Was Partition worth the suffering?
My wife and I watched Viceroy’s House in Berkeley,
California. Surprisingly, the movie theatre had
only Americans but no Indians. Uttara Choudhury’s
article on the British movie (Film: “Gurinder Chadha’s
Lavish Period Drama Viceroy’s House Brings New History
on Partition” – October 2017) has enlightened me
further from the historical point of view. It gives us a
new perspective of a U.S.-based writer on the 1947
Partition of India, besides the U.K.-based producer
Gurinder Chadha. A majority of the books written on
the 1947 Partition of India by Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi,
British, and American authors did not refer
to the “Great Game” scheme of Winston Churchill. I
hope future authors will keep this fact in view while
writing their books.
I have seen and suffered the effects of the 1947 Partition.
Around one million human beings lost their lives
and 15 million (including me) became refugees. Was
1947 Partition worth that suffering?
Bal K. Gupta, author,
Forgotten Atrocities: Memoirs of a Survivor of the
1947 Partition of India
by email
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An Indian Christian’s perspective on the BJP government
Your solid stand for democracy and secularism in
India is greatly appreciated (Editorial: “Don’t Mess with India’s Secularism!” – September 2017).
The Hindu population of the U.S. is 0.7 percent. Most
of them are either born in India, or are first, second,
or, at most, third generation in the U.S. And yet they
enjoy total freedom of religion. In contrast, the 3 percent
population of Christians in India have a 2,000
year old legacy, but are now under severe attack by
street goons of the ruling party.
Attacks against the Christian minority have increased
under the BJP rule—a threefold increase in the
year to 31 October 2016, compared to the previous year.
In 2016 there were 421 attacks, and in 2017 there were
410 attacks already by June.
Economist Arun Jaitley made a statement that
Western NGOs are converting people. Many of these
NGOs were feeding and clothing thousands of unwanted
and ignored people of India. One of the leading NGOs,
Compassion International, was spending $50 million a
year in India to help over 145,000 impoverished children
of the society. Their funding was fully stopped.
I got a call from a pastor from the seventh state of
India to enact an anti-conversion bill (Jharkand). For
the first time, he was called to the police station and
harassed with questions. The minorities of India are
living in fear. The people of India have never experienced
such a social crisis.
A. S. Mathew
Ringgold, Georiga

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