National News
‘Partition Horrors’: Falsehoods, “with clear communal intent”, say experts

‘The Indian History Congress strongly protests the falsehoods, with a clear communal intent, being spread among middle and secondary-level school children by bringing out a Special Module on Partition Horrors Remembrance Day by the NCERT and Ministry of Education, Government of India,’ reads a resolution put out on 27 August, Wednesday, by members of the body and endorsed by eminent academics.
The experts aligned with the Indian History Congress, based in the department of history, Aligarh Muslim University (AMU), take particular issue the ministry and the NCERT’s stance that “The British government tried their best to preserve India as one until the end” — not that Partition (as also in 1857) was a colonial agenda, but that it was the Indian National Congress as well as the Muslim League that engineered the breaking up of India and Pakistan at both eastern and western borders.
‘Turning history completely upside down, the modules hold not only the Muslim League but also the Indian National Congress responsible for the Partition of the country. Quite in tune with the loyalist stance of the communal forces during the freedom struggle, the British colonial rulers are given a clean chit in these modules’ — the experts’ statement minces no words in assigning both intent and culpability, nodding to the RSS–BJP system behind the ‘new historical’ stance at a time when entire chapters of history textbooks, both in schools and colleges, are disappearing.
Among the signatories are Prof. (retd) Aditya Mukherjee, formerly of the Centre for Historical Studies, JNU (Jawaharlal Nehru University); emeritus professor of AMU Irfan Habib; emeritus professor of JNU Romila Thapar; former UPSC member Purushottam Agarwal; former CSIR chief scientist Gauhar Raza; eminent historian and former professor of the University of Baroda Ganesh Devy; and 32 other ‘tall names’ from the field of Subcontinental, South Asian and Indian history.
The statement points out that the 1942 Cripps Mission and the 1946 Cabinet Mission Plan — ‘which actually had the idea of Pakistan embedded in them’ — are wrongly cited as proof of the British ‘trying to leave a united India’.
Instead, the NCERT and the ministry of education (and their ideological masters) blame the Congress for not accepting these two excellent ‘plans’ — and even for ‘pushing Jinnah towards “direct action” and the Calcutta killings in August 1946!
According to the ‘Partition Horrors Remembrance Day’ special module, the statement notes:
The reality, the historians point out, is very far from this.
For the Partition of India was the result of ‘a long-term strategy of the British pursued since the 19th century of divide and rule, particularly after the revolt of 1857, which Hindus and Muslims fought together, shoulder to shoulder’.
Partition, they note, was the direct result of this long-term colonial strategy, backed by nearly a century of effort at maintaining the ‘divide and rule’ principle in action — culminating in the final ‘divide and quit’ of 1947.
The result of the British crown’s longstanding approach ‘could not be what some British strategist briefly flirted with in the end, the notion of “unite and quit”, a notion selectively picked up by the NCERT modules’, the IHC statement argues — and it goes on to explain, with examples.
‘Among the various strategies in the British armoury to divide and rule was the bringing in of the notion of separate electorates based on religion and their promoting religion-based communal political organisations. The formation of the Muslim League was a “command performance”, the resolution continues.
‘A benevolent attitude was taken towards other communal organisations be they Hindu or Sikh, while targeting the Indian nationalists led by the Indian National Congress,’ it notes.
After all, that was where the greatest danger to the British empire lay — and the enemy of one’s enemy may usefully be nurtured into a ‘friend’, a playbook our contemporary communal voices don’t shy away from either.
‘Finally, Indian history was rewritten, showing Indian society as historically always divided on the basis of religion and the British coming in to save India from religious strife and persecution under Muslim rule,’ continues the statement — drawing a straight line between the actual British approach to ‘Indian history’ and that which is being claimed as the ‘new and decolonised’ history books under Hindutva proponents who continue to pit Indian communities that have coexisted for centuries against each other right into contemporary times.
The statement continues, though without naming names: ‘The communal parties aided the British (emphasis ours) by acting as the bulwark against the rising Indian national movement. The British colonial interpretation of Indian society was adopted and popularized by the communalists. The NCERT modules reflect the same colonial/communal bias.‘
The Indian National Congress leaders are criticised by the NCERT and the Government of India for “whitewash(ing)” history “in an effort to strengthen the nationalist movement”, the statement notes.
