India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

I didn’t know , but 60 years later, the official government report by India has been released. Between 27,000 and 40,000 Muslims were massacred, often by Indian Army soldiers.

The accounts that many in my family who survived this time tally up with what this article says. My grandmother’s sister told me watching through her window as Indian tanks machine-gunned her local hockey team, they died while still carrying their hockey sticks in their hands.

For my grandfather, the last straw was when Indian soldiers came into his house and demanded that he surrender any weapons he had to them - they took away a 400-year old jewel-encrusted samurai sword he had taken from a Japanese officer in WW2. When my grandfather realised that the soldiers had refused to disarm Hindus, he realised what was going to happen and fled with his family to safety in Pakistan.

BBC News - Hyderabad 1948: India’s hidden massacre

When India was partitioned in 1947, about 500,000 people died in communal rioting, mainly along the borders with Pakistan. But a year later another massacre occurred in central India, which until now has remained clouded in secrecy.
In September and October 1948, soon after independence from the British Empire, tens of thousands of people were brutally slaughtered in central India.
Some were lined up and shot by Indian Army soldiers. Yet a government-commissioned report into what happened was never published and few in India know about the massacre. Critics have accused successive Indian governments of continuing a cover-up.
The massacres took place a year after the violence of partition in what was then Hyderabad state, in the heart of India. It was one of 500 princely states that had enjoyed autonomy under British colonial rule.
When independence came in 1947 nearly all of these states agreed to become part of India.
But Hyderabad’s Muslim Nizam, or prince, insisted on remaining independent. This outraged the new country’s mainly Hindu leaders in New Delhi.
After an acrimonious stand-off between Delhi and Hyderabad, the government finally lost patience.
In addition, their desire to prevent an independent Muslim-led state taking root in the heart of predominantly Hindu India was another worry.
Members of the powerful Razakar militia, the armed wing of Hyderabad’s most powerful Muslim political party, were terrorising many Hindu villagers.
This gave the Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, the pretext he needed. In September 1948 the Indian Army invaded Hyderabad.
In what was rather misleadingly known as a “police action”, the Nizam’s forces were defeated after just a few days without any significant loss of civilian lives. But word then reached Delhi that arson, looting and the mass murder and rape of Muslims had followed the invasion.
Determined to get to the bottom of what was happening, an alarmed Nehru commissioned a small mixed-faith team to go to Hyderabad to investigate.
It was led by a Hindu congressman, Pandit Sunderlal. But the resulting report that bore his name was never published.
But now, historian Sunil Purushotham from the University of Cambridge has obtained a copy of the report as part of his research in this field.
The Sunderlal team visited dozens of villages throughout the state.
At each one they carefully chronicled the accounts of Muslims who had survived the appalling violence: "We had absolutely unimpeachable evidence to the effect that there were instances in which men belonging to the Indian Army and also to the local police took part in looting and even other crimes.
“During our tour we gathered, at not a few places, that soldiers encouraged, persuaded and in a few cases even compelled the Hindu mob to loot Muslim shops and houses.”
The team reported that while Muslims villagers were disarmed by the Indian Army, Hindus were often left with their weapons.
In some cases, it said, Indian soldiers themselves took an active hand in the butchery: “At a number of places members of the armed forces brought out Muslim adult males from villages and towns and massacred them in cold blood.”
The investigation team also reported, however, that in many other instances the Indian Army had behaved well and protected Muslims.
The backlash was said to have been in response to many years of intimidation and violence against Hindus by the Razakars.
In confidential notes attached to the Sunderlal report, its authors detailed the gruesome nature of the Hindu revenge: "In many places we were shown wells still full of corpses that were rotting. In one such we counted 11 bodies, which included that of a woman with a small child sticking to her breast. "
And it went on: “We saw remnants of corpses lying in ditches. At several places the bodies had been burnt and we would see the charred bones and skulls still lying there.”
The Sunderlal report estimated that between 27,000 to 40,000 people lost their lives.
No official explanation was given for Nehru’s decision not to publish the contents of the Sunderlal report, though it is likely that, in the powder-keg years that followed independence, news of what happened might have sparked more Muslim reprisals against Hindus.
It is also unclear why, all these decades later, there is still no reference to what happened in the nation’s schoolbooks. Even today few Indians have any idea what happened.
The Sunderlal report, although unknown to many, is now open for viewing at the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library in New Delhi.
There has been a call recently in the Indian press for it to be made more widely available, so the entire nation can learn what happened.
It could be argued this might risk igniting continuing tensions between Muslims and Hindus.
“Living as we are in this country with all our conflicts and problems, I wouldn’t make a big fuss over it,” says Burgula Narasingh Rao, a Hindu who lived through those times in Hyderabad and is now in his 80s.
“What happens, reaction and counter-reaction and various things will go on and on, but at the academic level, at the research level, at your broadcasting level, let these things come out. I have no problem with that.”

