Midnight's borders A people's history of modern India

Suchitra Vijayan

Book - 2021

"The first true people's history of modern India, told through a seven year, 9,000 mile journey across its many contested borders. Sharing borders with six countries and spanning a geography that extends from Pakistan to Myanmar, India is the world's largest democracy and second most populous country. Yet most of us don't understand it, or the violent history still playing out there. In fact, India as we know it didn't exist until the map of the subcontinent was redrawn in the middle of the 20th century--the powerful repercussions of which are still being felt across South Asia. To tell the story of political borders in the subcontinent, Suchitra Vijayan spent seven years travelling India's 9,000-mile land bord...er. Now, in this stunning work of narrative reportage, she shares what she learned on that groundbreaking journey. With profound empathy and a novelistic eye for detail, Vijayan shows us the forgotten people and places in the borderlands and brings us face-to-face with the legacy of colonialism and the stain of extreme violence and corruption. The result is the ground-level portrait of modern India we've been missing."--Publisher's description.

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2nd Floor 954/Vijayan Due Nov 13, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Travel writing
Anecdotes
Creative nonfiction
Informational works
Published
Brooklyn, NY : Melville House 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Suchitra Vijayan (author)
Physical Description
xv, 315 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 283-299) and index.
ISBN
9781612198583
  • Prologue: (My) Ishmael
  • Introduction
  • Part I. The Afghanistan-Pakistan Border
  • 1. Sar Hawza: Trapped in the Colonizer's Map
  • Part II. The India-Bangladesh Border
  • 2. Panitar: Playing Cricket in No-Man's-Land
  • 3. Near Jalpaiguri: "They Stole My Dreams"
  • Part III. The India-China Border
  • 4. Tawang: Cartographic Confusion
  • Part IV. The India-Myanmar Border
  • 5. Nagaland: Unimagined by My Nation's Cartography
  • 6. Nellie: Stuck Between Remembering and Forgetting
  • 7. Guwahati: Tales of Three Detentions
  • Part V. The India-Pakistan Border
  • 8. Kashmir: Records of Repression
  • 9. Kashmir Today: The Revocation of Article 370
  • 10. Rajasthan: The Tyranny of Territory
  • 11. Fazilka: Bunkered Territory
  • 12. Sri Ganganagar: The Tractor Brigade
  • 13. Amritsar and New York: Histories Partitioned
  • Acknowledgments
  • Glossary of Inhuman Words
  • Notes
Review by Booklist Review

India's borders are vast, contested, and uncertain: some drawn by colonial-era British diplomats who had never seen the land they were defining, others the subject of sustained disagreement between India and one of its six bordering countries, and many created and enforced without regard for the well-being of those who live along them. Journalist and photographer Vijayan spent close to a decade traveling these borders and speaking to people whose lives have been shattered by generations of trauma, from the slaughter of hundreds of unarmed civilians by British troops at Amritsar, to the rapes and murders of Partition, to the current, ever-growing wave of Hindu nationalism. As Vijayan talks to cricket-playing children in Panitar (on the border of Bangladesh) and soldiers tasked with stopping smugglers from entering Rajasthan, her interest and affection for the people she encounters are palpable. So, too, is her anger. This book is, perhaps chiefly, a record of the caprice and savagery that accompanies governmental efforts to define and enforce their borders--a project that necessarily allows some to belong to a country, while violently excluding others. Midnight's Borders is fascinating, eloquent in its insights, and unflinching in its depiction of the dark side of nation-building.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A viewpoint of modern India via a seven-year, 9,000-mile journey along its many borders. An India-born barrister, journalist, and photographer who worked for the U.N. war crimes tribunal in Yugoslavia and Rwanda before founding the Resettlement Legal Aid project in Cairo, Vijayan spent years interviewing stateless refugees around the entire border of India. She uses those stories to create a candid and heartbreaking work of exposé journalism. "The journey was…a return home," she writes. "But after being away for more than a decade, I was coming back to a place I no longer recognized. I wanted to understand 'my country,' and I wanted to make sense of the ongoing violence at its borders, the debates over nationalism, citizenship, and the unanswered questions about belonging. I traveled to the frayed edges of the republic to meet the people who inhabit the margins of the state and to study the human toll of decades of aggressive, territorial nationalism." Vijayan incisively shows how the lives of countless people are governed by often arbitrary borders created by imperialists who knew nothing of the ethnic makeup of the regions. She divides the book into five main sections, delineated along specific borders: the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, created by the looming Russian threat to British control of India in 1893, also known as the Durand Line; the India-Bangladesh border, another "contested colonial inheritance"; the India-China border; the India-Myanmar border; and the India-Pakistan border, "one of the most complex, violent, and dangerous boundaries in the world." Each carries deep traumatic memories of India's creation in 1947, and Vijayan is adept at teasing out the fraught, complicated social, political, and spiritual dynamics at play in each region. In the wake of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's reelection in May 2019, writes the author, "the government has aggressively implemented policies that seek to remake India into a Hindu nation," thus again disenfranchising millions. Dozens of powerful, intimate stories of people affected traumatically by India's expedient geopolitical borders. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

