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Everyone on the first and second trains to Pakistan was massacre

The terrorists from the other side of the border.
  1. They killed our people on the independence day.
  2. They killed our people in Kashmir.
  3. They killed our people in East Pakistan.
  4. They killed our people in APS.
  5. They killed our people in Quetta hospital.
  6. They killed our people in Baluchistan.
  7. They killed our people in FATA.
  8. And they continue to kill our people in Kashmir to this date.
And there is only place terrorists are going to end up in the afterlife.

FYI, No Indian citizen involved in any of the above and even if anyone is involved, you don't have any solid evidence to prove your claim. Moreover there is nothing after life mate. :-)
 
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From International Source......

Partition - August 1947

At midnight, on August 15, 1947, India and Pakistan strode to freedom. The British could have set a deadline for the accession of all princely states before 14 August 1947 but for some odd reasons they opted to avoid setting of such a date. The division of the Indian subcontinent involved the partition of two large provinces of Punjab and Bengal. Nobody expected the kind of population exchange that took place once London signaled its intention to leave its Indian Empire in the hands of the two successor states. What followed was "ethnic cleansing" - a term that was to gain currency later in the 20th century.

The holding up of trains and the massacre of all those from the opposite community of the gangs that held them up became the virtual hallmark of partition violence. By 15 August the rail service in the Punjab was seriously disturbed following killings in Lahore station. On 24 August, railtravel was officially declared unsafe throughout east and west Punjab. Guarding refugee trains imposed an additional burdenon the Boundary Force, for, it must be remembered, no transfer of populations was intended to occur. However, 11 Brigade at Jullundur found it necessary by mid-August to allocateone of its six under-strength battalions to fulltime railway guardduty. Moreover, by the end of the month, 70 per cent of the attacks on trains had taken place in areas - including princely states - outside the Boundary Force's authority.

The Sikh political leaders made it clear that, though they had demanded partition, they would not tolerate a division of the Punjab that went against the interests of their community. But there was in fact no possible division of the Punjab that could prevent the division of the Sikhs, and the loss of their rich agricultural land and of numerous shrines they considered sacred. The Sikh leaders made it clear, that they anticipated an exchange of population on both sides of the border between the West and Wast Punjab. Nor did the Sikh leaders hide the fact that they intended to bring this about by violent means. This area of India had provided a substantial and heavily Sikh component to the British armed forces in World War II. Violent attacks on the Muslim population in East Punjab would force them to migrate west, so that the Sikh population in West Punjab would migrate east to replace them and take their lands and property in exchange for what they would lose in the west.

The Sikhs, their leading political organization, the Akali Dal, and its leaders, particularly Master Tara Singh and Giani Kartar Singh, have come in for a very great share of the blame for the mass migrations and violence that occurred in the Punjab. The Sikh started systematic attacks on Muslims in various parts of Punjab. In Eastern Punjab and the adjoining Sikh princely states (particularly Patiala) the violence was marked by the prominent role of Sikh jathas (bands of 20 to 600 men); the police and the army remained rather passive. The rulers of some states of Punjab (Patiala, Kapurthala and others) not only allowed the marauding Sikh bands to use their territories as sanctuaries but also beefed up their strength by encouraging their own state troops to join in the killing sprees.

Sikh groups were far from alone in engaging in acts of violence, massacre, rape, and abduction to force the migration of peoples from one side of the new border to the other. Such acts were carried out extensively also by Muslim groups and gangs in West Punjab who attacked Hindus and Sikhs and, though much less is known about it, by Hindu groups and gangs in East Punjab who, like the Sikh gangs, attacked the Muslim population in East Punjab to compel its movement west.

Partition unleashed untold misery and loss of lives and property as millions of Hindu and Muslim refugees fled either Pakistan or India. The violence in 1947 was exceptionally brutal and large in scale; but the underlying attitudes had long been in the making. Families were torn apart in a population exchange that uprooted more than 14 million people during the months after independence. By one account, over 8 million refugees poured across borders to regions completely foreign to them, whith other accounts state that about 7 million people migrated to Pakistan from India and vice-versa. By another estimate, Partition resulted in the forced movement of 20 million people (Hindus and Sikhs to India and Muslims to Pakistan). Most estimates of the numbers of people who crossed the boundaries between India and Pakistan in 1947 range between 10 and 12 million.