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

Inb4 Aman ki Asha

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

OMG.

Re: India’s hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

:eek: and still the unthankful lot say partition of India was a blunder :bummer:

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

you do realize this violence was a direct consequence of the demand for partition? direct action day, anyone?

also funny how pakistanis will act all shocked over this, but ignore the biggest genocide that has happened in the subcontinent by their own soldiers on people of their own religion - partition shmartition.

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

May be partition was demanded considering such hatred amongst the people from both the sides. massacre and genocide was not justified at all. massacre of Bengalis is condemnable and we all condemn it and there are hundreds of books on this matter openly published in Pakistan. But strange is the case with Hyderabad massacre which just came on surface officially after six decades.

Re: India’s hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

Shukar Alhamdullilah we got a seperate homeland

Quaid tjhe salam :salute:

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

Exactly!

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

Not only is the bangladesh episode well known, with its fallacies like the total killed and who was it etc, but the mukti bahini was butchering pakistani troops and police and pro-pakistanis in that war as well. Do you see any butchery of indian army and police in hyderabad?

Stop being a thick headed hindu bigot for once. I guess you can take the techie outside of india but you can't take the bigot outside of him.

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

It almost sounds like you are justifying the 100,000 killed by the Pakistani army.

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

Genocide is genocide whether the victims are Bangladeshi Bengalis and non-Bengalis, Indian occupied Kashmiris, Indian Punjabis, Indian Gujratis, Indian Hyderabadis, or Sri Lankan Tamils and Sinhalese. The bottom-line is that murder is wrong whether individual or on large scale and sponsored by states, regardless of ethnicity or religion.

However, if we want to talk about numbers of deaths in the East Pakistan genocide, the mythical numbers of millions propagated by the victors of the war, India and Bangladesh, are grossly exaggerated and have been challenged even by some Indian sources themselves and have been countered with as low as 26,000 by the Hamud-ur-Rehman commission of Pakistan for the toll of atrocities by Pakistan army. This is certainly less than the 60,000+ killed in Kashmir, 40,000 in Hyderabad, 10,000 in the Sikh uprising in the 1980s, 3,000 in the Gujrat massacre (conveniently called riots by Indians). Let’s also throw in the 100,000 killed in the Sri Lankan civil war and the dirty role played by India in the war by arming the Tamil terrorists in Sri Lanka and trying to keep the separatist movement in Tamil Nadu under control which also cost Ragiv Gandhi his life by a female Tamil suicide bomber. Also in denial are India and Bangladesh about the atrocities committed by Indian army and the Indian trained Mukti Bahni terrorists and mercenaries. The victims being Bengalis sympathetic to Pakistan, non-Bengalis like Biharis and West Pakistanis in East Pakistan.

The difference is that Pakistanis largely show remorse and realize the murder and mayhem caused by their army on the orders of their power hungry leaders and would like to apologize to Bangladeshis. And they should unequivocally apologize to Bangladeshis to lift the curse that hangs over them. Hopefully in turn the Bangladeshis will apologize for whatever bad they did.

On the other hand, Indians are mostly smug, sanctimonious and self-righteous, compelled by the chronic Indian hubris. This trait is considered quite reprehensible by the smaller neighbours of India. India to all its neighbours is a big bully rather than a benevolent big brother. Wonder why ?

One would have thought that the ‘saviour’ of Bangladesh would let it live in peace afterward. But on the contrary, Bangladesh now suffers from the same bully-ism of the saviour as the other neighbours - what with the similar themed dirty water games of the rivers and daily border killings of Bangladeshis by the Indian ‘security’ forces. That exposes the ‘good’ faith in which India helped Bangladesh gain its independence. The obvious supreme motive was to destroy and punish Pakistan. That policy goes on till date as proved by a former Indian army official’s recent statement about continual covert terrorist operations by RAW in Pakistan.