The Congress and the Indian nationlists are accused of making “emotional appeals” — presumably these are the ones for Hindu–Muslim unity — and of “limiting their discourse to a binary of ‘native vs foreign’” by the ministry of education in this new revisionist framework of ‘Indian history’.
They are accused of “blaming the British rulers for every problem, including communalism”.
The nationalist leaders are accused of “consistently overlook(ing) the historical realities of Hindu–Muslim relations”.
It is curious, though, this loyalty to and this whitewashing of the British by an elected government of independent India, on the eve of its Independence Day after 76 years, is it not?
The experts of the Indian History Congress certainly seem to find it ‘interesting’. The historians continue:
As was done by the ‘Hindu communal forces’ during the freedom struggle, including during the Quit India Movement — the experts’ resolution continues — the argument put forth is that it was (and is) the Muslims, and not the British colonial rulers, who were/are the real enemy of ‘India’.
What is highlighted, the statement says, is the so-called “ideology of political Islam, which denies the possibility of any permanent or equal relationship with non-Muslims. This principle has been consistently applied in various parts of the world for centuries and can still be seen today” — this is the stance being espoused, and the one to be taught to impressionable future citizens, per the present Narendra Modi-led Government of India.
That the greatest threat to our nation comes from the “ideology of Islam” is surely a convenient scapegoat amid tariff wars led by a capricious POTUS Donald Trump, while our citizens’ and our representatives’ moral fibre is tested by a breakdown of democratic failsafes at home and a veritable livestreamed genocide in West Asia.
Though the statement sticks more closely to the points of Indian history, pointing out that the NCERT and education ministry’s appeal to ‘authority’ then moves to, of all people, Jinnah — quoting him at length in his call for a separate Muslim nation on 22 March 1940:
“The Hindus and Muslims belong to two different religious philosophies, social customs, and literature. They neither intermarry nor interdine together and, indeed, they belong to two different civilizations which are based mainly on conflicting ideas and conceptions. Their views on life and of life are different. It is quite clear that Hindus and Muslims derive their inspiration from different sources of history. They have different epics, different heroes, and different episodes. Very often the hero of one is a foe of the other, and likewise, their victories and defeats overlap.”
It would appear that the BJP–RSS ecosystem are aligned, then, with Jinnah’s ‘political Islamic’ position! A curious alignment, that, again.
But perhaps to any serious student of the Subcontinent’s history, not so curious. For while the government is at pains to not quote him in the special module, there was one V.D. Savarkar, who espoused a very similar position on Hindu–Muslim relations.
The Hindutva icon’s own version of the two-nation theory was propounded before Jinnah, three years earlier, in 1937, in his presidential address to the Hindu Mahasabha:
“India cannot be assumed today to be a unitarian and homogenous nation, but on the contrary, there are two nations in the main, Hindus and Muslims, in India.”
Repeating the British colonial argument in greater detail than Jinnah, Savarkar — the IHC statement notes — referred to the “centuries of a cultural, religious and national antagonism between the Hindus and the Moslems”.
The title of the section citing these statements is ‘As it is there are two antagonistic nations living in India side by side’.
‘It is indeed ironical that Hindu communalists are never included in the list of those responsible for Partition,’ the resolution notes.
Yet the chief ‘culprits’ of Partition, per the current Government of India, are supposedly nationalist leaders across the entire spectrum of the freedom struggle — ‘Moderates, Extremists, Gandhians, Congress Socialists, Communists, Revolutionaries etc.’, all those, in fact, who believed that India had ‘a long civilisational history of being able to live together with difference, who celebrated diversity, who believed in Hindu–Muslim unity and dreamt of an “Idea of India” which was to be secular, inclusive, humane and democratic’.
The Indian History Congress continues:
‘The Indian National Congress, which since its inception in 1885, struggled relentlessly against religious communal division, its greatest leader Mahatma Gandhi giving up his life for it, is projected as one of the main “culprits” of Partition!
‘Let us not forget that the Mahatma’s murder was a product of the vicious Hindu communal propaganda criticising him for arguing for Hindu–Muslim unity, which the NCERT modules dismisses as unrealistic “emotional” appeal, not taking into account “the historical realities of Hindu–Muslim relations”.‘
‘If this is not distortion of history,’ the statement concludes, ‘to promote a hateful, polarized future, one wonders what it is.’
All descriptions in the NCERT’s modules refer to Hindus and Sikhs killed and humiliated, the IHC notes, with no mention of the retaliatory horrors inflicted on Muslims!
