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The Punjab: Moving Journeys (Part Two) Early Migrations & Punjabis in the Army Partition Punjab Daily life of onthe Expedition The polar huts The huts the men built were home for the shore party for the duration of the expedition. It was here that all of the Expedition’s life could be found. You would see the men repairing and checking equipment, writing up diaries and papers, collecting scientific records, playing cards, smoking, having a hair cut from Anton - the ponies’ groom - or simply occupying their time. Early Migrations & Punjabis in the Army Here are the ‘tenements’, the five bunks which were home to Cherry-Gerrard (l), Bowers (standing), Oates (middle), Mears (top r), and Atkinson (bottom r). In 2005, Sir Neil Cossons, Chairman of English Heritage, visited Scott’s huts. He writes, “I Migration of Punjabis within the Punjab was struck by how timeless they are. Their timber walls were never built to last and are showing signs of the harsh environment. Yet they stand proud asthe oneagricultural of the few development in the 1800s as Many local communities in south west Punjab werestill side-lined during human landmarks on Antarctic landscape. It was in these huts that Scott’s men lived, were selected from densely they were thought to lack the necessary skills and knowledge. Instead, agriculturalists worked and relaxed during the long Polar winter in preparation for the journey populated Central Punjab, the areas around Amritsar, Ludhiana and Jullundar, to South. coloniseA and develop these irrigated hundred years ago you would have smelt bread baking, heard the piano or watched one of areas. Ponting’s slide shows. And today, as you face the untouched shelves of familiar foods – Tate and Lyle sugar and Coleman’s Mustard - you are simply transported back into another time.” A buffalo cart and street scene in Punjab by P E Vernon, 1926 Food The region was transformed from having predominantly nomadic and Muslim inhabitants to having a large Hindu and Sikh population. implicationscook, of this became significant during in 1947, when Thomas Clissold, The the Expedition’s is baking bread surrounded bypartition his supplies. In the polarpeople would be again forced to migrate, but this time along religious lines. huts the men dined on a wide variety of foods. For example, the menu for the dinner to celebrate Midwinter’s Day in 1911 ran to several courses. This was in stark contrast to the monotonous rations eaten by the sledging teams, an unchanging diet of biscuits, tea and Grants of land in the canal colonies were used to reward Punjabi ex-servicemen, a large number of whom were drawn pemmican (preserved meat). from the region. The colonial authorities sought the loyalty of these men and all landowning communities in this strategically important Menu forarea. the Midwinters Day 1911 – Cape Evans McMurdo Sound Consomme - Seal Roastbeef & Yorkshire pudding Horse Radish Sauce “Areas were reserved for those who contributed in the First World War. People who were in the army were given land very cheaply as reward. Fifty years prior to this this land was just a desert, after there were canals then that site became very good.” Member from the Undivided India Ex-Servicemen’s Association, 2008 Section of ‘Canal map of India, 1885’ Note: The blue lines depict the network of canals The ‘Martial Races’ The period from 1890 to 1914 is often referred to as ‘the Punjabization of the Indian Army.’ The British divided Indian ethnic groups into two categories: Martial and Non Martial. The following were identified as martial (military) races: Jats, Awans, Gujjars, Balochs, Gurkhas, Sikhs, Pashtuns/ Pathans and Rajputs. This period saw extensive recruitment into the Indian army from the martial races and led to accusations about ‘divide and rule.’ During the First World War, Punjabi martial races formed 54 per cent of the entire British Indian Army. The Sikhs were a minority community in India but they featured prominently within the army and were overrepresented when compared with numbers of Muslim and Hindu soldiers from the Punjab. “My older brother fought in the First World War and he got a pension. Many Punjabi’s enrolled in the British army; we were the right hand of the British. With all the fighting in Punjab (the Anglo-Sikh wars in the mid-1800s) the British saw that we were very feisty. It was our tradition then to join the army and it is now in the blood.” Member from the Undivided India Ex-Servicemen’s Association, 2008 “Thousands of Punjabis died in the First World War; I think that is one of the greatest tragedies of the 20th Century, they were cannon fodder.” Member from the Sangat Group, 2008 First World War (1914 - 18): Over half of the 1.4 million Indian soldiers involved were from the Punjab; 64,000 Indian soldiers died. Second World War (1939 - 45): A third of the 1.8 million Indian soldiers who supported the British call to arms in the Second World War were Punjabis. This became the largest all-volunteer force in history. 