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Gazing at Neighbours (Travels Along the Line that Partitioned India)

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In a voice that is refreshing as much as it is engaging. Ghosh offers us a new look at old lines of partition. transporting us into homes, cities, and lives, their stories untold till now -SHASHI THAROOR
Specifications
Publisher: Westland Books
Author Bishwanath Ghosh
Language: English
Pages: 347
Cover: PAPERBACK
8x5.5 inch
Weight 250 gm
Edition: 2017
ISBN: 9789360458980
HBM222
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Book Description
About the Book
In July 1947. British barrister Cyril Radcliffe was summoned to New Delhi and given five weeks to draw, on the map of the subcontinent, two zigzagged lines that would decide the future of one-fifth of the human race.

One line. 553 kilometres long, created the province of West Punjab; the other, adding up to 4,096 kilometres, carved out a province called East Bengal. Both territories joined the newborn nation of Pakistan.

Enough and more has been written about the horrors of the Partition, an event that led to the division of the subcontinent. But what of the people who actually inhabit the land through which these lines run?

Curiosity leads Bishwanath Ghosh into journeying along the Radcliffe Line-through the vibrant greenery of Punjab as well as the more melancholic landscape of the states surrounding Bangladesh-and examining, first-hand, life on the border. Recording Ghosh's encounters and experiences in luminous prose, Gazing at Neighbours is a narrative of historical stock-taking as much as it is of travel.

About the Author
Bishwanath Ghosh, born in Kanpur on 26 December 1970, is the author of the hugely popular Chai, Chai: Travels in Places Where You Stop but Never Get Off. He's also a Hindi poet, who has two well-received compilations-Jiyo Banaras and Tedhi-Medhi Lakeeren-to his credit. His other books include Tamarind City: Where Modern India Began; Longing, Belonging: An Outsider at Home in Calcutta and Aimless in Banaras: Wanderings in India's Holiest City. He is an Associate Editor with The Hindu newspaper and lives in Calcutta.

Prologue
No other seemingly benign exercise has such far-reaching consequences as drawing a line on a map. On the face of it, you merely put pencil to paper, but the line actually runs through towns, villages, valleys, farmlands, forests, rivers, ponds-and people.

Sometimes those assigned to run the pencil do so, without realising the impact their line is going to have on humankind. Sir Cyril Radcliffe was one of them.

Sir Cyril had built a formidable reputation in Britain as a barrister before he went down in history as probably the world's most infamous cartographer. In July 1947, he was summoned to New Delhi and given five weeks to partition India. Accordingly, he drew two lines on its map. One of the lines, 553 kilometres long, created the province of West Punjab; the other, 4,096 kilometres long, carved out a province called East Bengal. They both joined the newborn nation of Pakistan-an event that saw fifteen million people displaced and over one million dead.

Acknowledgements
Some of the journeys described in the book were originally documented, in somewhat different and much shorter form, in pieces written for The Hindu and its web-only platform, thREAD. I would like to extend my sincerest thanks to Dr. Malini Parthasarathy, who was the editor of The Hindu when I travelled and wrote those pieces. I am immensely grateful to Q. Rumman Dastgir, Sudeep Chowdhuri, Sharanyaa Chandrashekaran and Ashutosh Chatterji: they read every word of the manuscript and offered constructive feedback. I would also like to express my gratitude to those officers of the Border Security Force who went out of their way to help me but who did not wish to be named: if you find them named in the text, those are not their real names. Finally, a big Thank You to Sanghamitra Biswas, my editor at Westland, who, like a conscientious sentry, body-searched the manuscript for flaws and errors before sending it off to the press; and Gautam Padmanabhan, the CEO of Westland, who has always ensured that my works had a home even before the first word was written.

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