The migrations and the violence were regionally confined. They were not all-India phenomena. Partition brought, by one estimate, five million refugees from east Punjab to west Punjab after the British decided to leave their Indian empire in the hands of the successor states of India and Pakistan. While 5 million people left India for Pakistan, about the same number of people moved in the other direction. By another estimate, 4 million Hindus and Sikhs moved from West to East Punjab and 5 to 6 million Muslims moved from East to West Punjab. In the late 1940s, more than one-quarter of Punjab's population of about 19 million was made up of refugees. Sikhs, caught in the middle of Punjab's new "line," suffered the highest percentage of casualties. Most Sikhs finally settled in India's much-diminished border state of Punjab. Some though the Punjab disturbances were the direct result of Mountbatten's unwisdom in accelerating the date of partition, and that if Punjab had been given time, the terrible massacre of August, September and October could have been avoided.

The death toll of this terrible episode remains very much contested. Hundreds of thousands of people died, as Hindus and Sikhs fled to India, Muslims to Pakistan, and many others were caught up in a chaotic transition. A consensus figure of 500,000 is often used, but the sources closer to the truth give figures that range between 200,000 and 360,000 dead. By other estimates, Partition resulted in as many as 1.5 million deaths. The word genocide did not come to the minds of observers at the time, though there were genocidal aspects to what finally developed.

There has been surprisingly little detailed reporting and accounting of precisely what happened: how the migrations and violence associated with partition did in fact happen. Though some guns and bombs were available, the predominant methods used were cutting and axing of people to bits or burning them alive. The rape and abduction of women constituted a dishonoring of the male members of the community and of the community as a whole. Untold numbers of women and children were "saved" by being slaughtered by their own fathers and brothers to prevent their capture, abduction, rape, and conversion during these raids. One Mangal Singh, for example, during an attack upon his village cut off the heads of 17 women and children in his own family one by one in full view of all members of the family, though he and his son ultimately escaped, reached safety in India, and fostered new families.

The political game played by the leaders and authorities was to insist that the actions of persons from one's own community were spontaneous, while those from the other side were pre-planned. But there can be no massacre by the populace without both planning and enthusiasm. Massacres by the authorities require only planning, but popular participation requires enthusiasm. The testimony of the villagers who cut off the heads of their children or consigned them to the flames and killed their women or the latter's suicides is that they acted to save their honor, the reputation of their families and that of their villages, and to prevent forced conversion of their children to another religion.




http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/indo-pak-partition2.htm

Thanks i know we speak truth
 
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Here is a pre-1947 map of British Colonial India, showing Muslim majority and Hindu majority regions:


1024px-Brit_IndianEmpireReligions3.jpg


With provinces represented:

India%2BDemographics.PNG



Further, the focus being on Punjab, here is a map of Muslim-Hindu-Sikh percentages, in the Punjabi speaking areas of the British province of Punjab, minus the Hindi or Haryanvi areas that were to be made Himachal and Haryana:

Languages.PNG


In the Punjabi-speaking areas, Muslims formed 62% of the population.

A tehsil-by-tehsil analysis of the Muslim/Hindu/Sikh populations in Punjab:

Punjab%2B1947%2B-%2BMain%2BMap.PNG


Numbers of Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs and Christians in individual divisions of Jullundur and Lahore:

Jullundur Division

Division%2B-%2BJullundur.PNG


The Jullundur and Ferozepure districts have a Muslim majority

Lahore Division

Division%2B-%2BLahore.PNG


Nine Muslim majority tehsils (Dasuya, Nakodar, Jullundur, Ferozepur, Zira, Ajnala, Gurdaspur, Batala, Amritsar and the state of Kapurthala) that were contiguous to Pakistan were given to India, on the pretext of "other factors".

Not a single non Muslim majority tehsil was given to Pakistan

A large part of Muslim majority Kasur tehsil was awarded to India on the flimsy ground of protecting Amritsar city:
Kasur.PNG


Due to the above mentioned reasons, state of Kapurthala, with clear Muslim majority and surrounded by Muslim majority tehsils, fell into India.


A detailed and in-depth statistical analysis of the partition of Punjab:

http://pakgeotagging.blogspot.com/2014/10/partition-of-punjab-in-1947.html?m=1
 
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We were robbed plain & simple. How my heart yearns for Jalandhar. Had the partition been just..... oh well جو اللہ کی مرضی
 
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My grandfather (Dada) was a train conductor (he was born and raised in Agra). Many Muslims would show up an hour early to get through checking/security due to the massive amount of people that were getting on these trains.

He told my father stories of how at the time, many trains departing for Pakistan (in India) would leave 10-15 minutes early (they were much less frequent in those times). This was due to the fact that violent mobs would sometimes show up with knives, bats, and swords and attack and kill many emigrants. If your family came right on time, you often missed the train (or worse). Some were occasionally attacked on the trains, and they pulled in with all passengers dead.

