Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library

Mukti, free to be born again : partitions of Indian subcontinent, Islamism, Hinduism, Leftism, and liberation of the faithful, Sachi Dastidar

Label
Mukti, free to be born again : partitions of Indian subcontinent, Islamism, Hinduism, Leftism, and liberation of the faithful, Sachi Dastidar
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
fiction
Main title
Mukti
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Sachi Dastidar
Sub title
free to be born again : partitions of Indian subcontinent, Islamism, Hinduism, Leftism, and liberation of the faithful
Summary
"Mukti: Free to Be Born Again" is a history-based fictionalized non-fiction created on four decades of fieldwork in Muslim-majority Bangladesh and Hindu-majority India. Many strands of real-life drama have been weaved together with 1947 Hindu-Muslim, Secular-Islamic, and 1971 Islamic-Secular, ruling minority vs. oppressed-majority partitions of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. Because of precarious plight individuals and villages, names have been fictionalized. The story focuses on transformation of a society by the oppressor, oppressed, Islam, Hinduism and Leftism of elites who chose not to live in Muslim-majority homeland. The story ties Indian and Bengali history, views of Muslims and Hindus, role of Bangladeshi Hindu refugee elites in India, pogroms, devastation of minority communities, role of anti-Hindu Islamism and anti-tradition Communism, life of poor oppressed-caste Hindus left behind in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, and more. Dastidar is the first to break a taboo by writing in 1989 about the poor, oppressed Hindu Minority left behind by the Hindu-refugee elites. Mukti is a commonly-used term in Hindu-Buddhist philosophies meaning freedom from rebirth, and liberation from oppression
Target audience
adult
Content