35,559 Indian soldiers died. Indian soldiers fought alongside allied troops in many of the major battles during these wars. On their return home many became more politically aware and desired freedom from colonial rule. “We weren’t given much information…we couldn’t take a part in the politics. But we heard things on the news. Until the end, February/March 1947, we were absolutely fine. There used to be Sikh and Muslim companies and we often met. We just had a separate mess for each - the food was different. There was a Hindu platoon too and others. We were all friends.” Member from the Undivided India Ex-Servicemen’s Association, 2008 “In 1985 Britain celebrated the 40th anniversary of the end of the Second World War. They did not mention anything about the Indian army…although at the time many ex-servicemen were here…we didn’t know how many Indians took part in the two wars so we wrote some letters the Ministry of Defence and they told us. We thought that we too will commemorate our contributions to the war efforts. Our British Officer joined us along with others who served in India. 178 Indian veterans entered the hall that day.” Member from the Undivided India ExServicemen’s Association, 2008 No.4 Company Bombay Sappers and Miners' Workshops at Maidan, West Punjab, by unknown photographer, 1897-1898 Heavy recruitment from the Punjab for the army had social repercussions as it increased the out-migration of men from this region. As members of the British Indian army Punjabi servicemen travelled the world. Many of these men later returned to the Punjab or settled overseas. “The first wave of migration began between the 1860s and 1890s when the favoured position of the Sikhs in the Indian Army attracted them to foreign lands. Many had served in Central Asia, Africa and the Far East or had acted as security auxiliaries for British firms. Some Sikhs accompanied their fellow officers on tour and were recruited by British companies in the rubber plantations of Malaysia.” From the book Sikhs in Britain, by Gurharpal Singh and Darshan Singh Tatla, 2006 A Sikh sentry, Fort Johnston, Malawi by H H Johnston, 1891 Chinese police. Hankow, Hupeh by Isabella Bird Bishop, 1891 “We’d been in the army and seen other countries. We knew that people who got out had done well and were buying land. All the people who came over (to the UK) thought that we’d work here for 10 years, earn some money, educate the children and go back.” Member from the Undivided India Ex-Servicemen’s Association, 2008 After the Second World War the reconstruction of post-war Britain, together with the emergence of the National Health Service and rapid industrial growth led to labour shortages. The British government actively recruited from overseas including ex-soldiers and their families from the Punjab. These early settlers often filled manual jobs at factories, such as the Woolf Rubber Company near Southall, West London. “The reason Punjabis settled in Southall was because the factory personnel manager was a Major in the Indian Army and he gave them jobs because they would salute him. The second reason was that no one else wanted to work in that Factory.” Member from the Sangat Group, 2008 Indentured labour Because of the Punjab’s late incorporation into the British Empire fewer Punjabis migrated to the Caribbean as indentured labourers when compared to other Indians and the Chinese. In 1895, 350 Punjabi workmen were contracted to work on Ugandan railways in East Africa; a figure which rose to 31,895 six years later. Indian pundits, Trinidad and Tobago, 1931 'O' trestle (mile 476) looking down stream, Kenya by J. R. Baass, 1900 Partition of the Punjab 1947: Partition “It has taken me into my 40s to realise that my life has been defined by partition, not in some abstract conceptual, emotional sense…but I am a child of refugees with refugee families on both sides.” Member from the UK Punjabi Heritage Association 2008 Data collected by the British in India, alongside their underlying assumptions, played an important role in the partition of India 1947. Two regions felt the brunt of partition, the Punjab in the west and Bengal in the east. They were both divided by the newly drawn borders to form the independent countries of India and East and West Pakistan (later to become Pakistan and Bangladesh respectively). Partition unleashed a wave of violence, the scale of which had not been foreseen. Sir Cyril Radcliffe, a British lawyer, was given the task of dividing up the Punjab and Bengal. He had never visited India, was considered impartial and had less than 6 weeks to decide the boundaries. The mission of the Punjab commission was: “ To demarcate the boundaries of the two parts of the Punjab, on the basis of ascertaining the contiguous majority areas of Muslims and non-Muslims. In doing so, it will take into account other factors.” A paper by O H K Spate, published in the Society’s Geographical Journal in October 1947 outlines research that was submitted to Radcliffe. Spate was employed independently by a Muslim group from Gurdaspur district to provide a case to support the inclusion of this district in Pakistan. He explains his personal bias, alongside general misgivings about partition: “The fact that I favour the Muslim case in Pakistan has nothing to do with the merits and demerits of Pakistan itself, and in Bengal my leaning is towards the other side. I doubt whether any final detached historical judgement will be possible, so intangible and ever-shifting are the issues and morality and expedience, the attitudes and motives of parties and personalities.” Records: Records maintained by the British such as the first Indian Census of 1871 had a role to play in the partition. These records classified people and raised awareness of religious identity. It is believed that this inadvertently led to the politicising of the population and increased competitiveness amongst the different religious groups in India. Independence, population exchanges and loss: Massive migrations occurred between the two newly formed states following the Partition. About 14.5 million people crossed the