‘Let us not forget that the Mahatma’s last fast, weeks before he was murdered by a Hindu communalist,’ concludes the IHC resolution, ‘was to try and contain the attacks on Muslims and their places of worship happening in Delhi!’
The IHC resolution in its entirety may be seen below (pdf), and the full list of signatories is reproduced underneath.
Ihc Resolution – Ncert Modules on Partition Horrors Day by National Herald
1. Irfan Habib, emeritus professor, Aligarh Muslim University
2. Romila Thapar, emeritus professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University
3. Aditya Mukherjee, former professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University
4. Mridula Mukherjee, former professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University
5. Zoya Hasan, emeritus professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University
6. Purushottam Agrawal, former member, UPSC
7. Ganesh Devy, former professor, University of Baroda
8. Rahul Mukherjee, professor and chair, South Asia Institute, Heidelberg, Germany
9. Shantha Sinha, former professor, University of Hyderabad and founder-chairperson, National Commission for Protection of Child Rights
10. Ravindran Gopinath, former vice chancellor, Kannur University, Kerala
11. Rajen Harshe, former vice chancellor, Allahabad University
12. Sucheta Mahajan, former professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University
13. Vinita Damodaran, professor, Sussex University, UK
14. Ramakant Agnihotri, former professor, Delhi University
15. Manisha Priyam, professor, NIEPA, New Delhi
16. Gauhar Raza, former chief scientist, CSIR
17. Anvita Abbi, former professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University
18. K. L. Tuteja, former professor, Kurukshetra University
19. Satish Chand Abbi, former professor, IIT, Delhi
20. Dipa Sinha, visiting professor, Azim Premji University
21. Deepak Kumar, former professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University
22. Sarbani Guptoo, professor, Netaji Institute for Asian Studies, Kolkata
23. Sukhmani Bal, former professor, Punjab University, Chandigarh
24. R. Mahalakshmi, professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University
25. Rajshekhar Basu, professor, Calcutta University
26. Rohan D’ Souza, professor, Kyoto University, Japan
27. Rakesh Batabyal, associate professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University
28. Ramesh Dixit, former professor, Lucknow
29. Rajshekhar Basu, professor, Calcutta University
30. Sebastain Joseph, former professor, UCC, Kerala
31. Arun Bandopadhaya, former professor, Calcutta University
32. Rajib Handique, professor, University of Gauhati
33. Salil Misra, former pro-vice chancellor, Ambedkar University, Delhi
34. Shaji Anuradhan, professor, University of Kerala
35. Ajay Gudavarthy, associate professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University
36. S. Irfan Habib, former professor, NIEPA, New Delhi
37. Suresh Jnaeshwaran, former professor, University of Kerala
38. Gyanesh Kudaisya, historian
National News
U-turn of RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat

The National Swayam Sevak Association (RSS) supremo Mohan Bhagwat has demonstrated that a politician can be seen as a U-turn on the ongoing debate about retirement age, which was triggered by his first comments, firmly denying that he had ever suggested as a benchmark of retirement.
His comment believes that his earlier comments have long been seen as a veil sign for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who turned 75 next month, as Bhagwat himself does.
In particular, the BJP’s own internal policy, as has been implemented by PM Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah, has once turned 75 years old, or she becomes a part of it. Guide circle ,
Speaking in a ‘100 -year journey’ of the incident of Sangh -New Horizon on Thursday, Bhagwat clarified his earlier comments and dismissed all interpretations, stating that he was wrongly based on his words.
Referring to a humorous anecdote by former RSS leader Moropant Pingal, God explained the intention of his previous statements. He said, “I quoted Moropant, which was very funny; he would bounce you on his chair,” he said, remembering the stories from the launch of Pingal’s biography in Nagpur.
One of the anecdotes consisted of a senior RSS leader HV Shashadari, who used to offer pingal with a shawl at the age of 75 – some Bhagwat said it was joking and not as a call for retirement.
National News
Bihar sir: More than 1.95 lakhs filed for changes; 25,000 settled

The Election Commission of India (ECI) on Thursday announced that it had received more than 1.95 lakh applications from individuals requesting the inclusion or exclusion of names from Bihar’s draft electoral roles. Of these, around 25,000 have already been addressed, Tiwari said.
