MAPS OF HISTORY

MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · January 30 · 1948

ON THIS DAY · 30 JANUARY 1948

Birla House — Gandhi is killed

Map: Birla House — Gandhi is killed
30 JANUARY 1948 · INDIAN INDEPENDENCE & PARTITION, 1905–1948

30 Jan 1948 — Walking to prayer, Gandhi is shot three times by Nathuram Godse, a Hindu nationalist who judged him too generous to Pakistan. “The light has gone out of our lives,” Nehru tells the country the assassin claimed to defend. Remember him.

THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT

The map after midnight is not yet at rest — three tan question marks and a war remain. Junagadh (the marker), a Muslim nawab over a Hindu-majority coastal state, accedes to a Pakistan it cannot reach; India blockades, the nawab flies to Karachi with his dogs, a plebiscite ratifies the fait accompli. Hyderabad (the marker), the largest state of all, dreams of independence behind its own army until September 1948, when Indian troops end the standoff in five days — with communal killings in their wake that an official report counted in the tens of thousands, and that neither state cares to remember. And Kashmir: a Hindu maharaja over a Muslim-majority state dithers between accessions until October 1947, when a tribal lashkar from the frontier (the arrow), armed and passed by Pakistani officers, drives on Srinagar — and stops to sack Baramulla (the memorial), losing its race in the looting. Hari Singh signs the Instrument of Accession; Indian troops land on Srinagar airfield at dawn (the second arrow); and the first India–Pakistan war burns for fourteen months until a UN-brokered ceasefire, 1 January 1949, freezes a line — watch it appear on the map — that divides Kashmir to this hour. Junagadh argued accession by ruler; Kashmir argued accession by ruler; each state kept the argument that suited it and the territory it could hold. The two-nation theory and the one-nation theory had met their common counterexample, and neither has ever digested it.

From Chapter 12 — The Price and the Legacy of Indian Independence & Partition, 1905–1948 (FEB 1948).

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Indian Independence & Partition, 1905–1948
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