borders to what they hoped was safety. Based on the 1951 Census; 7,226,000 Muslims left India for Pakistan, while 7,249,000 Hindus and Sikhs moved from Pakistan to India after partition. The two newly formed governments were ill-equipped to deal with such large migrations; violence occurred on both sides of the border as a result. Estimates of the number of deaths range from 200,000 to 2 million; historians generally agree a figure of about 1 million deaths, although the true extent will never be known. Distribution of Mohammedans. Published by OSS, 1942 Stories of partition: remembrances The partition of the Punjab stirred many memories. Individual recollections and collective histories were shared and sensitive subjects were openly discussed. The following comments explore unity, loss and disorientation. “My parents were from Amritsar and they boarded a train from there. They had a small attaché case with my mother’s jewellery. When the train was attacked my father put the attaché case in the window to block it. Attackers tried to punch it with daggers. The case was scarred. Anyway, they arrived in Rawalpindi and their baggage was dumped in the GHQ grounds in the open. When they found a roof over their heads they went back to the grounds to reclaim the baggage. They were amazed to see that the jewellery was still in the case! “ Member from the Muslim Women’s Welfare Association, 2008 “My grandmother used to tell us that when the trouble started a local Hindu came to my grandfather and told him that he did not want to migrate to India and would be willing to convert to Islam along with his family, provided everyone in the village treats him and his family as a Muslim. My grandfather told him that he could give his personal guarantee but could not be sure of the rest of the village. The Hindu was disappointed and left Pakistan to go to India.” Member from the Muslim Women’s Welfare Association, 2008 Gandhi Wallahs, Bombay, Maharashtra by D Oliver, 1930 - 40 “A neighbour told me about when she was younger in India; she had to move during partition to Pakistan and she really missed India. She remembered the flowers they used to decorate her dad’s shop when they celebrated Diwali. She would go out and pick these big flowers with her sister but they had to move. She really missed this.” Member from the Bradford Young Ambassadors, 2008 “They ordered the army to make their decision about who wants to join which army, Pakistan or India. We filled out forms, although it was defaulted so that if you are Hindu or Sikh you went to India and the Muslims had to go to Pakistan. They often ignored requests.” Member from the Undivided India Ex-Servicemen’s Association, 2008 “Many Hindus and Sikhs were helped by good Muslims and vice versa. If we were to help each other then our governments would tell us that we shouldn’t. There was no defender. We were given 2-3 weeks of lawlessness and people were allowed to kill whomever they wanted. To this day no one has been questioned.” Member from the Undivided India Ex-Servicemen’s Association, 2008 “Not all the Sikhs are monsters nor all the Muslims. There are good people in both communities.” Member from the Muslim Women’s Welfare Association, 2008 “Before this happened everybody lived together and went to each other’s weddings.We lived together like brothers.” Member from the Undivided India Ex-Servicemen’s Association, 2008 View across roofs of some houses, Lahore, by E Barnardistan, 1904 “People were being forced to leave their homes; they were being burnt and their young girls were taken away and abused…so people killed their own to avoid them being dishonoured. I heard the story of an old woman who had to kill her teenaged daughters before fleeing to Pakistan...” Member from the Muslim Women’s Welfare Association, 2008 Partition & migrations: imaginings Younger participants had varying levels of knowledge about the partition of the Punjab. To explore the contemporary relevance of partition, members of the Bradford based Cartwright Hall Young Ambassadors Group were asked to respond to an imaginary partition of Bradford. “Before this project I didn’t think that much about Pakistan, India and partition or anything; it was just somewhere I called home. It just really hit home that people had to leave everything behind and start afresh their homes, with no idea where they were going and make a huge sacrifice.” “I’d rather practice my religion without violence, without tension; if you move with the people - it’s the same people - it makes sense to. What is in your heart is still going to be in your heart. You can take that with you.” “I would probably try and stay there and do what I can to survive, it would help if people, friends and family were around, even the Christian’s who would have to move would be going through similar emotions. They might respect you for staying. You would hope humanity would be there and they would say, ‘Ok, you made a choice, it is probably a difficult choice but we are going to respect you for that.’ “I think I’d probably leave because of protection in numbers. You have a duty to protect yourself; your life is at risk and your family.” “I would sit my family down and ask them what they want to do, and then come to a conclusion; as long as we are all together then we will be happy wherever we are.” “It goes back to the survival; if the Hijab (headscarf) was going to cause me harm I would remove it. But if it was just about people giving me funny looks or that kind of thing it wouldn’t bother me. But if it was life and death then, I would remove it.”