Why was India split into two countries? - Haimanti Roy

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  • čas přidán 20. 06. 2021
  • Dig into the 1947 Partition of India, when Britain split the region into two states, India and Pakistan, and the mass migrations and violence that followed.
    --
    In 1947, the British viceroy announced that after 200 years of British rule, India would gain independence and be partitioned into Hindu India and Muslim Pakistan. What followed was one of the largest and bloodiest forced migrations in history: an estimated 1 million people lost their lives. What caused this violent aftermath? Haimanti Roy details the lasting legacies of the Partition of India.
    Lesson by Haimanti Roy, directed by Jagriti Khirwar & Raghav Arumugam.
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Komentáře • 14K

  • @souradipsarkar3361
    @souradipsarkar3361 Před 2 lety +7382

    Fun Fact: India was divided by a man who had never ever visited India. 😶

    • @kosna
      @kosna Před 2 lety +326

      That’s evident in the crude dividing.

    • @melonoire
      @melonoire Před 2 lety +208

      Damn seems like a not fun thing at all

    • @ericcloud1023
      @ericcloud1023 Před 2 lety +229

      It was the scramble for Africa all over again (ب_ب) so much senseless bloodshed

    • @axelpatrickb.pingol3228
      @axelpatrickb.pingol3228 Před 2 lety +64

      I mean he was just given the post after the last guy was out and was given like a few months to make sense of the situation and resolve it...

    • @tulsipurushothaman9459
      @tulsipurushothaman9459 Před 2 lety +12

      @@axelpatrickb.pingol3228 pls tell me more about it (the full story if you can)

  • @huzaifa2
    @huzaifa2 Před 2 lety +11361

    There is saying that "Only reason you still find pyramids in Egypt because they were too heavy to transport to British museum"
    Pirates of the world.

    • @maninashed1451
      @maninashed1451 Před 2 lety +82

      Yeah, but they would have been better looked after for it.

    • @arnav1249
      @arnav1249 Před 2 lety +448

      @@maninashed1451 tf..

    • @belegarironhammer8166
      @belegarironhammer8166 Před 2 lety +10

      Anti British speak hate crime

    • @abhishekdas77
      @abhishekdas77 Před 2 lety +6

      ❤️❤️

    • @yingjiawan2514
      @yingjiawan2514 Před 2 lety +102

      @@maninashed1451 still, I believe those legacies were undermined most of their integrity the moment they got robbed and transported to another land.The beauty and significance of a culture can only be truly appreciated in the place where it was originally cultivated. The British took them and preserve them only to brag

  • @usuallymahi
    @usuallymahi Před rokem +2301

    Whenever I read about our history, it saddens me. My grandmother tells me about how big her house was in Multan (Now part of Pakistan). She tells me about how rich she was but had to flee to save her life. She thought that she would get to see her home again, but we have no contacts to know the conditions of the land. All money and gold were left their. She lost her twin sister in the violence that took place. She still prays for her to be alive.

    • @pepepopo_man
      @pepepopo_man Před rokem +73

      I wish you the very best for your and your grandma's future may God give you a thousand blessings
      Waheguru mehhr kare

    • @hussainmeeran
      @hussainmeeran Před rokem +4

      😢...

    • @saviorodrigues7852
      @saviorodrigues7852 Před rokem +8

      Howw sad for her 🥺🥺❤❤

    • @fizzah1758
      @fizzah1758 Před rokem +26

      SAD TO HEAR my dada lost his brother hope he is alive to as we are Pakistan while him and his whole family is In India

    • @sakshi0204
      @sakshi0204 Před rokem +30

      My grandfather (Hindu) was from Lahore which is in Pakistan. He was also so rich but after separation he left their big house and gold also.. he missed their home and everything which he left in lahore..

  • @AYZ21
    @AYZ21 Před rokem +4206

    As a Pakistani living in the UK, I can confirm that the British youth are oblivious to the wrongdoings of their ancestors and they have not been taught well enough about the impacts of colonialism that remain prevalent in various parts of the world to this day. It's a shame really.

    • @avgrate
      @avgrate Před rokem +58

      Unfortunately, it’s true.

    • @subditamerop8141
      @subditamerop8141 Před rokem +80

      pretty much westerners mindset.

    • @cringeneer5490
      @cringeneer5490 Před rokem +127

      Yeah, they don't teach students about this, cuz they think it's too dark and they don't want to perceive themselves as villians. Imo everyone should know about history

    • @AYZ21
      @AYZ21 Před rokem +46

      @@SDW3-6-9 Let's not talk about what Indian Hindus did in June 1984 to Gurdwaras.

    • @SDW3-6-9
      @SDW3-6-9 Před rokem +46

      @@AYZ21 Since 1947, the wholesale destruction of temples, gurdwaras, churches in Pakistan makes dismal reading alongside the persecution of miniroties, particularly girls. No point in taquiyya or whataboutery mate. Go in Peace!

  • @zahrashehryar4637
    @zahrashehryar4637 Před 2 lety +17165

    I have a feeling they don't teach this in british schools.

    • @arhamkhalid5990
      @arhamkhalid5990 Před 2 lety +1995

      A feeling? THEY DON'T LMAO

    • @sreejas3503
      @sreejas3503 Před 2 lety +2695

      @@arhamkhalid5990 I'm not blaming current Brits for anything (it would be foolishness)
      But atleast the Brits ought to know that their ancestors are the reason why many people from many countries suffer even today.
      Like Africa,India, and many many other.
      Famines,slavery, violence,poverty,hunger,and so on.
      British imperialist empire.
      A great cancer.

    • @maleekhussainali3685
      @maleekhussainali3685 Před 2 lety +47

      yeah

    • @Otter-Destruction
      @Otter-Destruction Před 2 lety +286

      @@arhamkhalid5990 Is British colonialism (or at least their actions in regards to India) really not part of the history curriculum? I'm not British so I wouldn't know.

    • @sabinayasmin4877
      @sabinayasmin4877 Před 2 lety +70

      What they are supposed to teach? That they collected all different nations in subcontinent into one, and later these nations started claiming they own sole power of the entire Subcontinent by virtue of their newly created identity "Hindu" and suppress Muslims. Thank God British didn't agreed to such cunning ideas of upper caste and divided their British empire in subcontinent into two.

  • @SpeedyRogue
    @SpeedyRogue Před 2 lety +38637

    As an old Iraqi saying goes "If you see two fish fighting in water, you can be sure an Englishman passed by five minutes ago"

    • @reubennelson4086
      @reubennelson4086 Před 2 lety +3242

      This is a universal saying at this point lol.

    • @SpeedyRogue
      @SpeedyRogue Před 2 lety +348

      @@reubennelson4086 yeah

    • @jassimarsingh6505
      @jassimarsingh6505 Před 2 lety +566

      @@SpeedyRogue I’m pretty sure it’s an old Ottoman Turkish quote

    • @afnaansyed5975
      @afnaansyed5975 Před 2 lety +821

      I swear I have seen this quote posted in like 4 different comment sections, with a different supposed place of origin every time

    • @AbhijayAgarwal
      @AbhijayAgarwal Před 2 lety +199

      @@jassimarsingh6505 The Ottomans be smart in their onion hats

  • @alottoftea
    @alottoftea Před rokem +599

    I'm British (although not white or South Asian) and I didn't know any of these details despite growing up around many people of Pakistani and Bangladeshi heritage. It's honestly shocking that colonial history is barely taught in English schools. Colonial history is British history

    • @Edward4Plantagenet
      @Edward4Plantagenet Před 11 měsíci

      I don't blame British. In 1945 and 1946 elections, 95% so called muslim Minority (which Ruled India & Spain for 800 years), Voted for Separate country because they didn't want to live under Democracy lead by (very Stu p!d) Secular Majority.
      1945 & 1946 elections -
      Congress represented - Secularists.
      Muslim league - 95% muslims voted for.
      Hindu Mahasabha - hardly 5% votes.
      The fearful Minority 30 Million (now 220 Million) didn't left for Pakistan and now pelt stone on Hindu festivals. Hindu temples are under attack, Idols are being vandalised. There are many cases.
      Also, Pakistan in 1970, kiIIed 3 Million Bangladeshi people 😃 10 million refugee went to India (with whom they didn't want to live) 🤦🏻‍♂️,
      lsIamic Brotherhood KiIIed Bangladeshi 🙈🙅🏻🤷🏻‍♂️🙆🏻‍♂️
      And even today,
      Baloch, Pashtuns, Sindhi people in Pakistan are "Disappearing".
      Take a guess by whom.
      Pakistan's main export is IT. (International Terr o rism)
      They were minority, yet they ruled Spain and India for 800 years.
      British were less than 1,00,000.
      Yet they ruled 300 million people.
      Minority is dangerous term.
      Don't play with it.
      For 51%, 49% is minority.
      1921, Moplah Riots. 10,000 H Indus got kiIIed ,
      3000 forced converted.
      Direct action day - 5000 Indoos KiIIed.
      Noakhali riots - 5000 Indus KiIIed. Minority pelt stones on our festival.
      Minority is dangerous term.
      It automatically makes them victim which is not case in India.
      Hindus are Victim of them.

    • @vineetamendiratta5121
      @vineetamendiratta5121 Před 9 měsíci +22

      And British thinks Germany owns up to its past

    • @user-wj6go1bw2g
      @user-wj6go1bw2g Před 6 měsíci

      f u c k u guys u took everything from us

    • @wingaard
      @wingaard Před 3 měsíci +1

      Of course history is taught in my country. What makes you think it is nt?

    • @GrantLeonard-lc6eb
      @GrantLeonard-lc6eb Před 2 měsíci +1

      As a history teacher, it now is...

  • @Shawa_Skibidi
    @Shawa_Skibidi Před 9 měsíci +197

    I am a Pakistani and a few days ago I went to meet my 103 year old great grandmother who has dementia, the people who lived with her told me that her brother was killed in the partition and that she probably saw things that she didn't tell anyone till her dementia.