Between submissions, 79 was filed by CPI (ML) -Liberation and three were filed by Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD). Both sides are recognized as state-level political institutions in Bihar.
As the process of filing claims and objections enters in its last four days, any such application has been submitted – including any national party – BJP or Congress.
The Commission did not break how many of the total 1,95,802 requests are especially related to the inclusion or exclusion under the ‘claims and objections’ category.
In media reports, an anonymous officer was quoted, saying, “claims and objections are negligible, as compared to more than 60 million names from the draft list for various reasons.”
According to the pole body, till Monday, documentation has been obtained for 99.11 percent of the 7.24 crore voters listed in the draft role.
The draft voter list was released on 1 August as a special intensive amendment (SIR) exercise in Bihar.
In a statement released on Sunday, August 24, the ECI highlighted the claim and objection to the citizens to fix any error in the draft role and to present any of their documents that they may have left while filling their calculations.
Between 24 June and 24 August, the Commission said that 98.2 percent of the voters presented their documents within the 60-day window.
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has directed the Commission to accept the Aadhaar Card or one of the 11 approved identity documents, demanding to be added to the election register.
In turn, the ECI has appealed to the court to have their trust in the Commission to handle the SIR process in Bihar before the upcoming elections.
National News
Assam’s identity crisis: politics of history, fear and exclusion

Assam is in troubled and upheaval today, one of the most beautiful and bounts states in India. The reason for this is ‘outsiders’, mainly Bengali Muslims-Automatically Bangladeshi is a deep-root concern among Swadeshi Assamia as Bangladeshi. The problem, however, is more complex.
Ahm integrated the Brahmaputra Valley and ruled from 1228–1826. They were migrants of Thai (Tai) origin – from Guijhou in South China, who entered through Thailand and Burma’s glory land. He maintained his ‘foreign’ pride and religion for about three centuries before assimilating into Hinduism.
This question that is a foreigner and who is not, therefore, depends on someone’s approach on a large scale. The irony is that when we celebrate his victory – such as the famous Mughal defeat of Borfukan in 1671 – we ignore the fact that the Mughal general was a Hindu Raja Ram Singh of Ajmer.
There was a turn in 1826 when the British removed the Burmese occupying the ‘Assam’, defeated the remains of Ahmas and enacted people such as new lands and wealth and gentia. Shortly thereafter, the British deliberately put a deliberate policy to settle the land and resources of the region to settle the ‘Mainland’ (Central) Indians.
The magician Bengal Presidency was part of Assam, soon educated Bengali Babus saw teaching and administrative positions, while Bengali farmers expanded farming. In 1874, one of the densely populated Eastern districts of Bengal, Sylhet was merged with Assam to make the province of an integrated Chief Commissioner with Shillong as its capital.
Neither the belly-Bengalis (large-scale Muslims) nor Assamese, mainly Hindus liked it, but both had to swallow it. Obviously, the movement and disposal within this ‘United Provinces’ was completely disqualified and the old settlers of the century get a hyper when the ‘external’ question is raised.
With the flourishing of British tea gardens, oil is being found in Digboi in 1889, and new coal mines and other resources are opened, the British found migrant labor truck loads from Bihar, Central India and Nepal to Assam’s tea gardens and coal mines, which makes serious neglect of local Assamia. A famine in Nagaon noticed that their number fell further. Today’s stress is rooted in these colonial misdeeds.
After independence and subsequent partitions, Sylhet moved to East Bengal (later Bangladesh), but there was no late-up in the flow of refugees in Assam. In 1950, Parliament passed the immigration (removal from Assam) to accept Assamese’s concerns. India’s first NRC (Civil Register of Citizen) was built in Assam based on the 1951 census. But every time riots in East Pakistan, religious oppression extended Hindu Bengalis towards Assam, West Bengal and Tripura, while poverty brought Muslims from East Pakistan to these states.
The problem of many layers of non-disgrace-speakers and their possession of fertile land and paying jobs cannot simply go. Local demonstrations against him became quite common in the 1970s – all Assam Students Union and all the Assam Gana Sangram Parishad with sometimes violence. Their demand: to find and expel illegal migrants – both Hindu and Muslim.
In 1979, a terrorist offshoot – the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) – emerged for “India to Asambha Assam”. Violence was at its peak in February 1983, with the infamous Nelli massacre in which some 2,000 people, mainly Bengali Muslims, were killed in one of the worst pogroms in independent India.