He later immigrated with his wife and young children in the 1950s after much of the violence died down, making it safely across without too many issues.
 
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While a painfull story , many on this side of the border faced the same , many have simmilar stories to tell of viloence which befell on them on the other side.
Partition was a bloody and violent saga, there have been many books on the subject . lets not try and paint one side as being better than the other .
Also the borders were open till the early 60s if i am not mistaken , there were many who crossed over much after the bloodshed was over.
@Joe Shearer your thoughts ?
 
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From International Source......

Partition - August 1947

At midnight, on August 15, 1947, India and Pakistan strode to freedom. The British could have set a deadline for the accession of all princely states before 14 August 1947 but for some odd reasons they opted to avoid setting of such a date. The division of the Indian subcontinent involved the partition of two large provinces of Punjab and Bengal. Nobody expected the kind of population exchange that took place once London signaled its intention to leave its Indian Empire in the hands of the two successor states. What followed was "ethnic cleansing" - a term that was to gain currency later in the 20th century.

The holding up of trains and the massacre of all those from the opposite community of the gangs that held them up became the virtual hallmark of partition violence. By 15 August the rail service in the Punjab was seriously disturbed following killings in Lahore station. On 24 August, railtravel was officially declared unsafe throughout east and west Punjab. Guarding refugee trains imposed an additional burdenon the Boundary Force, for, it must be remembered, no transfer of populations was intended to occur. However, 11 Brigade at Jullundur found it necessary by mid-August to allocateone of its six under-strength battalions to fulltime railway guardduty. Moreover, by the end of the month, 70 per cent of the attacks on trains had taken place in areas - including princely states - outside the Boundary Force's authority.

The Sikh political leaders made it clear that, though they had demanded partition, they would not tolerate a division of the Punjab that went against the interests of their community. But there was in fact no possible division of the Punjab that could prevent the division of the Sikhs, and the loss of their rich agricultural land and of numerous shrines they considered sacred. The Sikh leaders made it clear, that they anticipated an exchange of population on both sides of the border between the West and Wast Punjab. Nor did the Sikh leaders hide the fact that they intended to bring this about by violent means. This area of India had provided a substantial and heavily Sikh component to the British armed forces in World War II. Violent attacks on the Muslim population in East Punjab would force them to migrate west, so that the Sikh population in West Punjab would migrate east to replace them and take their lands and property in exchange for what they would lose in the west.

The Sikhs, their leading political organization, the Akali Dal, and its leaders, particularly Master Tara Singh and Giani Kartar Singh, have come in for a very great share of the blame for the mass migrations and violence that occurred in the Punjab. The Sikh started systematic attacks on Muslims in various parts of Punjab. In Eastern Punjab and the adjoining Sikh princely states (particularly Patiala) the violence was marked by the prominent role of Sikh jathas (bands of 20 to 600 men); the police and the army remained rather passive. The rulers of some states of Punjab (Patiala, Kapurthala and others) not only allowed the marauding Sikh bands to use their territories as sanctuaries but also beefed up their strength by encouraging their own state troops to join in the killing sprees.

Sikh groups were far from alone in engaging in acts of violence, massacre, rape, and abduction to force the migration of peoples from one side of the new border to the other. Such acts were carried out extensively also by Muslim groups and gangs in West Punjab who attacked Hindus and Sikhs and, though much less is known about it, by Hindu groups and gangs in East Punjab who, like the Sikh gangs, attacked the Muslim population in East Punjab to compel its movement west.

Partition unleashed untold misery and loss of lives and property as millions of Hindu and Muslim refugees fled either Pakistan or India. The violence in 1947 was exceptionally brutal and large in scale; but the underlying attitudes had long been in the making. Families were torn apart in a population exchange that uprooted more than 14 million people during the months after independence. By one account, over 8 million refugees poured across borders to regions completely foreign to them, whith other accounts state that about 7 million people migrated to Pakistan from India and vice-versa. By another estimate, Partition resulted in the forced movement of 20 million people (Hindus and Sikhs to India and Muslims to Pakistan). Most estimates of the numbers of people who crossed the boundaries between India and Pakistan in 1947 range between 10 and 12 million.

