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ID121951
Title ProperMaking and unmaking of Assam-Bengal borders and the Sylhet referendum
LanguageENG
AuthorHossain, Ashfaque
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The creation of Assam as a new province in 1874 and the transfer of Sylhet from Bengal to Assam provided a new twist in the shaping of the northeastern region of India. Sylhet remained part of Assam from 1874 to 1947, which had significant consequences in this frontier locality. This paper re-examines archival sources on political mobilization, rereads relevant autobiographical texts, and reviews oral evidence to discover the 'experienced' history of the region as distinct from the 'imagined' one. The sub-text of partition (Sylhet) is more intriguing than the main text (Bengal), because events in Sylhet offer us a micro-level study. Generations of historians-writing mostly in Bengali and relying on colonial archives-have tended to overlook the mindset of the people of Sylhet. This paper, on the basis of an examination of combined sources, argues that the new province was implicated in overlapping histories, across Bengal-Assam borders. The voice of the indigenous-mostly Hindus but partly Muslim-elites were dominant from 1874 onwards. However, the underdogs-particularly 'pro-Pakistani' dalits (lower-caste Hindus) and madrasa-educated 'pro-Indian' maulvis-emerged as crucial players in the referendum of 1947. Hardly any serious study, however, has focused on the Sylhet referendum-a defining moment in the region. This study of the Sylhet referendum will reveal a new dimension to the multiple responses to these issues and provide a glimpse of the 'communal psyche' of the people in this frontier district, rather than a binary opposition between 'religious' and 'secular' forces.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 47, No.1; Jan 2013: p.250-287
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol. 47, No.1; Jan 2013: p.250-287
Key WordsAssam ;  Bengal ;  India ;  Political Mobilization ;  Sylhet ;  Bengal - Assam Border ;  Sylhet Referendum