NON-FICTION: SHARDS OF MEMORY
In the wake of its 70th anniversary there has been a spurt of books on Partition. Most of them are unbiased. So is a recent work by debutante author Aanchal Malhotra titled Remnants of a Separation: A History of the Partition through Material Memory, which comes as a refreshing change as it unravels memories by attaching them to physical objects. The young woman, who studied fine arts at the master’s level, turned into an anthropologist and oral historian when she interviewed those who were forced to migrate from one side of the newly carved border to the other. Most people who crossed over nursed the hope that they would soon be able to return to their houses, which sadly was not to happen.
Though young Malhotra’s family had migrated from what became Pakistan, she never gave much thought to this tumultuous chapter in the subcontinent’s history until she saw her paternal grandmother hunched over her bed, carefully examining coins that she had brought with her. There were rupees, annas, paisas, takkas and dhelas, which she had treasured in a blue velvet pouch. What would interest Pakistani readers is that the coin of the largest denomination had ‘One Rupee India 1920’ embossed in bold letters in English and Urdu on one side. Malhotra’s dadi also showed her the maang teeka, which her own mother had brought along hidden in her clothes. The lovely jacket of Malhotra’s book displays the precious — both in terms of value and nostalgia — piece on the forehead of the old lady who treasures it.
Malhotra then takes us to her maternal grandfather and his elder brother’s house. They had brought a round vessel, called a ghara, in which their mother used to make lassi. The ghara continued to do the job in its new home for decades. Malhotra’s nani, meanwhile, had brought a metal yardstick called a gaz which was again put to use measuring fabric.
A debutante author reconstructs Partition through the things fleeing migrants took with them from their homes
Referring to her own ‘conversion’ — from viewing Partition as a moment in history to becoming emotionally engaged with it — the author says that flashing before her eyes were simply black-and-white images of refugees crossing the border, seeking refuge in tents and cooking meagre meals in makeshift kitchens. “But as my grand-uncle spoke about the Great Divide as something they had seen, witnessed, survived, it made my skin crawl.”
As many as 18 more people were interviewed by Malhotra. She talked to them, often in more than one session, and in the company of younger members of their family who would help fill in the blanks. The objects brought by the narrators often triggered their memories, and what a variety of objects there were — fading sepia-toned photographs, utensils, a hand knife for cutting vegetables and (if need arose) for self-defence, identification certificates, a haavan dasta [pestle and mortar], a pashmina shawl and a peacock-shaped bracelet, to name a few.
Malhotra interviewed an elderly Muslim, Nazeer Adhami, who ran away from his home in a suburb of Delhi when it was being ransacked by rioters in 1947, only to return when there was a semblance of normality. He and his family members had worked for the Muslim League, but culturally they felt they were different from their co-religionists in the new country, which was why they stayed back. His memorable belongings were three photographs of his hockey team at Aligarh Muslim University that he had taken off the common room wall.