    • @cack-monkey
      @cack-monkey Před 3 měsíci +2

      L

    • @Henry_69
      @Henry_69 Před 2 měsíci +16

      ​@@cack-monkey Bro wtf

    • @justme-vu7wi
      @justme-vu7wi Před 2 měsíci +5

      ​@@cack-monkey average indian

    • @cliprimate_EXtinted
      @cliprimate_EXtinted Před 2 měsíci +5

      I never thought I could relate with someone this closely, I am an Indian rajbansi bengali, we are classified as lower/scheduled castes in the Indian constitution although I cant share the gruesome stories here but I have heard stories from my grandmother about the things they had to go through as a dalit, they fleed from muslim persecution in east pak to be persecuted by hindus in bengal, there are now sc villages which were once like concentration camps in the past, I sometimes go there to visit my relatives and friends :)

    • @Sitar_my-love
      @Sitar_my-love Před 2 měsíci +6

      ​@@justme-vu7wi as an indian, i do not accept this waste of oxygen

  • @sahar.2316
    @sahar.2316 Před 2 lety +4018

    And yet the Queen still sits here today with the stolen Jewel of India on her crown.. nothing angers me more

    • @azhagurajaallinall126
      @azhagurajaallinall126 Před 2 lety +418

      The Queen? Of whom?
      She's just a witch of England

    • @sahar.2316
      @sahar.2316 Před 2 lety +294

      @@azhagurajaallinall126 exactly but people are blinded by media that portrays them so differently to what they truly are.. they don’t even recognise and look back at what they did to India, nor do they accept aboriginal lands in australia

    • @alliinase9076
      @alliinase9076 Před 2 lety +213

      ​@@sahar.2316The "stolen jewel of India" being the Koh-i-Noor? The truth is that the diamond changed hands so many times through history, that it is difficult to consider the diamond "Indian".
      It was given by Duleep Singh to Queen Victoria in 1849, after the signing of the Last Treaty of Lahore. It's debatable whether this should be considered a gift or a coerced tribute. If you consider it coerced, then by that standard, the Sikh Maharaja Ranjit Singh would also be guilty of coercing the diamond from the Afghan Shah, whom he received it as a "mandatory gift". The Afghan Shah himself received the diamond as a "gift" from the Persian Shah, who acquired it after looting the Mughal Empire. The Mughal Empire looted it from the Delhi Sultanate, who looted it from the Kakatiya dynasty, which is where the paper trail on the diamond's origin runs cold.
      Britain has had a messy history in regards to India, including many wrongdoings. However, regarding this particular gem, India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran all make some claim on the diamond, but official documents transferred the diamond from India to Britain over 170 years ago. It's probably best to keep it on the shelf, rather than open a whole can of worms. No more strife should be caused over a shiny rock.
      P.S: This diamond is _not_ part of Queen Elizabeth II's crown, and she has never worn it. The crown it is embroidered to was last worn by her Mum in 1953, and has remained on the shelf ever since.

    • @arpanmukherjee961
      @arpanmukherjee961 Před 2 lety +62

      @@alliinase9076Are you a history professor?

    • @twilightbts7058
      @twilightbts7058 Před 2 lety +216

      @@alliinase9076 it was given as a gift ?? Bruh they forced us to give the diamond as a "gift".

  • @Pentaguin
    @Pentaguin Před 2 lety +9186

    Fun fact : Today's British generation don't know any of this history.

    • @oshb5559
      @oshb5559 Před 2 lety +407

      I am a British student in Year 8 (12 to 13-year-olds), and I’m sort of the history buff of the class so I knew about this anyway but however when my class finished the Stuart curriculum early we did the British Empire and the main bit of the curriculum was finding out the positive and negatives of the Empire and obviously the partition of India was a part of that.
      So at least my class was taught and maybe others.

    • @sakshamraj1333
      @sakshamraj1333 Před 2 lety +142

      @@oshb5559 So may I ask what's written in your textbooks, was partition of India a positive or a negative for the British Empire?

    • @yousufkhan5787
      @yousufkhan5787 Před 2 lety +192

      @@oshb5559 I expect there being 90% negatives and 9% mehs and 1% positives.

    • @vansh6038
      @vansh6038 Před 2 lety +135

      @@oshb5559 hi, from India my age ,year same as your.
      But British did bad to india

    • @vansh6038
      @vansh6038 Před 2 lety +63

      @@oshb5559 I can give my history book text pdf you can read British did bad to india from the book.
      Do you want it ?

  • @davidbowie5023
    @davidbowie5023 Před rokem +1323

    As an Irishman (of Indian descent), we bitterly remember how British colonialism hurt our nation. For 800 years, the British tried to subject Ireland into its constitution, but Ireland never stopped resisting. So the British deliberately caused a famine in 1845, killing 2 million and leaving 2 million others to leave - so the British could repopulate with the Protestants (Ulsters), mainly in the Belfast region. That Ulster gang would go on to play a role in dividing our Ireland apart after our independence in 1921. This helped explain why Irish people do sympathise with India.

    • @harrisonbailey5449
      @harrisonbailey5449 Před rokem +23

      The famine wasn't on purpose, it was caused by the deliberate exportation of potatoes to Great Britain, which led to the famine. And what happened a few centuries ago isn't the modern day British peoples fault, but it was a tragedy that the British tried to incorporate Ireland into the union but blaming people today isn't going to help, people learning about the history will though.

    • @wren_.
      @wren_. Před rokem +92

      @@harrisonbailey5449 if the British hadn’t continued forcibly exporting potatoes from Ireland, the population would’ve never starved like it did

    • @tastes-like-straberries
      @tastes-like-straberries Před rokem +43

      I have read/watched a lot of history lectures on Ireland and England and how the United Kingdom came to be. England seriously has been the world's biggest aggressor for more than a thousand years and still feigns ignorance.

    • @harrisonbailey5449
      @harrisonbailey5449 Před rokem +2

      @@wren_. yes, that's what i said. but the british never created the famine, they just didn't respond well to it

    • @zsmith4853
      @zsmith4853 Před rokem +7

      Thank you for sharing and explaining this.
      This make sense.

  • @userhandle-l
    @userhandle-l Před rokem +1655

    Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru didn't represent the "Hindu majority", they were secular. Leaders of the Hindu Mahasabha represented Hindus. The views involved are a lot more complex and nuanced than presented.

    • @__berserker8426
      @__berserker8426 Před rokem +30

      Yupp

    • @ronki23
      @ronki23 Před rokem

      The Mahasabha is a fringe right wing group who have no power today

    • @saravananram3740
      @saravananram3740 Před rokem

      jinnah wanted muslim majority because of hindu majority

    • @syarifidayat
      @syarifidayat Před rokem

      So in fact the party that you said is an extremist one who forced to make another chaos in that crowds situation, wait thats not me who said that but that argue is from NYT New York Times article in 1950.

    • @AestheticAadil
      @AestheticAadil Před rokem +40

      Info : RSS what's app university 😌

  • @pierrecurie
    @pierrecurie Před 2 lety +4882

    Rest of world: that's terrible
    British Empire: just as planned

  • @hazelnuts590
    @hazelnuts590 Před 2 lety +3984

    Like someone said, "All the fighting in the world started with a Britsh drawing a line on a Map"

    • @davidmcjeri_
      @davidmcjeri_ Před 2 lety +53

      Not, really, there was already conflict before the British.

    • @rajkumarjadala3826
      @rajkumarjadala3826 Před 2 lety +15

      @@Wa._.li1 but not all Hindus

    • @rajkumarjadala3826
      @rajkumarjadala3826 Před 2 lety +11

      @@Wa._.li1 u didn't mention it 🙂

    • @jatintomar8170
      @jatintomar8170 Před 2 lety +2

      I think the best is to make a world history as it is that it was!

    • @thesmartone2735
      @thesmartone2735 Před 2 lety +12

      @@Wa._.li1 It's not an independent country, it's an forced country. They live in revenge for nothing now. Pak is either needed to be joined or totally destroyed, else it will affect everyone in the next generations. No muslims here are now treated poorly so they can easily join us but it seems politicians of both the countries want a fking war.

  • @sabahnawaz6992
    @sabahnawaz6992 Před 9 měsíci +94

    it devastates me how Punjab was sliced through the middle like that. brothers separated from sisters, children from their parents all because of colonial greed, and poor planning. as a Pakistani punjabi, it blows my mind how we share the same/similar language, food, traditions and culture as Indian punjabis but we can never cross over to see them or share our plate with them because of politics. I hope this border disintregrates one day and Punjab becomes whole again,

    • @wingaard
      @wingaard Před 3 měsíci

      Then why has nt it happened ??

    • @cack-monkey
      @cack-monkey Před 3 měsíci +2

      This is because of incompetent delhi Sultan not british do not blame your problems on us

    • @aditsingh5114
      @aditsingh5114 Před 2 měsíci +3

      The britishers did this.

    • @naveedahmad7138
      @naveedahmad7138 Před 4 dny

      @@cack-monkey It was definitely cuz of your ancestors. Not you, but your ancestors.

    • @mrcringe-fg6zq
      @mrcringe-fg6zq Před 4 dny

      ​@@cack-monkeyThe Border was drawn by Lord Mountbatten. Who had the Border making skills of a drunk 1st trimester fetus.

  • @dj_digital7857
    @dj_digital7857 Před rokem +125

    as an indian, many years ago my family lived in present day pakistan. They left to India. My grandfather lost his job and went through much stress. Sometimes i wish the world could live at peace and didn't need to go through so much.

  • @thewellenoughchannel176
    @thewellenoughchannel176 Před 2 lety +5985

    "No wonder that the sun never set on the British Empire because even God couldn't trust the English in the dark" -Dr Shashi Tharoor

    • @b.m.t.h.3961
      @b.m.t.h.3961 Před 2 lety +132

      Well, they were powerful. But if it was the other way around, and india became a world power, they would do exactly the same and go and colonize the world. Britain was colonized herself, by the Romans, the Vikings, the Normans etc. That's what nations do. It does not justify it, it is a sad trait of humanity.

    • @kanishkanegi5594
      @kanishkanegi5594 Před 2 lety +421

      @@b.m.t.h.3961 umm...I don't think so just saying that everyone would do that if they were in the same position is a bit....cus before the British or even Turkish invasion india was a big civilization and the biggest economy and the kings who conquered outside of the country kept and respected the indigenous culture. Even the Turks who invaded India were atleast tolerant to people and still under their rule India's gdp was 24% of the world. In my openion colonisation is the worst you could do to any country cus its sole purpose is profit. Atleast the kings work for the empire they conquer but with colonisation every single change or "development" that happens is for the sole benifit of the colonisers.

    • @b.m.t.h.3961
      @b.m.t.h.3961 Před 2 lety +58

      @@kanishkanegi5594 I have to respectfully disagree with you. If india industrlized in the 17th/18th century like the west, they probably would have done what the west did. Remember, it was not just Britain expanding, it was many countries too, Spain, France, Portugal, the Arab nations etc. Humans are animals, very intelligent animals but we share their ways, animals expand territory, they do it for resources. India would have probably done it too.

