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US group preserves fading memories of 1947 partition

Over the last year, 500 individuals from 20 countries trained as citizen historians through free online workshops and submitted 1,000 video interviews ranging from 1 to 9 hours for preservation

IANS Washington

Thousands of people from across the world have rallied to collect the moving stories of one of the greatest migrations after South Asia's 1947 violent partition and the birth of two nations -- India and Pakistan.

Helping to preserve the history of that tragic event is a small team of volunteers based at the University of California in Berkeley and their newly founded organization, The 1947 Partition Archive.

The group uses web based "crowdsourcing" to record and preserve witness oral histories.

Over the last year, nearly 500 individuals from over 20 countries trained as citizen historians through free online workshops and submitted nearly 1,000 video interviews ranging in length from 1 to 9 hours for preservation.

 

"Because we are huge believers in grassroots and crowdsourcing, we wanted to take that route. This way, anybody from anywhere can contribute," says the founder, Guneeta Singh Bhalla, who left a research position at Berkeley in December 2012 to volunteer full time for the project.

Through their grassroots effort, The 1947 Partition Archive hopes to train up to 1,000 citizen historians and preserve 3,000 witness accounts in 2014.

With the witnesses of the traumatic events of partition largely in their 80s and 90s, the 1947 Partition Archive collected $35,000 through a crowd funding campaign through international crowdfunding site IndieGoGo, to better equip itself for the task.

The ongoing project, which can be seen online at 1947PartitionArchive.org, features an online Story Map showing where each person's story originated.

"I feel like a bottled plant," writes Z. Ansari on becoming homeless overnight after he found himself on the wrong side of the divide as a Muslim. "I have no roots. I can be put anywhere."

Having lost all material property, he migrated with his family to Pakistan along with millions of other Muslim families.

"I looked up to see the same sky, the same stars, but this was India," exclaims J. Hemrajani upon arriving in Delhi from a small town in Sindh, Pakistan.

"I feel like I was forced into exile," recalls refugee G.S. Sekhon. "Except I did nothing wrong to deserve that."

The archive also preserves pre-partition life and culture as well as post-partition migrations and life changes from all ethnic, religious and economic communities in the form of video and sometimes audio testimonies.

Interviews are conducted in the language that the interviewee is most comfortable with and already include English, Urdu, Punjabi, Hindi, Bengali, Gujarati, Sindhi and others.

Last year, the archive also funded four Story Scholars in South Asia.

Now, Bhalla and her colleagues are urging Indian Americans to share their stories, too.

"We are seeking input from witnesses of partition all over the world, not just NRIs," she says.

"There are individuals from the borders of Afghanistan to Burma that have been affected, and of course many British personnel. It is essentially a global story at this point."

Bhalla says she first became fascinated with the stories of partition when she heard her grandmother describe her own traumatic train ride, clutching her three children to her as she observed carnage and saw dead bodies around the railroad tracks.

"My paternal grandparents and my father were all from Lahore. My father was an infant at the time of partition, when he and his brothers fled with my grandmother to Amritsar. Hence, it is a part of my existence," said Bhalla.

 

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First Published: Mar 09 2014 | 11:02 AM IST

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