Across Borders

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With reference to the Vijay Diwas celebrations that I attended on the 16th of December, the pictures of which are in the link below, I thought it might be worthwhile to share an excerpt from my novel Across Borders – that gives a peek into the circumstances surrounding the liberation of Bangladesh in 1971 – incidentally also the year I was born.


https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10154871208309974.1073742086.614624973&type=3


 


Across Borders


227


*****


After Partition of British India in August 1947, two new states


were formed. One was the secular state of India and the


other the Islamic one of Pakistan, made of two culturally


and geographically separate areas to the east and west of


India. The western zone was officially termed West Pakistan


and the eastern one called East Bengal. It later came to be


known as East Pakistan, which is the current day Bangladesh.


Though there was not much difference in the population of


the two zones, political power came to be concentrated in


West Pakistan. This led to many grievances with the


perception that East Pakistan was being exploited. In March


1971, the rising political and cultural discontentment in East


Pakistan was met by a fierce suppressive force from the


ruling elite of West Pakistan.


This brutal crackdown by the West Pakistani forces led to


East Pakistan declaring its independence and the beginning


of a civil war. It resulted in the cessation of East Pakistan, to


form the independent nation of Bangladesh. This war led to


a vast number of refugees flooding the eastern part of India.


Faced with a rising humanitarian and economic crisis, India


started organizing and aiding the Bangladeshi resistance army,


known as the Mukti Bahini or the Liberation Army. The Mukti


Bahini was made up of Bengali military, paramilitary and civilians,


using guerrilla warfare tactics to fight the West Pakistan


army. The war broke out in March, 1971. The


Bangladesh Liberation War was an armed conflict between


East Pakistan aided by India versus West Pakistan.


228


The army units directed by West Pakistan launched a military


operation in East Pakistan. It was directed against


Bengali civilians, students, intellectuals and armed personnel,


who were demanding the separation of the East from


the West of Pakistan. India aided the Mukti Bahini by providing


economic, military and diplomatic support, leading


Pakistan to launch an attack on the western border of India,


thereby starting the Indo-Pakistan War of 1971. In December


1971, the Indian army and the Mukti Bahini defeated


the West Pakistani forces deployed in the east. The surrender


resulted in the largest number of prisoners of war since


World War II. During this war, there were widespread killings


and violation of human rights and atrocities by the Pakistani


Army.


The intellectual community was murdered on the instruction


of the Pakistani army who picked up physicians, professors,


writers and engineers in and around Dacca. They murdered


and left the bodies in mass graves. There are many


such mass graves in Bangladesh and many more are discovered


continually. Many women were tortured, raped and killed


during this war, giving rise to a large number of war babies.


The Pakistani Army also kept numerous Bengali women as


sex-slaves inside Dacca cantonment, mostly captured from


Dacca University and private homes. There was also violence


perpetrated by the Bengali nationalists against non-


Bengali minorities like the Biharis. A large number of people


fled East Pakistan to seek refuge in India during the time.


The Death of My Hero


Across Borders


229


It was the first week of May 1971, at the peak of the killings


of noted civilians and intellectuals during the Bangladesh


Liberation War. Late one evening, a Pakistan Army jeep


loaded with soldiers arrived at Ronjit uncle’s office-cumresidential


premises at Vishnuganj in East Pakistan. After a


loud knock on the main door of his office where he also


slept on most days, Ronjit uncle came out. The armed soldiers,


with guns pointing in every direction, asked him to get


into the jeep. Under the circumstances, not wanting them to


know there were other family members inside, including


women and children, he complied with their wishes. He left


in his night-suit and robe, without informing anyone that he


was leaving. However the next day he returned home, after


a night with members of the Pakistani Army.


Two days later, the Pakistani army, with the obvious help of


their local collaborators, once again abducted Ronjit uncle


from his residence. This time on the way out at gun-point,


he called out softly to his younger son Romit, who was


working late with him in the office, to say he was leaving.


Little did he know that this leave-taking would cost him dear?


The armed soldiers directed his son to get into the jeep as


well, leaving behind his young bride and a year-old son.


Luckily no other members of the family, above all the women,


stepped out then, or who knows what might have been done


to them. After the night of their leaving home, no one ever


saw Ronjit uncle or his son Romit again. They were officially


declared missing, though presumably murdered shortly


after their abduction.


230


However, there is no evidence to date of their murder, as


the bodies were never found. Their surviving widows continued


to dress as married women for the next twelve years,


as is the Hindu custom, in the hope their husbands may return


someday. I was lecturer at a college in Delhi University,


married by then and pregnant with my first child. I read of


Ronjit uncle’s abduction along with two other men of repute,


in an international newspaper at the college library.


The news in bold letters, making me intuitively certain Ronjit


uncle had been killed, brought tears spurting out of my eyes.


I called the Red Cross Society in Delhi to verify the news,


but could get no further information. It was alone in my room


that evening, with vivid images of my life with Ronjit uncle


since leaving my childhood home that I bitterly wept for the


death of my hero.


 


If you’d like to read more, it’s available in the link:


https://www.amazon.in/ACROSS-BORDERS-SHUVASHREE-GHOSH-ebook/dp/B00J7Y5IJI


The media reviews and event updates are all in the link below: 


https://shuvashreeghosh.wordpress.com/2013/09/13/the-telegraph-reviews-my-book-across-borders/


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Published on December 20, 2016 06:55
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