    • @kanishkanegi5594
      @kanishkanegi5594 Před 2 lety +111

      @@b.m.t.h.3961 yup you could be right I can't predict what could have happened but as an indian I can atleast say that I know haw the people are.. maybe lol?? I don't know much about western history but usually conquering and expanding is glorified and in india too kings were expected to do the same but the pattern I have observed is that the kings and leaders who were more peaceful were glorified they were the ones who got people's support and left a mark in history. You can't see other cultures and civilizations through your own culture's lens right?it's just that different cultures have different outlooks which in a way I believe dictate their actions too. Plus in india the raw materials were already available that's why we got colonised in the first place lol soo it could be we would have colonised but I really don't think so...

    • @kanishkanegi5594
      @kanishkanegi5594 Před 2 lety +19

      @@physicslover4951 can I ask you something ??do you have knowledge in your recent history like in your family that did sati?? I won't defend anything but I just want to know cus I have something to tell.

  • @welcometotheinternet574
    @welcometotheinternet574 Před 2 lety +2859

    Hindus
    Muslims
    Sikhs
    Jains
    Buddhists
    Jews
    Long ago the religions lived peacefully
    But everything changed when the Tea Nation attacked
    (EDIT: Damn…)

    • @lazymonsta2007
      @lazymonsta2007 Před 2 lety +294

      "TEA NATION" bro Brits even stole tea from India

    • @aden5297
      @aden5297 Před 2 lety +420

      @@lazymonsta2007 they stole tea from china, not india. it was brought to india where farmers were forced to grow tea instead of crops to feed their families.

    • @lazymonsta2007
      @lazymonsta2007 Před 2 lety +88

      @@aden5297 oh, my bad...

    • @byimpeccableimeantotallype9436
      @byimpeccableimeantotallype9436 Před 2 lety +118

      fr...and the worst part is that our current govt is so much like British..trying to gain power by filling hatred in the minds of innocent ppl , repeating the history

    • @lazymonsta2007
      @lazymonsta2007 Před 2 lety +26

      @Biswadeep Pal 卐 you can say that but British created the actual divide...if peace was less before the British came, then they totally took it away.

  • @pratikghosh3499
    @pratikghosh3499 Před rokem +91

    My late grandfather was from Lahore (now in Pakistan) and came to India as a refugee. He used to tell about the difficulties he faced during the Partition. He told me that while he took a train to go to the newly formed Dominion of India from the Dominion of Pakistan, he wore a burkha to hide from the local Muslim militias who were constantly stopping the train to look out for Hindus and kill them (Since my grandfather was a Hindu). When he finally reached the Indian border, the driver of the train who was a Muslim was taken out by the angry Sikh and Hindu militias from the Indian side and was killed mercilessly. When asked about how he felt during that time, He only used to say that no one in this world should go through what he went through.

  • @haniahmahmood2195
    @haniahmahmood2195 Před 7 měsíci +54

    As a bangladeshi living in the UK, I can say that without my own reasearch or my family, and having gone through the british education system, I never would have known about my own history regarding the indian split.

    • @aishaahmed3736
      @aishaahmed3736 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Same as a Pakistani in UAE.

    • @naveerarizwan5329
      @naveerarizwan5329 Před 4 měsíci

      Yeah as Pakistani in Australia I really only recently found out about it

    • @Arkham-kq9uf
      @Arkham-kq9uf Před 3 měsíci +3

      ​@@naveerarizwan5329you people really missed your history classes badly.
      How can you not know about india Pakistan partition

    • @antons5302
      @antons5302 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Bengal should never have been divided. They mutilated the country

    • @rorke6092
      @rorke6092 Před 27 dny

      you won't learn it from this hindutva propaganda either. Read the wikipedia article and read what Nehru and Janni said about the partition of india. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partition_of_India

  • @YuvrajSingh-pu8nf
    @YuvrajSingh-pu8nf Před 2 lety +4926

    "No wonder sun never sets in the British empire cuz even God can't trust britishers in the dark "
    ~ shashi tharoor

  • @harjindersidhu4594
    @harjindersidhu4594 Před 2 lety +3102

    The world will never know the pain Punjab had to face.
    All the Hindu and Sikh families that resided in Pakistan had to leave all their assets, lands and Homes to start from scratch in India after Partition and Vice Versa for Muslim Families who left for Pakistan.
    Another Factor was the Religious Mob who would burn the homes of People of other religions and would kill you instantly if you weren't a part of their Religion..

    • @jyotirani8187
      @jyotirani8187 Před 2 lety +174

      People even say that when the train was used to transport people from India to Pakistan or vice versa, if the train was started from pakistan, most of the people would be dead inside the train by the time it reached India and the same happened when the train started from India.

    • @Avicerox
      @Avicerox Před 2 lety +84

      I am from Pakistani Punjab and my Grandmother tells me the stories of the violence that happened.

    • @kamdeoray3573
      @kamdeoray3573 Před 2 lety +4

      Ikr

    • @ayanokoji715
      @ayanokoji715 Před 2 lety +21

      This is so heartbreaking.

    • @ishraknoor8992
      @ishraknoor8992 Před 2 lety +96

      The case was also similar for Bengal. The people of West Bengal and now Bangladesh had to suffer a lot and had to go through the same situation like Punjab

  • @Heba7785
    @Heba7785 Před rokem +28

    4:47
    Nothing is harsher that splitting families...it's really hard to even imagine it..

  • @mariatrinitymya8618
    @mariatrinitymya8618 Před rokem +47

    I'm from Myanmar and I know the feeling of being colonized by other countries. Watching this video make this feeling reborn in my heart again.

    • @protocetus499
      @protocetus499 Před rokem +7

      Yet you guys did the same thing towards Rohingya

    • @phyoko3141
      @phyoko3141 Před rokem

      @@protocetus499 The Burmese government is afraid of Muslims. The Burmese government, like India, is worried about secession.

    • @Edward4Plantagenet
      @Edward4Plantagenet Před 11 měsíci

      @@protocetus499 , no
      RO hi gya are terro rist people who don't respect other's faith.

    • @ballenboy
      @ballenboy Před 10 měsíci +1

      Of course, when you are in power you can boss the powerless minorities however you like. Like the Rohingya people a few years ago in Myanmar, made close to a million flee your country. If the Myanmar people had an empire who would know what atrocities would be committed.

    • @johnnotrealname8168
      @johnnotrealname8168 Před 8 měsíci

      @@ballenboyUh guys, he is either living in a military Junta or has left the country. Please do not put a massacre on him.

  • @watcherolic9930
    @watcherolic9930 Před 2 lety +4811

    British used the simplest tactic -of- Divide and Rule.
    Even today in India, we see fair skin obsession, western brands hype, more value of English language, than regional ones...

    • @TheAmericanPrometheus
      @TheAmericanPrometheus Před 2 lety +123

      tbf learning English is a useful skill to have irrespective of anything else.

    • @rishabhanand5563
      @rishabhanand5563 Před 2 lety +566

      @@TheAmericanPrometheus he is not saying english is not useful... But he is saying Indian society thinks those who speak english are superior than native speakers.... And thats really bad

    • @razemusik3466
      @razemusik3466 Před 2 lety +105

      That's oversimplification, the Western culture which the current Indian generation is following is American opposed to the Western culture which the elites of the 20th century India were following which was inherently British. And probably it's also cause of the more conservative and superstitious side of these regional cultures which makes them less attractive to the current day youth and which at some level is also incompatible with the urban lifestyle. So rather than viewing outside cultures with hostility we should try to imbibe the best features of those cultures and in process reform our own as well. And as far as it is concerned about english, I think it is more of a sign of how well aware one is about the international affairs, hence it's hyped up in this age of globalisation. Personal opinion, agree to disagree. What do you think?

    • @sayalipalande1620
      @sayalipalande1620 Před 2 lety +65

      @@razemusik3466 true India has so many regional languages that it is difficult for people to communicate while travelling through states. Instead of picking one the hundred languages and offending others, it is better to learn English for business purposes.

    • @Anonymous-xg1xq
      @Anonymous-xg1xq Před 2 lety +43

      So Indians having obsession with fair skin is somehow British fault? Common dude our Indians should change their mentality before blaming others..we are adults and we are able to make our own decisions and living in a democratic country…

  • @adiyaroy0
    @adiyaroy0 Před 2 lety +5981

    The guy who made the border: ooh let me do this, ah yes this looks kinda cute, uh-huh, yeah perfect

    • @OreOmod
      @OreOmod Před 2 lety +72

      Could be true. who knows

    • @heynachiket
      @heynachiket Před 2 lety +159

      @@OreOmodif u read history, it's really true..!!

    • @lostonearth7856
      @lostonearth7856 Před 2 lety +138

      If you take a look at the limited Historical Documents of Sir Cyril Radcliffe, he had said "I had no alternative, the time at my disposal was so short that I could not do a better job. Given the same period, I would do the same thing. However, if I had two to three years, I might have improved on what I did."
      You see he was given only 5 weeks to make a border at the last minute and seeing the horrific results of the border he was forced to rush, he refused to take his salary.
      I can not say exactly how he felt but from the things I found, no one in the committee felt comfortable with the border and the violence that came after and they were highly likely horrified at the large screw up they had just made but dividing British Raj was never an easy job not to mention, dividing a very diverse country in just 5 weeks is just impossible to do without causing massive amounts of violence and let's not forget Sir Cyril Radcliffe never have been to Asia and knew very little of British Raj.
      If anything I really do feel bad for Sir Cyril Radcliffe as he was made to do the impossible and still, I have no idea why the British even tried dividing the British Raj up at all instead of keeping the British Raj united as that was more possible to do in just 5 weeks then it was to get a Lawyer from London who knows nothing about British Raj to divide British Raj.

    • @Cyber-zw6kb
      @Cyber-zw6kb Před 2 lety +6

      Heard he had a pet terrier that he loved and wanted to make one of the countries in its likeness

    • @heynachiket
      @heynachiket Před 2 lety +18

      @@lostonearth7856 bro you mentioned 5 weeks here, but what about 250 yr of British rule in India..?

  • @edwincruz3325
    @edwincruz3325 Před rokem +400

    Thank you Ms. Marvel for bringing this real life event to light to many people. I never knew about this as an American. Watchmen brought the tulsa race massacre to light. Comic book shows 2 , American education system 0.

    • @phildowd5106
      @phildowd5106 Před rokem +11

      Literally. I took AP World History in high school, and World History (1500-Present) in college and not once did I ever hear about this.

    • @klarke5760
      @klarke5760 Před rokem

      westerns are always saying that they are free and yeah they are but their minds are not. Ms. Marvel is not showing the real story and the media never showed the real picture.