Iss himam main sab nangay hain, therefore the fake Indian sanctimony needs to be kept in check.

There is popular sentiment in Pakistan that all the culprits (leaders) of the three countries that played central (read dirty) roles in the East Pakistan debacle met befitting ends. Some of their progeny also met unfortunate ends.

Where Bangladesh is Pakistan’s shame, Pakistan is India’s shame. Pakistan is still paying for its sins. Wonder when will it be India’s turn to pay for its sins.

The blame for the creation of Pakistan and the large-scale violence and murder in 1947 also goes primarily to the majority leaders of United India. They utterly failed to address the concerns regarding the future status of the large Muslim minority in the independent and democratic United India. The racist majority leaders didn’t want to share power with the large minority.

The large scale massacres of 1947 were the direct result of the cutting up of the provinces of Punjab and Bengal. The formula of the two independent states in India was that the Muslim-majority provinces would be part of Pakistan in their entirety and vice versa. (Hence the historic map we often see showing all of Punjab and Bengal as part of Pakistan). That would have ensured that the independent and democratic Pakistan would not be an exclusively ‘Muslim’ state because it would have a large non-Muslim minority population. Just as the independent and democratic state of India would have a large non-Hindu minority population. There would have been reverse demographic parity in the two countries and result in two stable countries in the region. But no, the racist Hindu leaders would have none of that. They were okay with a large Muslim population living as perpetual minority in a predominantly Hindu India but would not bear having a large Hindu population living in a predominantly Muslim Pakistan. That is why they pushed to slice up the provinces that resulted in a truncated, weak and vulnerable Pakistan and caused the immense suffering and loss of life and property at partition. The second attempt to destroy Pakistan was achieved in 1971 by breaking up Pakistan in two and now working overtime to destroy what’s left by covert terrorist activities in Pakistan and sponsoring the separatists in Balochistan.

Unfortunately, killing of co-religionists for dominance and power and other differences is a common theme in human history and is not exclusive to one religion. More Christians have killed Christians than followers of other religions. The stark example is WW2. Similarly, more Muslims have killed Muslims than other people. I don’t know too much about the Hindu history of India but I am sure there are examples of this in Hindu history also. But it is clear that it is a matter of great shame and gravity in the case of East Pakistan, as Pakistan was founded upon the notion of Indian Muslim solidarity and protecting the rights of the Muslim minority of India. It is a shame that in the throws of greed and power and some help and instigation by enemies appearing as friends, they are willing to kill each other, forgetting what their religion teaches them.

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

i come from hyderabad strange i never heard this news,there might have killings of razkars but not the number mentioned

if anything there are thousands of such cases of razkars brutality with many sources
ask anyone from telanagana region of old hyderabad state,nizam rule did lot of bad affecting region even to this day,zamindary system still exists with lot of poverty

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

I'm also surprised why this has been called hidden and all of sudden this report got attention on international media.

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

Have you written all this yourself. Just asking.

Re: India’s hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

Are you suspecting plagiarism here? :hmmm:

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

i will have to check with some of my friends from old city about this source
for me hyderabad is one of the nicest place in india and truly multicultural, i hardly ever saw any religious clash here apart from one or two political incidents especially when you compare to northen part of india

Re: India’s hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

just wanted to properly appreciate effort of TS :chai:

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

Exactly! I am from Hyderabad too and I've never heard of this from anyone. In fact I asked my dad yesterday after reading this topic and he couldnt recollect it either! If it was indeed true, is it practically possible to keep such a thing under wraps for such a long time?

On another thought, if this was true, Muslim politicians from Hyderabad would have raised this topic over and again and at every possible chance...and as we all know politicians can go to any extent for their victory and coverage. Now, this hasnt happened either ever.

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

who is sunderlal.

**No official explanation was given for Nehru's decision not to publish the contents of the Sunderlal report, though it is likely that, in the powder-keg years that followed independence, news of what happened might have sparked more Muslim reprisals against Hindus.

It is also unclear why, all these decades later, there is still no reference to what happened in the nation's schoolbooks. Even today few Indians have any idea what happened.**

Re: India's hidden massacre - Hyderabad 1948

exactly MIM would have made this huge in every political meetings to gain sympathy