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Sindh Quotes

Quotes tagged as "sindh" Showing 1-7 of 7
Imran Khan
“Certain folks start playing Sindh Card despite having ravaged the life of the common Sindhi.”
Imran Khan

“In the city of Ahmedabad where I live, a flight to Karachi takes less time than flying to Bombay, but arbitrary and tyrannical borders have made Sindh inaccessible to me in more ways than one.”
Rita Kothari, Unbordered Memories : Sindhi Stories Of Partition

“I would learn many years later that although Sindh and Punjab had been geographically and culturally close, their experience of Partition was vastly different with respect to violence.”
Rita Kothari, Unbordered Memories : Sindhi Stories Of Partition

“Unlike the Punjabis and Bengalis, the Sindhis were not coming to an ‘Indianâ€� part of Sindh because Sindh was not divided into east and west Sindh. It went in its entirety to Pakistan.”
Rita Kothari, Unbordered Memories : Sindhi Stories Of Partition

“The Province of Sindh (now a state in Pakistan) is bordered on the east by the Thar desert of India and in the west by the mountains of Baluchistan; it boasts of the port city of Karachi as well as the remains of the Indus Valley civilization. Its history is chequered and is best known by the brief message ‘PECCAVIâ€� sent by its British conqueror Charles Napier to his superiors in the Bombay Presidency. Tracing its origin to the Indus Valley settlements of Mohen-jo-daro (itself a Sindhi word meaning the ‘gate/hillock of the deadâ€�), Sindh was part of various Hindu kingdoms up to 712 AD when Mohammed bin Kasim conquered it and established Muslim rule. Various Muslim dynasties ruled over Sindh undisturbed until 1843 when the British decided that its strategic importance necessitated its conquest. The colonial policies of land and education tipped the economic and social balance. The Hindu minority of Sindh which had always been rich but unobtrusive, now cornered powerful positions in the nineteenth century, evoking a strong feeling among Sindhi Muslim leaders that they had not received their just desserts.”
Rita Kothari, Unbordered Memories : Sindhi Stories Of Partition

“Although the rich and prosperous Hindus of Sindh must have felt insecure and frightened in the new state of Pakistan, by and large, the threat to physical safety was relatively less in Sindh. The danger to the lives and property of Sindhi Hindus became palpable once Muslim immigrants, driven out of Bihar and the United Provinces, entered Sindh.”
Rita Kothari, Unbordered Memories : Sindhi Stories Of Partition

“Three months after Partition, when Acharya Kripalani (president, Indian National Congress) visited Sindh he noted that, ‘There was only a slight exodus of the Hindus and Sikhs from Sindh. It did not suffer from any virulent fanaticism. To whatever faith the Sindhis belonged, they were powerfully influenced by Sufi and Vedantic thoughts”
Rita Kothari, Unbordered Memories : Sindhi Stories Of Partition