The popularity of the Assam movement led by AASU and Aagsp continued until Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi broke the Assam Agreement in August 1985. Aasu and AagSP leaders will soon form governments and take official steps to weed ‘foreigners’. However, ULFA was curved and violent, and operated on foreign soil.
Even in 1991, when I was posted in Barpeta and Nalbari as the supervisor of the Election Commission, ULFA slogans were raised – screaming ‘Indians go out’ and using other derogatory conditions. So there was heavy security, that a step could not be taken without ringing by a gun-totting guard. Over the years, batches of armed ULFA cadres began to surrender, recently led a major faction led by Arbinda Rajkhova.
The ULFA army led by more aggressive Paresh Barua still operates from China, with the only purpose to cut Assam away from India.
,
Despite the movements, the central fear persisted: Assamese could become a minority in its state. We have not even touched the issue of Bodos and many tribal groups, which are demanding our own ‘land’ free from Assamese or within or within Assam. Assamese were rapidly disappointed at the slow progress of identifying ‘foreigners’ and sometimes boiling outbreaks -sometimes boiling.
In 2013, the Supreme Court stepped into and ordered an immediate update to NRC of Assam and strictly monitored by Justice Ranjan Gogoi (an Assamia) and Justice Rohinton Fali Nariman.
The BJP, with an aggressive Hindu agenda, came to power at the Center in 2014 and accused the Congress governments on the issue of Mulayam-Peding foreigners. BJP’s state unit in Assam rode behind this combative and in 2016 seized Shakti.
Entire NRC process Grained for six yearsUnder intensive investigation and amid allegations of prejudice and massive confusion. The final update NRC for Assam was published on 31 August 2019, but no one was satisfied. It certified some 3.1 million people as real citizens in the population of 3.3 crore. It was surprising for many people that out of 19 lakh suspected foreigners, there were more Bengali Hindus than Muslims. Most Assamese did not accept this list compiled after a long drawn process costing Rs 1,603 crore by March 2022.
The governments of India and Assam were released from conclusions. Soon, soft-spoken Sarbanand Sonowal was replaced by radical Himant Biswa Sarma in 2021-a former Congress stallwart replaced the Hindutva Champion. It is during his tenure that high-granality is the rule where ‘Mass’ (Bengali Muslims) are particularly targeted.
Since 2021, he launched an aggressive campaign for the ‘encroachment’ ‘free’ government or forest land, and the record would prove that almost all such ruthless expulsions have been against Bengali speaking Muslims. He claims that he has freed 1.5 lakh bighas and is ramping on a scale ahead of next year’s assembly elections. There is no doubt that he wants to play communal cards, and there is any violence, destruction or death, but is a collateral damage.
But there is another aspect of Sarma’s plan – his alleged collusion in ‘handing over the government’ to the government and even constitutionally favorable industrialists protected tribal land. During a recent hearing, Gauhati High Court Expressed shock and disappointment Sarma’s 3,000 bigha allocation (about 4 sq km) Tribal land for a private company in Dima Hasao district.
A group of tribals in the region met the People’s Tribunal Team (Harsh Mandar, Prashant Bhushan, Vajahat Habibullah, Syeda Hamid, themselves and others) during their recent visit – to explain how illegal this action was.
Some of us visited the village of Burduar in Kamup district, where Raba Tribals talked about eviction to make us a way for some ‘Township’ project. In Golpara, the government made a prohibitory orders under Section 144 of (Old) CRPC to block our journey, but Mandar and Habibullah defined the order and visited the affected villages like Rakhishini, Hasila Beel and Asshudubi and told the authorities about bulldozers and muscles.
On 27 August, CM issued a shoot-on-vision order to the police in Dhubri district-to intimidate the minority community with population and protect “Sanatan Dharma which is in danger”.
This is the Assam of Himanta Biswa Sarma, who arrests Pawan Khera in Will and where the police issues the police until the Supreme Court is interfered against journalists Siddharth Vidarajan and Karan Thapar. It is a suspicious honor that Sarma took time out to brand our journey as “Jamaat-inspired” and allegedly stacked the Chosest interactive on us to try to disrupt Assam.
Welcome to India of Narendra Modi, Amit Shah, Yogi Adityanath and his very competent contestants, Himant Biswa Sarma.
Jawahar Sarkar A retired IAS officer and former Rajya Sabha MP
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