    • @klarke5760
      @klarke5760 Před rokem

      @@phildowd5106 this shows their priorities that they never give a damn about brown people

    • @Muralidharan001
      @Muralidharan001 Před rokem +17

      It's nothing compared to British shooting over 5000 men in single village of Southern India for refusing to pay tax.

    • @christopherbuck7679
      @christopherbuck7679 Před rokem

      You must be joking! Ms Marvel the Amazon TV show!!! And Watchman…….Christ just about sums the American knowledge of history and they clearly forgot to teach in school about the deaths of an estimated 12 million native Indians during the colonising of the US.

  • @Akasan
    @Akasan Před rokem +47

    Thank you Ms. Marvel for starting my path of India education to this video!!

    • @rorke6092
      @rorke6092 Před 27 dny +2

      this is indian propaganda it's not true. The British didn't want to separate india, they were forced to by threats of war and increasing provocation from the Muslim league and the INA. Read the actual history here en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partition_of_India

    • @naveedahmad7138
      @naveedahmad7138 Před 4 dny

      @@rorke6092 Uh yeah. Their plan was to take control over the bustling sub-continent and steal as much as they could.

  • @alex-ju2bd
    @alex-ju2bd Před 2 lety +17339

    i’m an indian living in Britain and i just mentioned the partition offhandedly and none of my white friends knew that this had ever happened, it hit me then how many british people live without understanding just HOW britain got to their current privileged position in the world, and the severity of the consequences of their past actions

    • @Aditi-cg4qf
      @Aditi-cg4qf Před 2 lety +515

      the irony-

    • @alex-ju2bd
      @alex-ju2bd Před 2 lety +925

      @@Aditi-cg4qf tell me abt it and these are the same people who are tryna be social warriors

    • @adamhazik7373
      @adamhazik7373 Před 2 lety +357

      ah yes, BRI ISH PEOPLE

    • @bncthiccboi7552
      @bncthiccboi7552 Před 2 lety +150

      Why are you living in Britain? You move to western countries that you hate?

    • @alex-ju2bd
      @alex-ju2bd Před 2 lety +1011

      @@bncthiccboi7552 i didn’t really have a choice lmao? my parents chose to immigrate here

  • @ignorasmus
    @ignorasmus Před 2 lety +2223

    I grew up in India hearing that Pakistan is Enemy. My young mind extrapolated that to mean 'Pakistanis are bad people'. I hear, Pakistan's textbooks explicitly teach about Indians being Hindus and Hindus being bad people who hurt muslims intentionally and for no reason.
    Then I got to meet a bunch of Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Poles, Ukrainians, Americans, French, Germans, Lebanese, etc. etc. etc. in my stay of several years in Europe.
    I realized, people are inherently just people - some are great, most are mundane, few are awful. Nothing to do with their nationality , ethnicity or religion.
    In fact, the more I think about it, the very idea of having nation states for purposes other than administrative conviniences (and may be positive competitive goals like sports) makes less and less sense to me.

    • @ishraknoor8992
      @ishraknoor8992 Před 2 lety +105

      Exactlly, that is the point. We should not blame a community because of any deed of an individual one.

    • @khondokermehedi1195
      @khondokermehedi1195 Před 2 lety +28

      You my broski, are a king

    • @kimseoah154
      @kimseoah154 Před 2 lety +80

      No they don't teach that, just we study about history of Pakistan , As a Pakistani we want peace and brotherhood between two countries🇵🇰❤️🇮🇳

    • @ismailshahzad6368
      @ismailshahzad6368 Před 2 lety +5

      I mean, not to fight with u, but that was the original proposition in the Jinnah's 14 points...

    • @iamhumanbeing3
      @iamhumanbeing3 Před 2 lety +30

      Yeah...these are the hate that have been sown in our mind from our generations that have lived their lives before us...note everything you see and note everything you hear is true ..beside we are humans what other then humanity...we are one..we are humans and humans are the same...all are equal...justice to everyone.🦋lots of love from Pakistan✨

  • @moon_dust_lights3388
    @moon_dust_lights3388 Před rokem +54

    I am half-Bangladeshi and Indian, My maternal grandfather was born in East Pakistan or now the Bangladesh (Foridpur) and had to leave all the wealth they had. They were wealthy farmers with a huge manor and 3 streams and 13 farms but had to leave at a very young age. He was only 8 that time and wasn't sure what happened. His sister was also taken away from his family. They came to India for the first time and had no money and he used to work at a hospital sweeper at the age of 12-15 and nextly a Group-D worker. He married to 14 year old girl when he was 22. This was perfect true history which still Horrifies me as a 16-year-old teen

    • @xlr8_bs514
      @xlr8_bs514 Před rokem +1

      Both my maternal and paternal grandfathers we're born in Bangladesh, however, I would not say that I'm half Bangladeshi.
      Nevertheless, yes, both of my grandparents also had to go through what you just mentioned, and as a 15 yo teen it horrifies me to this day, and I cannot even imagine the hardships they had to go through at such young ages (especially because they were completely separated from their families and their parents had died due to horrible diseases.)

    • @moon_dust_lights3388
      @moon_dust_lights3388 Před rokem +3

      @@xlr8_bs514 However some artists call themselves half-nationality just because someone in their family is from that nationality, that's the reason I wrote

    • @xlr8_bs514
      @xlr8_bs514 Před rokem +1

      @@moon_dust_lights3388 Understandable

    • @sky-ev6lh
      @sky-ev6lh Před 4 měsíci

      My ancestor also came from foridpur😢😢

  • @lazygagalxxxv
    @lazygagalxxxv Před rokem +77

    As a Bangladeshi this breaks my heart. We should have never been segregated. We should have all been one.

    • @kushagrapal8689
      @kushagrapal8689 Před rokem +19

      AS AN INDIAN I DISAGREE. PARTITION OF INDIA WAS GOOD. HINDUS AND MUSLIMS ARE FUNDAMENTALLY DIFFERRENT PEOPLE AND CANNOT BE ONE COUNTRY. I BELEIVE IN THE TWO NATION THEORY AND THAT PARTITION OF INDIA WAS GOOD.

    • @rahman077
      @rahman077 Před rokem +21

      @@kushagrapal8689 g chill

    • @leonardodtc1493
      @leonardodtc1493 Před rokem

      Under whose rule?

    • @kikaa1884
      @kikaa1884 Před rokem +7

      ​@@kushagrapal8689 just chill chill chill

    • @kikaa1884
      @kikaa1884 Před rokem +6

      ​@@rahman077 we cannot be one is because Pakistan and Bangladesh are Muslim majority nations which follows Shariah law
      We know how you people give respect to Hindus with great names you will call us also we know how you respect our Hindu scriptures etc actually

  • @socraja5777
    @socraja5777 Před 2 lety +1249

    Me: Lives in india, read history, know about partition.
    Also me: Still watch TedEd.

    • @R0TEK
      @R0TEK Před 2 lety +27

      Same and I live in Pakistan 🇵🇰

    • @adityatiwari2005
      @adityatiwari2005 Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah same

    • @csbhosale6226
      @csbhosale6226 Před 2 lety +4

      Me Too

    • @socraja5777
      @socraja5777 Před 2 lety +28

      Want to add,
      I didn't know brits allowed only same religion vote... They made such a system by law. And this is continued even today however not officially.

    • @wadiarasul7115
      @wadiarasul7115 Před 2 lety +10

      we"re just makin sure if it's correct or not 🧐

  • @ShortHax
    @ShortHax Před 2 lety +11802

    Such small divisions on a map sure have caused millions of people to hate each other...

    • @indopew2319
      @indopew2319 Před 2 lety +352

      yep, most of the ppl in India hate muslims coz Muslim league demanded Pakistan and separate country for muslims which they also supported, They think that they can never co exist

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves Před 2 lety +83

      No, it's come down to what makes human, human.

    • @harshvardhan4766
      @harshvardhan4766 Před 2 lety +163

      @@indopew2319 The main culprit still are politians

    • @Boss-mp8py
      @Boss-mp8py Před 2 lety +109

      @Bhaskar ojha no man Hate is never justified

    • @batman_2004
      @batman_2004 Před 2 lety +125

      Indian people hate each other. Read about colorism and caste system.

  • @nerdlingeeksly5192
    @nerdlingeeksly5192 Před rokem +15

    "The problems created by partition"
    As a CK3 player this sentence struck many cords with me.

  • @pattyayers
    @pattyayers Před rokem +2

    This is an excellent brief description of what Partition was, what happened and why. Thank you!

  • @manalfatima4961
    @manalfatima4961 Před 2 lety +8200

    My grandfather came to Pakistan without his father or siblings, alone. After years he settled yet he still missed the place he grew up in (Lucknow). He couldn't even attend the funeral of his brothers. He was the eldest yet the only one alive. I can feel sorrow in his voice when he talks about his brothers.

    • @gaurangverma5470
      @gaurangverma5470 Před 2 lety +227

      I'm so sorry to hear that. Did he ever get to talk to his brother after he came to Pakistan?

    • @manalfatima4961
      @manalfatima4961 Před 2 lety +251

      @@gaurangverma5470 yes but at that time there were no video calls and voice calls would be short and once in a month.

    • @juhimohan
      @juhimohan Před 2 lety +69

      @Manal Fatima Adaab from Lucknow to your grandfather and you

    • @sisir37
      @sisir37 Před 2 lety +42

      @@manalfatima4961 That is very tragic.

    • @baaz8730
      @baaz8730 Před 2 lety +187

      my grandma was from Rawalpindi, Pakistan nd she always talked about her memories as being a kid , her brother who became muslim as they didn't want to leave thier land. And a berry tree near well.

  • @gabrielreed1096
    @gabrielreed1096 Před 2 lety +910

    There's an old saying that holds a lot of truth about this situation, and many, many others.
    "If two fish are fighting in a pond, chances are an Englishman just walked by".

  • @nuts3100
    @nuts3100 Před 8 měsíci +5

    My grandpa had huge hotels in lahore and karachi at that time he was a very successfull businessman but as all our family lived in india he left all that and fled to India on a camel he made few visits to pakistan even after independence he still talks about how beautiful pakistan is

  • @jbpalma9034
    @jbpalma9034 Před rokem +13

    Saw this video the first day it went out, but I watched it again because the Great Partition heavily inspired Ms. Marvel. TV shows should feature more historical events!

  • @Canjeero314
    @Canjeero314 Před 2 lety +1980

    I feel like a lot of today's problems began with British colonisation, just an opinion

    • @palestinabaddie
      @palestinabaddie Před 2 lety +156

      that's a fact, same they did to Palestine:(

    • @subhankitbasu620
      @subhankitbasu620 Před 2 lety +24

      yup its a hard fact !

