The UK-wide project was launched this week to bring British Asians of all faiths and backgrounds together to reflect on their shared history through 11 special events funded by the Department for Communities and Local Government.
The aim is forthe participants to remember lives lost and learn about the history of partition first-hand from those who lived through the violence, displacement and ultimately the birth of India, Pakistan and eventually Bangladesh in 1971.
"I hope this brave project will encourage British Asians of all three faiths to reflect on the divisions that ripped us apart in the past, thereby bringing us closer together in the future," he said.
Volunteers from Muslim, Sikh and Hindu communities will get together to stage events,including a play written, produced and performed by a group of Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs to tell the story of the 1948 London Olympics, the first time India and Pakistan met as competing nations in the country from which they had just gained independence.
More From This Section
It will explore the relationships formed, as Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims of South Asian background were forced to flee to the UK in the wake of Idi Amin's upheaval in 1972.
The exhibition will allow visitors to listen to the testimony of local residents.
UK minister for faith Lord Bourne said, "Just as the Grand Trunk Road has tied together India and Pakistan and their diverse cultures and faiths for millennia, this project will highlight the rich history that British Sikhs, Muslims and Hindus share.
A women's group in Slough in southeast England for Hindu, Muslim and Sikh women of all ages will also be set up to talk about the impact of partition on their own families.
The UK government said it hoped that the conversation will lead to a more formal event for the whole community.
According to theDepartment for Communities and Local Government,the aim of all the events is to bring people together from the three main faiths of the Indian subcontinent to hold events that can explore a range of different experiences around the history of partition and its aftermath.