The migrations and the violence were regionally confined. They were not all-India phenomena. Partition brought, by one estimate, five million refugees from east Punjab to west Punjab after the British decided to leave their Indian empire in the hands of the successor states of India and Pakistan. While 5 million people left India for Pakistan, about the same number of people moved in the other direction. By another estimate, 4 million Hindus and Sikhs moved from West to East Punjab and 5 to 6 million Muslims moved from East to West Punjab. In the late 1940s, more than one-quarter of Punjab's population of about 19 million was made up of refugees. Sikhs, caught in the middle of Punjab's new "line," suffered the highest percentage of casualties. Most Sikhs finally settled in India's much-diminished border state of Punjab. Some though the Punjab disturbances were the direct result of Mountbatten's unwisdom in accelerating the date of partition, and that if Punjab had been given time, the terrible massacre of August, September and October could have been avoided.

The death toll of this terrible episode remains very much contested. Hundreds of thousands of people died, as Hindus and Sikhs fled to India, Muslims to Pakistan, and many others were caught up in a chaotic transition. A consensus figure of 500,000 is often used, but the sources closer to the truth give figures that range between 200,000 and 360,000 dead. By other estimates, Partition resulted in as many as 1.5 million deaths. The word genocide did not come to the minds of observers at the time, though there were genocidal aspects to what finally developed.

There has been surprisingly little detailed reporting and accounting of precisely what happened: how the migrations and violence associated with partition did in fact happen. Though some guns and bombs were available, the predominant methods used were cutting and axing of people to bits or burning them alive. The rape and abduction of women constituted a dishonoring of the male members of the community and of the community as a whole. Untold numbers of women and children were "saved" by being slaughtered by their own fathers and brothers to prevent their capture, abduction, rape, and conversion during these raids. One Mangal Singh, for example, during an attack upon his village cut off the heads of 17 women and children in his own family one by one in full view of all members of the family, though he and his son ultimately escaped, reached safety in India, and fostered new families.

The political game played by the leaders and authorities was to insist that the actions of persons from one's own community were spontaneous, while those from the other side were pre-planned. But there can be no massacre by the populace without both planning and enthusiasm. Massacres by the authorities require only planning, but popular participation requires enthusiasm. The testimony of the villagers who cut off the heads of their children or consigned them to the flames and killed their women or the latter's suicides is that they acted to save their honor, the reputation of their families and that of their villages, and to prevent forced conversion of their children to another religion.




http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/indo-pak-partition2.htm

You bloody shit hole indian you only killed innocent people who was unarmed in east punjab and your hindu and Sikh migrated before august when there was no roits.but they arrive in indian punjab and start the muslim Holocaust they kill one million muslims and after punjab they reach in jammu and kashmir to repeat the east punjab massacre. But there they faced they second world war retired warriors and they start crying pakistan has infiltrate with warriors but thats was not true 1948 war start in respond to indian state agression against innocent muslims of jammu where they killed two hundred thousands muslims in three days where the muslim gather for migration to Pakistan but their dead bodies reach pakistan through the chenab and tawi rivers waters.but when indian reach ponch and other areas of wadi kashmir they face retired british muslim soldiers who start a war and free the kashmir's 1/3 untill your banya p.m nehru goes to u.n.o and cry for a ceasefire that was our fault to accept the u.n.o ressolution over kashmir for referendum under uno which never happens so never try to misguide the people about history
 
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You bloody shit hole indian you only killed innocent people who was unarmed in east punjab and your hindu and Sikh migrated before august when there was no roits.but they arrive in indian punjab and start the muslim Holocaust they kill one million muslims and after punjab they reach in jammu and kashmir to repeat the east punjab massacre. But there they faced they second world war retired warriors and they start crying pakistan has infiltrate with warriors but thats was not true 1948 war start in respond to indian state agression against innocent muslims of jammu where they killed two hundred thousands muslims in three days where the muslim gather for migration to Pakistan but their dead bodies reach pakistan through the chenab and tawi rivers waters.but when indian reach ponch and other areas of wadi kashmir they face retired british muslim soldiers who start a war and free the kashmir's 1/3 untill your banya p.m nehru goes to u.n.o and cry for a ceasefire that was our fault to accept the u.n.o ressolution over kashmir for referendum under uno which never happens so never try to misguide the people about history

U know from since childhood and read from Pakistan source, correct?...THank you ....
 
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U know from since childhood and read from Pakistan source, correct?...THank you ....

I know also ur sources hindu banya class who always follow the quote bhagal may churri mou may ram ram thats ur source right... Chankiya is ur ideology
 
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nobody talks about casualty in pakistan bound trains.. in India most people know that lot of hindus/sikhs died, women raped and killed when they crossed to India... we play down atrocities done to other side... by either saying the number was small or saying that it was revenge...
i guess it will be similar in pak
 
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