    • @aviaspotter32
      @aviaspotter32 Před 2 lety +6

      Haha the Holy Land go brrr

    • @Canjeero314
      @Canjeero314 Před 2 lety +65

      @Francesca B This only makes sense from a British perspective. It’s not up to the British to colonise countries who have existing systems and cultures and then expect them to not stand up for their freedom.

    • @devu940
      @devu940 Před 2 lety +10

      @easter worshipper before thieves colonization, they didn't have any problems except caste

  • @mrbloodyhyphen-5657
    @mrbloodyhyphen-5657 Před 2 lety +1467

    Me, who studied this for months in school, seeing this concluded in 5 mins - 👁️👄👁️

    • @akshayhere
      @akshayhere Před 2 lety +104

      To be fair this was a extremely complicated series of events and it actually may take months to study every detail

    • @imsickoflifeanditstactics5063
      @imsickoflifeanditstactics5063 Před 2 lety +71

      You say months. My useless books have been repeating the same thing for years. I came to know about these in 5th grade. Now I'm in 10th. Still the same chapters.

    • @idktbhidc
      @idktbhidc Před 2 lety +38

      @@imsickoflifeanditstactics5063 heck yes
      It's the same bs but the language made more complicated for different levels..

    • @dograkhalsa1098
      @dograkhalsa1098 Před 2 lety +22

      This video touched me more deeply than all the history books I've read about the Partition.

    • @Niraj20091
      @Niraj20091 Před 2 lety +1

      THIS WJ=HOLE WAS A HISTI=ORY BOOK FOR WHOLE ONE CLASS

  • @prasenjitbhattacharya2920

    My paternal grandmother is from Rangpur in modern day bangladesh and my paternal Grandfather from Sylhet in Bangladesh. Both my Maternal Gradpa and Grandma are from Noakhali Bangladesh. They came to the other side of the border to remain in their homeland India and ended up in Kolkata. My maternal grandpa came to Kolkata before partition as to complete his college education. Partition occurred when he was in College. All of my relatives from maternal side were a total of 20 families who lived in a 1 bedroom flat in Bhavanipore for the first 5-6 years since partition. Then, they used their savings to build their own respective houses.

  • @jonathanhoffman7464
    @jonathanhoffman7464 Před rokem +2

    Great video. Dense, legible, and interesting. Not much more you can ask for

  • @mandirarai1215
    @mandirarai1215 Před 2 lety +1913

    "Divide and rule" yeah. They divided people based on their religion so that people would not unite together to fight them. But we did it anyways and it still cost us. It's still causing us pain because religious and caste differences were weaponized by the British but it's used by politicians till date to divide our people. So yeah even though we are free from the British we still are shackled.

    • @justpassingby7262
      @justpassingby7262 Před 2 lety +114

      The politicians sure learned alot from the british though.

    • @soullessbody7924
      @soullessbody7924 Před 2 lety +65

      So true, we citizens still haven't learnt anything, we are still feeding the one who is dividing us, many would argue there is nothing like that but minority and majority of India have again being divided by hate!

    • @aadityakhaitan4345
      @aadityakhaitan4345 Před 2 lety +25

      If you think about it,without Gandhi ji , we would probably still be under British rule

    • @navintrg8422
      @navintrg8422 Před 2 lety +13

      With British being sent their method to divide should have also been sent but we kept it, keeping it.🤐

    • @agz843
      @agz843 Před 2 lety +31

      Exactly. I will not accept that we are independent until the minds of our people are "decolonised" from this stigma planted by the British.

  • @isha7079
    @isha7079 Před 2 lety +2198

    Not to offend anyone that's British ,but they really tore people apart from their homeland . Im from the Caribbean where the majority of people is either of African ,Indian or Chinese descent or a mix because the English brought slaves from those countries to work on the sugar cane plantations and these people ended up staying creating a mix of cultures.

    • @notheno57
      @notheno57 Před 2 lety +282

      If they're offended by the truth then they deserve to be.

    • @omarshinwari7823
      @omarshinwari7823 Před 2 lety +6

      who are actually the natives of the carribien

    • @maxdavis7722
      @maxdavis7722 Před 2 lety +6

      So did everyone else before the British tho? Why specify this to the British? In fact this only ever stopped because of the British but you didn’t mention that.

    • @isha7079
      @isha7079 Před 2 lety +40

      @L I am Hindu but I'm not from India im from the Caribbean

    • @aviaspotter32
      @aviaspotter32 Před 2 lety +3

      @@isha7079 Guyana?

  • @alexpardon9570
    @alexpardon9570 Před rokem +9

    I’m here because of a Marvel show. That’s how you know you did something right. Ms Marvel is one of the best marvel shows yet.

  • @naveerarizwan5329
    @naveerarizwan5329 Před 4 měsíci +5

    My family is originally from North India, my mum’s side is from Lucknow and my Dad’s side is from Dehli, during the partition my we forced to leave our land behind and move to Karachi, Pakistan. My grandparents still remember their homes and the deaths my family suffered. But ultimately decided that Pakistan was the right decision, especially now seeing the state of my muslim brothers and sisters in India I can’t help but agree.

    • @Arkham-kq9uf
      @Arkham-kq9uf Před 3 měsíci +2

      Except punjab, no muslim was forced to leave India. Your parents would have left on their own, because Lucknow City still has 30% muslims and Delhi has 13% muslims

  • @jadenj1561
    @jadenj1561 Před 2 lety +9274

    I am Korean and I can tell this is SCARILY similar to what happened after Independence of Korea. Japanese troops withdrew and we separated… Also I just realized two Independence Days share same date(15/8)

    • @niftygaming4861
      @niftygaming4861 Před 2 lety +224

      @@muskanie2055 yeah I've also heard how wrong happened to Muslims and Pakistan, Muslims in Kashmir are still suffering atrocities of the Indian army

    • @byron-ih2ge
      @byron-ih2ge Před 2 lety +278

      @@niftygaming4861 ok pak u r just like imran but you should know no one is gonna take you seriosly..

    • @ashleybrooke3350
      @ashleybrooke3350 Před 2 lety +49

      @@niftygaming4861 yeah regardless of religion Hindus and Muslims are living in danger

    • @muskanie2055
      @muskanie2055 Před 2 lety +92

      @@niftygaming4861 there is absolutely no proof of Indian army doing atrocities on citizens of India living in Kashmir. All news are "alleged" and mention "reports say", so stop spreading false rumours if you don't have valid proof. BBC and Washington post are some news companies which have always been spreading such ridiculous rumours without any proof whatsoever.

    • @muntaha681
      @muntaha681 Před 2 lety +105

      @@muskanie2055 If same media says something about Pak it is considered true but if they say something about Kashmir then that's considered groundless... Hmmm..! Well, at the end of the day, it all comes down to politics. I just wish Kashmiris get their true freedom and reunite.

  • @devangimajumdar9066
    @devangimajumdar9066 Před 2 lety +1269

    In the partition, both my parents families lost valuable property and land because they were hindus living in bangladesh, so they had to leave everything and flee to india. (Bangladesh was callled east pakistan back then)

    • @himalayanirjhar
      @himalayanirjhar Před 2 lety +70

      Same. Every affluent family on the other side of the border who had to flee lost their land holdings, sacks of gold jewellery and were reduced to bare minimum on arrival.

    • @benderisback619
      @benderisback619 Před 2 lety +16

      @@himalayanirjhar very painful to hear that

    • @bishwashrimajumdar5395
      @bishwashrimajumdar5395 Před 2 lety +37

      Same, my great-grandfather and their families were from Bangladesh as well. But due to the wars and division, they moved into west bengal and lost all the valuable properties. Their condition became like beggars. It's so surreal to listen to the stories from my grandfather.

    • @AryanSharma-qj4eu
      @AryanSharma-qj4eu Před 2 lety +30

      My tuition teacher (who is 86 now ig) used to tell us this. His family was from now Bangladesh and he had to run to India during the partition. He used to stay with his uncle aunt (his parents died ig) and he used to study on the floor (legit floor, like take chalk, write things, wipe the floor and then do again). From there he went on to get a job in Railways and then found stability in his life.

    • @Satyameda
      @Satyameda Před 2 lety +3

      Same

  • @okayokay.2993
    @okayokay.2993 Před rokem +7

    my great grandparents were from lucknow, they had to escape with my grandmother to Pakistan when she was just a child. some of my relatives are still in India, knowing I will probably never meet them makes my heart heavy. almost every family in Bangladesh, Pakistan and India have a partition story and none of them are pretty. Some people here still identify themselves as "delhi walai" and my dad still says that his caste is lucknow. they really never forget. very bittersweet :(

  • @lookingcoolluke2981
    @lookingcoolluke2981 Před rokem +10

    Came from Ms Marvel episode 5 and now I'm a fan ♥️ this video is awesome!

  • @thrishnamuppavarapu6517
    @thrishnamuppavarapu6517 Před 2 lety +3460

    I'm from India and I'm really feeling very bad after watching this. I want to ask both Indians and Pakistanis- "Do you really want to fight and kill innocent people again just because a third person, who doesn't belong to both of us, divided us 74 years ago??"
    My answer is NO.

    • @gamingfirst01
      @gamingfirst01 Před 2 lety +187

      No - fellow indian here

    • @pinkzero281
      @pinkzero281 Před 2 lety +24

      Yes I want to

    • @talhamunir6554
      @talhamunir6554 Před 2 lety +293

      Absolutely not !
      From Pakistan 🇵🇰

    • @fasihazaib3695
      @fasihazaib3695 Před 2 lety +175

      No brother no one wants that you are right and I'm happy that there are still people like you who think that way . I think us pakistan and India should think that what we are doing is wrong . Pakistan

    • @thrishnamuppavarapu6517
      @thrishnamuppavarapu6517 Před 2 lety +118

      @@fasihazaib3695 Thanks for sharing ur opinion. All this is happening only because of very few people who create bad image about Muslims in India and about Hindus in Pakistan. Or else why will brothers fight? That one day will surely come when both countries will be best brothers again
      ❤️

  • @rohanfernando21
    @rohanfernando21 Před 2 lety +753

    I can see the overall dark theme used which certainly fits how tragic the event was.

  • @kanakraj3198
    @kanakraj3198 Před rokem +8

    I just don't expect something so wrong from @TED-Ed. Gandhi was never the leader of only Hindus, he was the combined leader of India, same with Nehru. You can't just say that because of his religion. It shows that the creators also have the same colonial religious mindset that you mentioned in the video.