(My) Ishmael "When someone asks me for my name, I say I am someone who has lost my home many times over." --Field notes, India-Bangladesh border He had nothing left of his home except an old map of his city. The maps no longer looked like the map he had memorized as a student. It looked like a tilted triangle, but he called it the broken half of a whole. His school and the local factory that produced jams and juices had been turned into a camp. His city was remade, and his country doesn't exist anymore. He was a refugee twice over, an exile once, and an orphan always. After he arrived in this country, he renamed himself Ishmael, after the son who was supposed to be sacrificed for God, but lived. He did everything he could to begin anew. But he could never entirely cleanse himself of the violence he had encountered. The war never left him, that immense pain of having lost his family and his home clung to him. Time no longer made any sense to him, it no longer anchored him. For him, it no longer moved. It simply stagnated. When I met Ishmael, he had a set of notebooks with collected news clippings from the war years. He called the collection his museum of forgotten facts. Flipping through his many notebooks, you would learn about an internment camp that men went to voluntarily because they thought they would be safer there than on the street filled with men in uniform. You'd come across the cellist who performed at funerals for free during the height of the siege when every street corner had a sniper positioned to attack civilians. And you'd encounter the journalist, who now cleans toilets in Sarajevo, who kept one hundred notebooks with names of the dead, and of the men he saw kill during those twenty days of carnage. Then there was the woman who had been starved at the internment camp. She lived, but lost the sense of taste, except the taste of cold prison floors. Freedom, once stolen, crippled, and starved, never managed to recover. Ishmael had a simple question. Why did his home not exist anymore? Why was it unmade and erased? Looking for answers, he said he would become a modern-day Ibn Battuta, traveling the contours of apartheid and occupation; the fractured lines that refused to become nations, and the ugly walls and fences that divided people. His lines did not match the lines that proclaim nations sovereign. But he never left the city of his last refuge. He stayed, he waited, and he rotted a little every day. *** What does it feel like to be the last one? I can no longer live knowing I am the last one. Not when they claim we never existed. They found this note next to Ishmael's limp body. He had lived as a refugee, an exile, and an orphan for over twenty years. He had no executor; no living will. He left nothing behind, for no one. Everything he owned fit into a cardboard box that his Armenian landlord had donated to a thrift store--including his museum of forgotten facts, his notebooks full of news clippings, names, dates, and maps of his city and a country that no longer exists. When Primo Levi, the chemist, writer, and Holocaust survivor, died in 1987, Elie Wiesel made an infamous observation: "Primo Levi died at Auschwitz forty years later." Like Levi, Ishmael died at his home that was destroyed, nearly twenty years later. I don't know why he chose to end his life; perhaps living had become a terrible price to pay. "Exacting," was the word he had used when we first spoke almost a decade ago. For all his eloquence about war, violence, and pain, Ishmael appeared childlike. He was a boy when he had lost everyone and everything to the war. He had never reconciled with the violence, and the loss of his country never made sense to him. "Where do I belong?" Ishmael asked once. This question of belonging, that he left life without answering, haunts me the most. Did he belong to his land? To this time? Or did he belong to silence and forgetting? When I worked for the War Crimes Tribunal for Yugoslavia, I spent months reading the witness summaries of victims and survivors. Many of the witnesses who came before the tribunal were those who had survived heinous crimes, had witnessed them, or had family who were victims of ethnic cleansing and genocide. They talked of starvation, of the destruction of their homes and community; separation and disappearances of family members; physical torture; sexual violence and rape; abuse, torture, and killing of others; perilous flight or escape and forced exile. What they often spoke of as justice was really a deep longing to make sense of their loss. When people came to testify at the tribunal, they brought tokens with them; anything that would convey their loss, make them human and not another witness number or statement. Above all, they wanted their personal purgatories to be recorded, remembered, and acknowledged. Some brought photographs of the family they had lost and gave them to the lawyers and investigators. Justice, for many of them, was about not being forgotten. Ishmael was no different. In his museum of forgotten facts, he obsessively collected maps and old photographs of his home--proof that his memories were true, that his city was not imagined but had existed, even if they were clippings from newspapers. But the maps did not speak his language; they speak the language of the state, the bureaucrats, politicians, and the armies. Maps are objects of power, and they do not belong to the people. Maps are keepers of a state's knowledge: the distances, the miles, the nautical, and where things begins and ends. They are not keepers of people's memories. So Ishmael tinkered with the maps and vandalized them, hoping one day he would make them speak his language. "To redraw the world and its contours is my magnum opus," he had said many times over. He would break up the borders--those lines that bring order--into unruly curls and curves. He drew the places he had lost, and sometimes he drew them as places they would have become if they were allowed to exist. His maps committed treason; his memories were disloyal to the state. The struggle over geography, the struggle to define the frontiers of our home, has existed throughout history. But when maps became the arsenal of imperialism and colonial conquest, people, in turn, became surveys and statistics. For the maps of this world to make sense, many fictions have been put in place and we have been taught to treat these fictions as fact. We imagine nations out of nonexistent lines--sometimes amputating communities or whole cultures to make way for a country--and reinforce the lines with violence less they cease to exist altogether. Borders make unequal people. I have met many Ishmaels now. In Kigali, Khartoum, Kashmir, London, The Hague, Berlin, Arusha, Cairo, Kabul, Karbala, Mardin, and Ni'lin. These many Ishmaels are people who live as exiles, as refugees, and as prisoners. Some were forced to flee, and some were born in exile. Others have returned home to their city emptied by bombs. There are those who live in cities that have now been remade into camps, dotted with bunkers, checkpoints, and guns. Their every move surveilled. Their humanity first questioned and then denied. Like Ishmael, they are all part of the histories of occupation violence and multiple exiles, and they are also all remarkable bards, storytellers trying to make sense of their world's injustices, inequities, and violence. Landlocked between disquiet and desperation, they are not in search of great truths about the world, just about themselves. Caught between history, time, and territory, they are the people who get trapped beneath the collapsing lines that willed nations into existence. And they are the unacknowledged casualties when those arbitrary borders shift, even a little. Excerpted from Midnight's Borders: A People's History of Modern India by Suchitra Vijayan All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.