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And I would not call it Anglophile. He is praising neither the Brits nor the Indians

If I get the time, I might join in for a re-read of this one. :)


@Others, welcome to join :) I am in chapter 6




Well, to an extent, that bit is true. Historians agree that the people of Hyderabad probably wanted to side with India, but the Nizam surely didn't. In fact, he didn't even want to join Pakistan.
However, after tolerating him for many months, Sardar Patel orchestrated the march of the Indian Army into Hyderabad, leading to the annexure of the state.


But the book also sheds light on many small incidents which never make it to text books. For example how the partition line was actually drawn.

Unbelievable, the way British acted."
One of many. Sad thing is the kings they replaced were worse



There was a Punjabi movie by the name of Shaheed Udham Singh, starring Raj Babbar and Juhi Chawla, which had a graphic scene on Jallianwala Bagh. It was bone-chilling to watch.

Even the same Jalianwalabagh scene in Rang De Basanti was heartbreaking..



So far, I am loving the tiny details, which no history books reveal- like how they partitioned petty goods and even fought over those, and the foibles of all the great persona mentioned in the book.


When I reached Simla with Mountbaten, somehow lost the appetite to read further.
I will come back, once I finish my Persian safari via Rooftops of Tehran


Can't start without that because I majorly read on the move.
Books mentioned in this topic
Roses in December (other topics)Rooftops of Tehran (other topics)
Freedom at Midnight (other topics)
Members are welcome to join me in the discussion.