  • @prantadasgupta992
    @prantadasgupta992 Před rokem

    Hi Haimanti
    We have done a great job by telling our bloodshed incident to the world. Specifically who belongs to those border side understands and feels your word. Thank you

  • @ayushmangd5538
    @ayushmangd5538 Před 2 lety +2852

    my grandparents came from Bangladesh (then east Pakistan) to India in 1947, so this hits harder. they told me stories of how they safely escaped in the middle of the night, he could hear voices of dying people as his boat was slowly moving across the river.

    • @she_wizzdom4410
      @she_wizzdom4410 Před 2 lety +185

      Same here. My maternal grandfather had two sisters who had to burn themselves to save their honour.

    • @ayushmangd5538
      @ayushmangd5538 Před 2 lety +120

      @@she_wizzdom4410 may their soul rest in peace 🙏

    • @AnneGcovers
      @AnneGcovers Před 2 lety +50

      I am so sorry to hear that and actually i am doing a report on the partition of india as my class 12th main project. my aim is to document new accounts of experiences and keep this massive event for all the physical and emotional damage it caused to so many people. so i have been wanting to interview people who have lived and experienced the parition. so is there any way I can contact you, specifically your grandparents and ask some questions? it can be telephonic or via email.

    • @avinashagnihotri5616
      @avinashagnihotri5616 Před 2 lety +20

      @@she_wizzdom4410 Sad for maternal grandfather sister .

    • @sriku1000
      @sriku1000 Před 2 lety

      Social Media & Mental Health. A nice video czcams.com/video/d97mTNxfn-k/video.html

  • @infiniteaseem6523
    @infiniteaseem6523 Před 2 lety +4709

    I honestly do not believe any 5 or 6 minute video could do justice to the sheer volume of material that exists regarding the partition. That being said, this one was fairly comprehensive, especially given the fact that it was as short as it was.
    For the people of India and Pakistan, the partition was a tragedy unlike any other and remains etched in the hearts of the people of both countries as a dark chapter in their history. Many thanks to TedEd for educating people about this event. Here's to hoping for a more peaceful tomorrow, much love from India🥂

    • @harshitjaiswal5529
      @harshitjaiswal5529 Před 2 lety +6

      Yup

    • @hnaqvi6656
      @hnaqvi6656 Před 2 lety +87

      The people were divided by the colonial masters which is still going strong. Love from Pakistan 🇵🇰

    • @alokbaluni8760
      @alokbaluni8760 Před 2 lety +46

      @@hnaqvi6656 people were divided even before British people came in the Indian subcontinent. I don't understand why Ted Ed didn't show that. People were divided on the basis of Ethnicities, castes, religion, sector (shia, sunni and ahmediya)........

    • @yiwoon_cr8s
      @yiwoon_cr8s Před 2 lety +12

      And much love from Malaysia 🇲🇾

    • @AJThePro99
      @AJThePro99 Před 2 lety +5

      True, true. Very true.

  • @junespencercera9659
    @junespencercera9659 Před 9 měsíci +2

    It's sad that for millennia people in undivided India lived together in peace only to be separated by the British.

  • @tahminarumi2685
    @tahminarumi2685 Před rokem

    Thank you so much for creating this video.

  • @NehaSharma-od5gz
    @NehaSharma-od5gz Před 2 lety +6244

    One of the most dark chapter of human history. All Thanks to the "great" Britain.

    • @akshay-jr1qz
      @akshay-jr1qz Před 2 lety +116

      Just say Britain

    • @molamola8305
      @molamola8305 Před 2 lety +70

      @@akshay-jr1qz no, Great Britain

    • @mysharatasnim9016
      @mysharatasnim9016 Před 2 lety +269

      @@akshay-jr1qz No, they really like being called "great" Britain, so call them "great" Britain.

    • @BBaibhavPadhee
      @BBaibhavPadhee Před 2 lety +51

      well it is late now so whats the point of holding a grudge so far chill and forgive them

    • @lukebrodin631
      @lukebrodin631 Před 2 lety +41

      @@akshay-jr1qz Great British conquered the world, Land of hope and glory!

  • @coldestballs3743
    @coldestballs3743 Před 2 lety +2728

    Fun fact: The border was drawn by a lawyer, not even a geologist
    Edit: Ye, I know, a geologist doesn't study maps. But it would have been better than a lawyer making a boundary.

    • @uselesshero.official
      @uselesshero.official Před 2 lety +61

      That just shows the level of importance ( read f**k) given to us by our then colonial masters. Too bad there wasn't any Spartacus.
      PS: Well there actually was one but we don't talk about him because reasons...

    • @adiyaroy0
      @adiyaroy0 Před 2 lety +54

      Ikr, even a politician could've understood it better. A geologist is fine, but having a British lawyer just scribbling makes no sense.

    • @coldestballs3743
      @coldestballs3743 Před 2 lety +19

      @Ayaan Mohammed But it would've made more sense if a geologist drew the map Lmao

    • @aimarov.5568
      @aimarov.5568 Před 2 lety +39

      You draw an ethnic political map using various kinds of demographic data, not with rock age and type. A geologist making ethnic political map doesn't make sense either.
      A geographer is the better answer imo since they deal with social stuff too.

    • @ApoorvaRajBhadani
      @ApoorvaRajBhadani Před 2 lety +31

      Geologist? 😂. Would he divide borders based on volcanoes.

  • @mahroozabdullah
    @mahroozabdullah Před rokem +10

    After the 200 year british rule,it wasn't over. Because pakistan wanted the power from bangladesh use that for themselves. So after 200 years, then started the liberation war between pakistan and bangladesh. And I am more than happy about my country and india's independence.

  • @yaaseenalam2023
    @yaaseenalam2023 Před 8 měsíci

    Great video , and good summary.
    The 1971 bit was covered shortly in the video, I would also like to see a video on the Bengali genocide when Pakistan tried to ethnically cleanse Bangladesh for no good reason

  • @RayRoberts
    @RayRoberts Před 2 lety +514

    Imagine if this history was taught in British schools.

    • @wonderworld7721
      @wonderworld7721 Před 2 lety +1

      What is the difference ??? huh !..

    • @ABHINAVKUMAR-pl4iw
      @ABHINAVKUMAR-pl4iw Před 2 lety +103

      @@wonderworld7721 they wont go around feeling proud and boasting about British empire that's the difference ,

    • @liberalbias4462
      @liberalbias4462 Před 2 lety +5

      @@ABHINAVKUMAR-pl4iw I just learned about it and I'm still proud.

    • @shreshroop
      @shreshroop Před 2 lety +78

      @@liberalbias4462 Then the problem is probably much more deeper than your school's eductaion syllabus, maybe try closing some stolen goods museums and open few psychology therapy centres....might help

    • @liberalbias4462
      @liberalbias4462 Před 2 lety +7

      @@shreshroop not our fault you guys can't handle diversity and hate each other

  • @phasm42
    @phasm42 Před 2 lety +1878

    The more I hear about colonialism, the more I realize how despicable it was. I don't think enough emphasis was given to how immoral and unethical it was in US education.

    • @hittingyouoverthehead
      @hittingyouoverthehead Před 2 lety +137

      What's worse is that colonialism still isn't over. Some African countries are still getting independence and there still are tiny island nations in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans which are under French and Portuguese colonial rules.
      Heck, even USA has the American Samoa and Guam where the people are treated as second class citizens. They're essentially colonies, just like what India was to "Great" Britain.

    • @-SimonRiley
      @-SimonRiley Před 2 lety +2

      @@infotalktamil551 what does that mean?

    • @subhadramahanta452
      @subhadramahanta452 Před 2 lety +11

      @@hittingyouoverthehead they are nothing but hypocrites

    • @yj9032
      @yj9032 Před 2 lety +22

      In your country the GOP does not want to teach their children colonial history as it hurts their ego

    • @laneythelame
      @laneythelame Před 2 lety +19

      The US does not want to educate its people

  • @MxPotato84
    @MxPotato84 Před rokem +6

    Very educational since this was part of the story on Ms. Marvel with Kamala Khan.

  • @unknown-bg1uq
    @unknown-bg1uq Před rokem

    Wow 🙃 amazing explanation
    I wish I saw this video before my test it cleared my concepts😲

  • @joohwii4339
    @joohwii4339 Před 2 lety +607

    It's very disturbing to realize just how easily the British got away with all those years of tormenting us, and never eventually acknowledged the amount of pain and violence they gave us, Indians. Great video, with unbiased representation.

    • @owenfautley
      @owenfautley Před rokem

      It was the elites that did most of that life in the UK was not any better in those times if you were not rich
      czcams.com/video/rJuoZuaLAsg/video.html wife swap clip from horrible histories from the victorian era.

    • @hindustanimapper
      @hindustanimapper Před rokem +23

      @@vatsal7640 another british troll.

    • @kennethkilian1971
      @kennethkilian1971 Před rokem +9

      @@vatsal7640 What are u even defending

    • @bruhno1545
      @bruhno1545 Před rokem

      @@vatsal7640 no they arent, they colonized and stole from us and isn't misleading, brits accept this too

    • @ninab.4540
      @ninab.4540 Před rokem

      @@kennethkilian1971 He probably voted for the Fridge Lover

  • @Lol-mk2hs
    @Lol-mk2hs Před 2 lety +591

    2:11 No, MK Gandhi and Nehru weren't "representatives of the Hindu majority". They were part of the Indian Nation Congress which stressed secularism and represented all communities of India. The INC very much comprised of Hindus and non-Hindus alike so u can't say that they represented the views of the hindu majority. Jinnah on the other hand said that he represented the Muslims(Tho he only had the backing of around 20% of the Muslim electorate wheres a good chunk of Muslims were also against partition-Muslim leaders such as Maulana Azad and Abdul Gaffar Khan )

    • @battleroyale1760
      @battleroyale1760 Před 2 lety +48

      Gandhi should have made total muslim population transfer to Pakistan and all hindus, sikhs to india.

    • @hannahsyed2063
      @hannahsyed2063 Před 2 lety +20

      in the elections of 1937 AIML had around 20% but in elections of 1945 that had increased to 87%.

    • @the420aditya
      @the420aditya Před 2 lety +14

      What are smoking man 😂 where do you get 20% number majority of Indian Muslim supported partition even knowing they were in minority provinces.please read scholarly book of venkat dhulipala.

    • @maquacr7014
      @maquacr7014 Před 2 lety +27

      Jinnah was in Indian national congress himself but left it after he realized that Indian national congress only cared about Hindu majority and planned to sideline minority Muslims. His belief got solidified during 1937-39 congress rule.

