July 2009 The Partition of India Cambridge University Press p 72 ISBN 978 0 521 85661 4 Ian Talbot Gurharpal Singh 23 July 2009 The Partition of India Cambridge University Press p 64 ISBN 978 0 521 85661 4 Gyanendra Pandey 22 November 2001 Remembering Partition Violence Nationalism and History in India Cambridge University Press pp 104 ISBN 978 0 521 00250 9 Ian Talbot Gurharpal Singh 23 July 2009 The Partition of India Cambridge University Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 521 85661 4 Barney White Spunner 2017 Partition The Story of Indian Independence and the Creation of Pakistan in 1947 Simon amp Schuster p 166 ISBN 978 1 4711 4800 2 PDF Archived 2022 02 27 at the Wayback Machine Page David 2002 The Partition Omnibus Oxford University Almost every village in the Rawalpindi District where non Muslims lived was attacked and plundered in this manner and Hindus and Sikhs were murdered Bina D Costa 2011 Nationbuilding Gender and War Crimes in South Asia Routledge p 57 ISBN 9780415565660 a b Verinder Grover Ranjana Arora 1998 Partition of India Indo Pak Wars and the Uno Deep and Deep Publications p 11 ISBN 9788176290579 Anjali Gera Roy Nandi Bhatia 2008 Partitioned Lives Narratives of Home Displacement and Resettlement Pearson p 189 Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 61 Ian Talbot Gurharpal Singh 23 July 2009 The Partition of India Cambridge University Press p 68 ISBN 978 0 521 85661 4 Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 62 Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 63 Do women have a country The Hindu 2004 06 06 Retrieved 2017 05 09 dead link Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 68 69 Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 69 Kiran Violence against Muslim Women 2017 p 163 Butalia Urvashi 24 April 1993 Community State and Gender On Women s Agency during Partition Economic and Political Weekly 28 17 WS14 JSTOR 4399641 via JSTOR Sharma Roshni Mathur Velath Priyanca Encountering Identity Refugee Women and the Partition of the Subcontinent Journal of Migration Affairs Sengupta Anwesha Looking Back at Partition and Women A Factsheet PDF Peace Prints a b Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 64 65 Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 65 Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 66 Major Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab 1995 pp 67 68 Bina D Costa 4 October 2016 Children and Violence Politics of Conflict in South Asia Cambridge University Press pp 24 ISBN 978 1 316 67399 7 a b Sukeshi Kamra 2002 Bearing Witness Partition Independence End of the Raj University of Calgary Press pp 316 ISBN 978 1 55238 041 3 Anis Kidwai 1 March 2011 In Freedom s Shade Penguin Books Limited pp 183 ISBN 978 81 8475 152 9 Ashraf Ajaz 2017 08 12 How Sunil Dutt s uncle and Inzamam ul Haq s family were saved during Partition violence DAWN COM Retrieved 2017 10 24 Bibliography editMajor Andrew 1995 Abduction of women during the partition of the Punjab South Asia Journal of South Asian Studies 18 1 doi 10 1080 00856409508723244 Kiran Naumana 2017 Punjab Migration 1947 Violence against Muslim Women and the Settlement South Asian Studies 32 1 Ravinder Kaur 2014 Bodies of Partition Of Widows Residue and Other Historical waste Penn University Press BooksBarbara D Metcalf Thomas R Metcalf 24 September 2012 A Concise History of Modern India Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 53705 6 Daiya Kavita 4 February 2011 Violent belongings partition gender and postcolonial nationalism in India Philadelphia Pa Temple University Press ISBN 978 1592137442 Khan Yasmin 2008 The great Partition the making of India and Pakistan New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300143331 Kakar Sudhir 1996 The colors of violence cultural identities religion and conflict Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226422852 Further reading editTalib Gurbachan Singh Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee 1950 Muslim League Attack on Sikhs and Hindus in the Punjab 1947 Amritsar Shiromani Gurdwara Parbankhak Committee External links editWhitehead Andrew Women victims of partition Brutalised and humiliated Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Violence against women during the Partition of India amp oldid 1202945416, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.