These questions led "Neerja" director Ram Madhvani to make his short film, "This Bloody Line" on the World Poetry Day (March 21.)
"This story was in my head for 10-15 years now. I had read Auden's poem on Partition. It is quite amazing that he does not name Radcliffe in his 1966 poem, but you know that it is about him and about India.
"I kept thinking what he would have felt if he had read the poem. I don't know whether it was published at that time or whether he read it," Madhvani told PTI in an interview over phone.
Madhvani, who screened the film at the India Today Conclave, says perhaps Radcliffe regretted being a part of this monumental decision, which led to the largest mass migration in human history.
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"He returned the 3,000 pounds, burnt his papers and never spoke about it. So, from this action, you can tell that he must have had some regret about his role. It is a difficult position to be in on a human level," says Madhvani.
But Radcliffe wants her to read it out to him anyway. He then recalls how Mahatma Gandhi had warned him against the Partition even though Lord Mountbatten insisted that he should draw the line.
Madhvani begins the story with Nehru's iconic 'tryst with destiny' speech before moving to Radcliffe and his wife, sitting in their drawing room.
He also intersperses the story with images of actual footage of Partition as a pen runs through the map drawing the red line separating the two countries.
"It is also important for the youth to know and talk about what happened. We need to remember and ensure that we don't do that again. And if you do that again, you should know what you are doing."
The director says he is happy that the film has connected with people on an emotional level as he has been receiving mails from different parts of the country.
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