    • @nidhinraj4291
      @nidhinraj4291 Před 2 lety

      @@the420aditya Look at the 1946 elections 🙄

  • @charlotteleroux7309
    @charlotteleroux7309 Před rokem

    waw, an incredible video! Thank you

  • @ras2592
    @ras2592 Před rokem +2

    This explains my curiosity on the partition history that mentioned in Ms Marvel

  • @anantpratapsinghchauhan3700
    @anantpratapsinghchauhan3700 Před 2 lety +558

    "The sun never sets in the British empire because even God couldn't trust the British in the dark".

  • @HammadAli-uf3ll
    @HammadAli-uf3ll Před 2 lety +765

    *Ethnically diverse people living peacefully minding their own business *
    The British: Allow me to introduce myself
    Edit: We would've been better off without the Brits even though we had our fair share of problems.
    Also my comment wasn't specific to India only. Just look what they did to Palestine. Jews and Muslims were coexisting peacefully before the Brits came.
    Same thing with Africa. Years of White Imperialism ruined it.

    • @sleepifiy2096
      @sleepifiy2096 Před 2 lety +68

      @@hwfq34fajw9foiffawdiufhuaiwfhw there's nothing to believe in that. That's the truth. Believe it or not. I have lived it.

    • @maquacr7014
      @maquacr7014 Před 2 lety +26

      @@hwfq34fajw9foiffawdiufhuaiwfhw Your mom.

    • @amp7930
      @amp7930 Před 2 lety +16

      The fact that TED-Ed hearts this comment 😄

    • @AbdurRahman-mb1vr
      @AbdurRahman-mb1vr Před 2 lety +3

      You make this all a joke. Grow up

    • @AbdurRahman-mb1vr
      @AbdurRahman-mb1vr Před 2 lety +5

      This is serious just like a murder case and you get idiots trying to make clever comments.

  • @divyeshkumar6357
    @divyeshkumar6357 Před 6 měsíci +4

    A little correction : M.K Gandhi and J.L Nehru were totally secular towards the masses. The Congress party had a number of prominent muslim leaders like Syed ahmad khan, abdul ghaffar khan etc. who were the reason of a lot of muslims choose to stay back in India. It was due to the divisive policies of British , that allowed Jinnah and his followers to proceed with a separate identity.

  • @darshparashar6083
    @darshparashar6083 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Ted ed i am not an expert on history but do like to read and understand history
    I am Indian and do not blame british for the partition completely

    • @Arkham-kq9uf
      @Arkham-kq9uf Před 3 měsíci +1

      It were muslims to be precise, India could have been United and secular but Muslims divided it

  • @mohammadhafiz2679
    @mohammadhafiz2679 Před 2 lety +1086

    My grandparents were originally from Kolkata in West Bengal. They migrated to Rajshahi in Bangladesh (what was then East Pakistan). The stories they tell make my cry. Muslims and Hindus back then lived more harmoniously in peace. One day I hope to visit Kolkata. ❤️

    • @n.w.flannel3463
      @n.w.flannel3463 Před 2 lety +69

      They never did, actually. Communal violence has always been a thing.

    • @akshayjain6408
      @akshayjain6408 Před 2 lety +65

      One person are responsible for everything after Britishers, that are "jinna"

    • @snaik9141
      @snaik9141 Před 2 lety +17

      But West Bengal has a near Muslim majority now

    • @epifania6529
      @epifania6529 Před 2 lety +48

      @@snaik9141 only if you're smart enough to think 27% is "near majority"

    • @mohammadhafiz2679
      @mohammadhafiz2679 Před 2 lety +27

      @@snaik9141 lmao Muslims are a minority in West Bengal, far from a majority...

  • @simranb392
    @simranb392 Před 2 lety +436

    My grandfather when around 19 when all of this happened, he left his family behind and his house behind only taking his close friends. He had no food no clothes or anything and he didn’t even know English. He got on a boat and thought he was going to America but ended up in England and then he got married to a sikh girl who was in the same situation as my grandfather. My grandfather passed away almost a year ago December 21 and I miss him. He never told me this story and it’s so sad because he had so many stories to tell me. My uncle told me his story at his funeral. My grandfather had nothing and he started from nothing. When I was born he was so rich and I’m so proud of him. Also my grandmother passed away when I was a baby before my sister was born so I was the only one who saw all of my grandparents and I’m thankful for that. I pray to them every single night and I miss them so much.
    Thank you for having the time to read this.

    • @anushshah21
      @anushshah21 Před rokem +2

      damn

    • @comet6740
      @comet6740 Před rokem

      You are so lucky. Your grandad took a big risk. Big respect.

  • @lookingfordiscovery
    @lookingfordiscovery Před 11 měsíci

    extremely informative, thank you

  • @arhumahmedghouri6876
    @arhumahmedghouri6876 Před rokem

    Thank you so much for mentioning the Referendum that hasn't taken place till date

    • @byron-ih2ge
      @byron-ih2ge Před rokem

      it never will untill pakistan wants it to

  • @TheLunarNights123
    @TheLunarNights123 Před 2 lety +71

    (Sees India in Title)
    Indians: *We Have been Summoned*

  • @AliKhan.1247
    @AliKhan.1247 Před 2 lety +5356

    Here I am, a Pakistani living abroad, and pretty much all of my friends are Indians. The majority of both populations want peace and are sick of division. There's so much love that goes unseen in the media and politics. Both countries have done good and bad things to the other, yet still there is mutual respect. I am confident that one day these problems will be solved and things will go back to peace. Also, please don't start an Indo-Pak war in the replies. Unfortunately, I have too much experience with that kinda stuff.

    • @mallucommenter4071
      @mallucommenter4071 Před 2 lety +77

      Do you want to live in a full India?

    • @alibinnaseer
      @alibinnaseer Před 2 lety +54

      @@mallucommenter4071 no

    • @123Anwarshah
      @123Anwarshah Před 2 lety +84

      F**k the media. Never EVER believe the bs that they spout. Do yout own research, and then understand the truth. Medias almost always are biased, so believing them is tantamount to smoothening your brain. Well said, OP.

    • @cma6812
      @cma6812 Před 2 lety +68

      That love is as useless as your (and my) life for those in power.

    • @sarashahzad5478
      @sarashahzad5478 Před 2 lety +2

      Same same same

  • @memosandmore
    @memosandmore Před 8 měsíci +2

    The biggest clap back and revenge would be to reunite all the split lands, create a secular state honoring all religions and cultures, focus on what makes this land so powerful and great, stop warring, and literally focus on becoming a dominant superpower which it has the ability to be--- it is written in India's DNA, its land, its craftsmanship, its history, its art. Maybe One Day we can fix what we did not break.

    • @Arkham-kq9uf
      @Arkham-kq9uf Před 3 měsíci

      It is impossible as of now, we can only do it by banning the practice of all religions

  • @AnkitKumar-bz2dm
    @AnkitKumar-bz2dm Před rokem +5

    This 5 minute video is more accurate than whole British TV media combined.

  • @TheTheak49
    @TheTheak49 Před 2 lety +398

    At the time my grandmother was a young girl (10-13) and she lost her entire family in the partition. She moved to Pakistan and started another family, but imagine losing your parents, siblings, friends, for the rest of your life and Not even knowing whether their dead or alive.

    • @samanfisherman2276
      @samanfisherman2276 Před 2 lety +8

      poor girl; its very sad; can you explain more how it happened; why she could not stay with them?

    • @injanammanchey6632
      @injanammanchey6632 Před 2 lety +13

      @@samanfisherman2276 Well the things were chaotic you know so people often got lost while moving to the other side.

    • @spicybiryani2617
      @spicybiryani2617 Před 2 lety +18

      My grandfather's (now Pakistan, always Muslim) half family is also still in India. Thankfully they are alive and seem happy and are Indian patriots.

    • @doctorjoy2688
      @doctorjoy2688 Před 2 lety +9

      I am Indian. My grandparents were originally from Noakhali, Bangladesh and they witnessed the horrific Noakhali genocide of 1946. They migrated to Kolkata but many were not lucky to escape. It is sad to see even in 2021, people hate each other based on religion...I wish we were all united and don't repeat mistakes of past

    • @vp3993
      @vp3993 Před 2 lety +7

      happens everyday in pakistan. 12 year old hindu, christian girls kidnapped and slaved for life

  • @galenpemberton4382
    @galenpemberton4382 Před 2 lety +891

    The history of Britian ruining everything, fighting everyone, and fighting themselves never ceases to be wild to learn about.

    • @segmentsAndCurves
      @segmentsAndCurves Před 2 lety +28

      Divide and conquer is deadly.

    • @haroldinho9930
      @haroldinho9930 Před 2 lety +37

      France, Spain and Netherlands did the same.

    • @haroldinho9930
      @haroldinho9930 Před 2 lety +33

      And Belgium, Germany, and Italy.

    • @happyslapsgiving5421
      @happyslapsgiving5421 Před 2 lety +47

      But Britain did it more than anyone else.
      However, guys, don't fight.
      You're all forgetting who the real enemy, here, is: *RELIGION.*

    • @jaipreetsingh6566
      @jaipreetsingh6566 Před 2 lety +12

      @@happyslapsgiving5421 britian divided people in religion

  • @klloydplata4098
    @klloydplata4098 Před rokem +2

    That's what's telling in the MCU's Marvel Studios Ms. Marvel Television series because this is what interests me when historical information is talking about.

  • @tess_88
    @tess_88 Před rokem +4

    A great deal of the misery that the "third" world suffers now is the direct result of the previous crimes and colonizations by the prestigious "first" world today, despite this the world does not have a good memory, we are ruled by an agonizing amnesia, a wrenchful reality for so many

    • @Edward4Plantagenet
      @Edward4Plantagenet Před 11 měsíci

      I don't blame British. In 1945 and 1946 elections, 95% so called muslim Minority (which Ruled India & Spain for 800 years), Voted for Separate country because they didn't want to live under Democracy lead by (very Stu p!d) Secular Majority.
      1945 & 1946 elections -
      Congress represented - Secularists.
      Muslim league - 95% muslims voted for.
      Hindu Mahasabha - hardly 5% votes.
      The fearful Minority 30 Million (now 220 Million) didn't left for Pakistan and now pelt stone on Hindu festivals. Hindu temples are under attack, Idols are being vandalised. There are many cases.
      Also, Pakistan in 1970, kiIIed 3 Million Bangladeshi people 😃 10 million refugee went to India (with whom they didn't want to live) 🤦🏻‍♂️,
      lsIamic Brotherhood KiIIed Bangladeshi 🙈🙅🏻🤷🏻‍♂️🙆🏻‍♂️
      And even today,
      Baloch, Pashtuns, Sindhi people in Pakistan are "Disappearing".
      Take a guess by whom.
      Pakistan's main export is IT. (International Terr o rism)
      They were minority, yet they ruled Spain and India for 800 years.
      British were less than 1,00,000.
      Yet they ruled 300 million people.
      Minority is dangerous term.
      Don't play with it.
      For 51%, 49% is minority.
      1921, Moplah Riots. 10,000 H Indus got kiIIed ,
      3000 forced converted.
      Direct action day - 5000 Indoos KiIIed.
      Noakhali riots - 5000 Indus KiIIed. Minority pelt stones on our festival.
      Minority is dangerous term.
      It automatically makes them victim which is not case in India.
      Hindus are Victim of them.

