^^
Have to disagree with you there. Better mention first that I am Indian and I probably have a different perspectibe to you. But the idea of co-existence is a new one, 60 years old. Prior to that it was always the rule of one over many, and the imposition of values by force. The Indo Pakistan friction isn't a historical one, but one rooted in history. The Mughals conquered much of India, and imposed their values and beliefs over the majority Hindu population. It's a matter of history. To think that the invaded would welcome the invaders with open arms is absolutely ridiculous. But to expect the conquered to rise up continuously in rebellious foment is also daft. The Mughals were on the way out at the time of the British arrival in India, The Sikhs had already altered the map of India in terms of rule by establishing their own Empire under Ranjit Singh, from Delhi all the way to Afghanistan, and the few remaining Mughals were fighting over the remaining scraps, or fading away in their own decadence. That's the point where the Hindu population probably would have risen up and given their former overseers a good kicking on the way out. Short, sharp and sweet.
But then the British came, and froze everything is stasis. They became the overseers, and everyone else were the second class citizens, and it doesn't do to have the children of the benevolent masters squabbling. For a hundred years, that lingering resentment of the Mughals festered.
Yes, the British made mistakes, and yes, their haste to depart in 1947 exacerbated tensions. Yes, Jinnah's insistence on Pakistan is a contributing factor, although Gandhi was hardly the saint that history has made him to be, and blame can equally be laid at the feet of Nehru. But none of these factions, none of these politics, no calm, distanced academic analysis can explain just why a million people had to die in communal violence during Partition. That sort of hatred, that lingering resentment that saw previously peaceful multifaith villages have a minority exterminated or driven out by the majority is far more deep-seated and ancient than the misplaced meddling of the British, or arbitary lines on a map.
In this case, your 'relatively' is rather naive.
Have to disagree with you there. Better mention first that I am Indian and I probably have a different perspectibe to you. But the idea of co-existence is a new one, 60 years old. Prior to that it was always the rule of one over many, and the imposition of values by force. The Indo Pakistan friction isn't a historical one, but one rooted in history. The Mughals conquered much of India, and imposed their values and beliefs over the majority Hindu population. It's a matter of history. To think that the invaded would welcome the invaders with open arms is absolutely ridiculous. But to expect the conquered to rise up continuously in rebellious foment is also daft. The Mughals were on the way out at the time of the British arrival in India, The Sikhs had already altered the map of India in terms of rule by establishing their own Empire under Ranjit Singh, from Delhi all the way to Afghanistan, and the few remaining Mughals were fighting over the remaining scraps, or fading away in their own decadence. That's the point where the Hindu population probably would have risen up and given their former overseers a good kicking on the way out. Short, sharp and sweet.
But then the British came, and froze everything is stasis. They became the overseers, and everyone else were the second class citizens, and it doesn't do to have the children of the benevolent masters squabbling. For a hundred years, that lingering resentment of the Mughals festered.
Yes, the British made mistakes, and yes, their haste to depart in 1947 exacerbated tensions. Yes, Jinnah's insistence on Pakistan is a contributing factor, although Gandhi was hardly the saint that history has made him to be, and blame can equally be laid at the feet of Nehru. But none of these factions, none of these politics, no calm, distanced academic analysis can explain just why a million people had to die in communal violence during Partition. That sort of hatred, that lingering resentment that saw previously peaceful multifaith villages have a minority exterminated or driven out by the majority is far more deep-seated and ancient than the misplaced meddling of the British, or arbitary lines on a map.
In this case, your 'relatively' is rather naive.