  • @zainulabideen6218
    @zainulabideen6218 Před 2 lety +817

    This is indeed one of the most objective videos I've seen on this topic. My grandfather was born in Agra, India and came to Karachi after partition when he was a child. I am the third generation born in Pakistan but even today the wounds of partition have not fully healed.
    I wish things had been different and it would not have been this difficult to visit my ancestral home :((... Love and respect to all my Indians brothers and sisters out there 🇵🇰🇵🇰🇵🇰🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
    Edit: Thank you all for the wonderful wishes. Never thought would get this amount of positivity :))

    • @sarthakjain5929
      @sarthakjain5929 Před 2 lety +21

      I'm from agra. Is there any chance u remeber about the area where they lived?

    • @zainulabideen6218
      @zainulabideen6218 Před 2 lety +17

      @@sarthakjain5929 I don't know but I'll ask the elders of my family they might know. Thank you for your reply, mate :)

    • @gurpreetkaurdhillon8404
      @gurpreetkaurdhillon8404 Před 2 lety +14

      @@zainulabideen6218 so your fore' father was a supporter of a seperate muslim state

    • @NavierBlue9603
      @NavierBlue9603 Před 2 lety +13

      My great grandparents remained in India. But yeah partition sowed deep hatred against Muslims.

    • @aperture0
      @aperture0 Před 2 lety +19

      @@zainulabideen6218 Yoooo we've a lot of muslims remaining on our side, and from the looks of it, they don't think India is a secular and a democratic country so can you please take them in your side? They think Pakistan is pretty secular and democratic and while we're at it please return our Kashmir and we'll give you people from your faith in return. Pretty please 🙏🙏

  • @mahimarao694
    @mahimarao694 Před 2 lety +226

    The entire vibe of this video accurately reflects the severity and predicament of the partition, and can we talk about the tragic background tune?
    As an Indian, this video was so touching, although there remain many many many layers to the history of partition uncovered. Thank you TED-ed 💛🤧

    • @gautamgopal3517
      @gautamgopal3517 Před 2 lety

      Absolutely.... Watched it twice just for the bg..

    • @Aditya-pm2jw
      @Aditya-pm2jw Před 2 lety +4

      The sole purpose of partition was muslims wanted an seperate Islamic nation therefore it's not totally correct to blame Britishers as they only poured oil in fire ..the harsh reality which no one talks about is muslims wanted to create an Islamic state and they couldn't live with Hindus peacefully that's why partition occured

    • @veryconfused9768
      @veryconfused9768 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Aditya-pm2jw No the real play was politics Jinna wanted to be the prime minister of India but Nehru got chosen so they agreed to make pakistan.

    • @shashlek5751
      @shashlek5751 Před 2 lety

      @@Aditya-pm2jw LoL Hindus didn't want a separate because Hindus were in a majority

  • @Ivy_009
    @Ivy_009 Před rokem +5

    My grandma experienced this mascara in real life . She told me all the horrifying things that happened , about how at the time of indra Gandhi she was a refugee in a camp and ate dry rice and stuff . I think she also lost 1 of her child and relatives . She told that the pregnant women's were killed slowly slowly and how she had to go from 1 bus to another bus to another bus and had to travel for 2 - 4 days straight . I have so much respect she actually suffered a lot .

  • @angyw3968
    @angyw3968 Před rokem +4

    All religions pre India's independence lived in peaceful co-existence together there was never any violence between groups. The British Empire used divide and rule tactics to wreck ancient civilisations. It pains me to see what happened but it is now on the leaders and people of both countries to work together like the Europeans have after WW2.
    Bhagat Singh zindabad! Long live India, Pakistan and Bangladesh!

  • @rooseveltgomes7487
    @rooseveltgomes7487 Před 2 lety +652

    East Pakistan didn't secede, but fought liberation war with west Pakistan for 9 months in 1971. Became independent with the cost of around 3 million lifes and became a new nation Bangladesh.

    • @chka2562
      @chka2562 Před 2 lety +41

      @Nabil Ibrahim the Muslims showed how peaceful they are through Direct Action Day, Noakhali riots, Godhra Train massacre, 26/11 bombings, multiple attacks on civilians, Pulwama, Balakot, right?

    • @chka2562
      @chka2562 Před 2 lety +33

      Also, the exodus of the Kashmiri Hindus was simply just a mass migration right?

    • @chka2562
      @chka2562 Před 2 lety +27

      And the Hindu, Christian, Sikh minorities in Pakistan are not undergoing any persecution, right?

    • @ankur.mahajan
      @ankur.mahajan Před 2 lety +18

      @@nabilian_2003 Yeah, definitely. That is shown by the increase in population percentage of M in H majority country and decrease in population of H in M majority country. 😑

    • @passionatecraftartist3744
      @passionatecraftartist3744 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm a Bangladeshi.

  • @Mandemon1990
    @Mandemon1990 Před 2 lety +199

    I only have one minor problem with this episode, and it's that British Empire is consistently shown with EIC logo, when in reality EIC was dissolved when Britain took direct control of the continent.

    • @raniab5487
      @raniab5487 Před 2 lety +2

      The Queen Proclamation 1858 abolished the EIC and Queen Victoria became the Empress of India

    • @dukethotness
      @dukethotness Před 2 lety +1

      EIC was revived and an Indian just bought the East India Company.

    • @aguy6771
      @aguy6771 Před 2 lety +2

      yeah it makes no sense, the EIC was dissolved of their holdings and it was given to the Crown in 1858, Officially becoming the Indian Empire, or the British Raj.

    • @arnavjha7375
      @arnavjha7375 Před 2 lety

      It was taken just after the 1857 rebellion was crushed . I guess

    • @Adi300594
      @Adi300594 Před 2 lety

      I pointed out the same thing

  • @mariumsubrana2307
    @mariumsubrana2307 Před rokem +4

    They easily stated that in 1971 East Pakistan became Bangladesh.... But during the whole video they talked how much injustice were made by the British and stuff... But didn't even think of talking about the liberation war of Bangladesh.... Bangladesh had to go through all of those things just to get their rights, own independent land and Language .... Women were tortured, young Men were killed, tortured brutally..... The most Sadenning thing is the Then west Pakistani military killed our most revolutionary leaders, they cleared all wise people... Remarkable writers, journalists, poets they did not spare anyone.... At least they could mention that Bangladesh was born after a liberation war.....

    • @milfbangerbhabhilover9771
      @milfbangerbhabhilover9771 Před rokem +1

      Don't worry, people know. Bangladesh fought a just war

    • @rdothl5
      @rdothl5 Před rokem +1

      Its new media policy to not talk anything bad about muslims countries like pakistan...

    • @mariumsubrana2307
      @mariumsubrana2307 Před rokem

      See it's not about talking bad about any country... No enmity towards any country... What I've meant is they should have added one more thing which is the liberation war of Bangladesh .....

  • @paulwareing1859
    @paulwareing1859 Před 11 měsíci +3

    The question should be why didnt it split into a number of smaller countries? India is so diverse it cant be ruled by one law without neglecting millions of minorities

  • @erik2602
    @erik2602 Před 2 lety +416

    The weirdest thing to me is that a lot of white Europeans today interpret these conflicts to mean: 'Without western ruling, they will only fight each other. Do you see now that they needed us to govern them'

    • @raneegopan6349
      @raneegopan6349 Před 2 lety +37

      Ikr
      Honestly you did improve some conditions which will not be denied but that didn't mean you had to colonise someone to do that and many kingdoms of Asia where more rich before they were colonised.
      It could have been just trading between people and then some got greedy and wanted it all😐
      If you read history you can get a basic idea that it was more of the European countries showing of who had more colonies 😑

    • @user-L13
      @user-L13 Před 2 lety +27

      Well, they need to make themselves look like the good guy don't they

    • @liberalbias4462
      @liberalbias4462 Před 2 lety +3

      @@user-L13 not our fault you guys can't handle some diversity and hate each other.

    • @AbhijayAgarwal
      @AbhijayAgarwal Před 2 lety +44

      @@liberalbias4462 Yeah,it's only like there were hundreds of cultures in each religion and hiring a guy who didn't even visit India to draw the border is a bad idea

    • @subhadramahanta452
      @subhadramahanta452 Před 2 lety +33

      @@liberalbias4462 ahhh, stupidity at its peak

  • @mastera4779
    @mastera4779 Před 2 lety +677

    "And if History taught us anything, it was humans couldn't get along with anyone. Not even themselves."
    -Artemis Fowl II

    • @AnandTumurtogoo17
      @AnandTumurtogoo17 Před 2 lety +18

      Maybe they faired better without the European British.

    • @pratikrana7684
      @pratikrana7684 Před 2 lety +25

      India is today 75 years of age. Hindus, Muslims, Buddhists, Sikhs, Jains, Christians and Zoroastrians and many other minor groups co exist peacefully here. Politicians try to light the fire of hatred between different groups for personal gains but despite of all that India has managed to stay strong and is looking good for at least another century to come. Thus, proving that the two nation theory was a failure.

    • @ishaan8658
      @ishaan8658 Před 2 lety +2

      Artemis fowl fan yesssss

    • @retrogamer3775
      @retrogamer3775 Před 2 lety

      No.this statement is true. But can be changed when all humans have inner wellbeing then. No one will fight each other.

    • @retrogamer3775
      @retrogamer3775 Před 2 lety

      @@pretendtheresaname9213 no a person will only get along with ones who have same likes and common things with him/her. Ofcourse there are some people who will get along with everyone.

  • @MohammedHassan-dr9kv
    @MohammedHassan-dr9kv Před měsícem +2

    India was never a thing prior to partition. You can say it was a big piece of land with certain ethic groups being the dominant in said region. That has been true for all of History in South Asia.
    So it's like me asking today if you cut India in perfect half, which half will be India?

  • @mayurnayan4547
    @mayurnayan4547 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for this information