The Indian Subcontinent Partition Documentation Project

The Indian Subcontinent Partition Documentation Project The Indian Subcontinent Partition Documentation Project was founded by Drs. Sachi & Shefali Dastidar.

04/05/2026

It's hard to see Pakistan as a neutral mediator, says Chietigj Bajpaee, a senior research fellow for South Asia at Chatham House.

04/05/2026

Hanuman temple over 100 feet high in Houston Texas
JAI HANUMAN!

This could be seen as insignificant paperwork- blind - a piece of paper could very well exemplify the effects of perpetu...
04/05/2026

This could be seen as insignificant paperwork- blind - a piece of paper could very well exemplify the effects of perpetual effort in pursuit of ~breaking through a wall built upon blind bias.
We can see, on a piece of paper, how many people driven by emotion-based work are capable of MAKING A MOVEMENT WHOSE ESSENCE, BREAKING DOWN BIGOTED BARRIERS, IS EVIDENCED BY EXAMPLES OF THE EXISTENCE OF “HOLES” IN SOCIETAL REJECTION OF OPENNESS, BASED ON OPEN SOCIETY FACILITATES DEVIANCE FROM THE GUIDELINES THAT G_D HAS ESTABLISHED…THE DIVINE WORDS ALL MUST READ AND LIVE AS G_D SHARED.
The words are important as they have gotten governmental approval for actions that have been defined as inappropriate and contrary to words which everyone must have hearts and minds *adhere to their restrictiveness*.

We are pleased to announce that the registration renewal for 2026–2028 of Hare Rama Foundation Pakistan has been *provisionally approved* by the Punjab Charity Commission, Government of Pakistan.

This important milestone reflects our unwavering commitment to transparency, accountability, and dedicated service to the community. We remain steadfast in our mission to create meaningful impact and uphold the highest standards of organizational integrity.

Ajeet Kumar
Information Secretary

https://www.un.org/en/observances/womens-dayIt is a day when women are recognized for their achievements without regard ...
03/09/2026

https://www.un.org/en/observances/womens-day

It is a day when women are recognized for their achievements without regard to divisions, whether national, ethnic, linguistic, cultural, economic or political. Since those early years, International Women's Day has assumed a new global dimension for women in developed and developing countries alike.

The purpose of the day is to uphold women’s achievements, recognize challenges, and focus greater attention on women’s rights and gender equality to mobilize all people to do their part.

Do you realize how much of the modern world was invented in India? 🇮🇳
02/20/2026

Do you realize how much of the modern world was invented in India? 🇮🇳

“Today, we mourn the passing of , a towering advocate for civil rights whose vision of justice transcended boundaries of...
02/19/2026

“Today, we mourn the passing of , a towering advocate for civil rights whose vision of justice transcended boundaries of race, faith, and community.
Rev. Jackson’s leadership in the civil rights movement, including founding the Rainbow Coalition, expanded the promise of equality in America. He consistently stood for dignity, fairness, and shared humanity, recognizing that oppression against any group weakens the fabric of society.
He also spoke out for Hindu Americans and other South Asian communities when they faced threats and attacks, including defending leaders like Rep. against religiously charged and violent rhetoric, from hateful individuals like Pieter Friedrich. His courage in speaking up for marginalized groups reflected his deep commitment to justice beyond lines of identity or origin.
Rev. Jackson believed that progress is built on solidarity, empathy, and unwavering moral clarity. His legacy strengthens our resolve to protect civil rights, religious freedom, and the dignity of all communities in the United States.
Śāntirastu, sadgati prāptirastu.
______________________________________

What if we could wipe the slate clean of colonial narratives and begin to learn and present our tradition in its entirety, with its important contextual nuances? What if we could examine Hindu history and dharma through archeological, genetic, literary, and sociological methodologies?

https://x.com/SuhagAShukla/status/1836039714895253905/video/1

, we’re changing the way we talk about Hindu Dharma. We're making it easier to be Hindu in America.”
-Msgs. made public on X by Ms. Suhag Shukla

How this border transformed a subcontinent  |  India & Pakistan https://youtu.be/r5Ps1TZXAN8?si=9V9G0ycYup5qGOTO via
02/14/2026

How this border transformed a subcontinent | India & Pakistan https://youtu.be/r5Ps1TZXAN8?si=9V9G0ycYup5qGOTO via

The story of how a hastily-drawn line divided one people into two.This season of Borders is presented by CuriosityStream. Watch thousands of documentaries fo...

02/13/2026

What is happening in the Indian Subcontinent in February 2026?
The Indian subcontinent is currently experiencing a mix of political, social, and environmental developments. Here are some of the key events and issues being reported:

Political: The government has changed the land use for approximately 101 acres in Central Vista area for construction of government offices and official residences. This decision has sparked discussions and protests.
https://www.ndtv.com/india

Social: The Chief Minister Skill Development Scheme has been launched to empower artisans in khadi, handloom, and unorganised sectors. The initiative offers structured training, financial aid, and digital market access.
https://www.ndtv.com/india

Environmental: Tectonic shifts beneath the Indian subcontinent are causing parts of the Indian tectonic plate to fragment, with seismic data revealing cracks at 100-km depths. These processes may explain the ongoing rise of the Himalayan mountain range.
https://www.aljazeera.com/where/india/

These developments reflect the dynamic nature of the Indian subcontinent, where various issues are being addressed and resolved, contributing to the region's ongoing evolution.

https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/literature/1913/tagore/article/?fbclid=IwY2xjawPwzZlleHRuA2FlbQIxMABicmlkETFBeU15VkY2U...
02/05/2026

https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/literature/1913/tagore/article/?fbclid=IwY2xjawPwzZlleHRuA2FlbQIxMABicmlkETFBeU15VkY2U2RRTUdQYlhVc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQQMjIyMDM5MTc4ODIwMDg5MgABHnrMFHDsDVLUqYquEOT23q5NfR8TRYtxlPOSTEpjAqwuDm3UeuCFCbRN2g0C_aem_DhCR_tfANUrdChpYx1KCzg

"Nationalism and colonialism
Tagore was predictably hostile to communal sectarianism (such as a Hindu orthodoxy that was antagonistic to Islamic, Christian, or Sikh perspectives). But even nationalism seemed to him to be suspect. Isaiah Berlin summarizes well Tagore’s complex position on Indian nationalism:

Tagore stood fast on the narrow causeway, and did not betray his vision of the difficult truth. He condemned romantic overattachment to the past, what he called the tying of India to the past “like a sacrificial goat tethered to a post,” and he accused men who displayed it – they seemed to him reactionary – of not knowing what true political freedom was, pointing out that it is from English thinkers and English books that the very notion of political liberty was derived. But against cosmopolitanism he maintained that the English stood on their own feet, and so must Indians. In 1917 he once more denounced the danger of ‘leaving everything to the unalterable will of the Master,’ be he brahmin or Englishman.

The duality Berlin points to is well reflected also in Tagore’s attitude toward cultural diversity. He wanted Indians to learn what is going on elsewhere, how others lived, what they valued, and so on, while remaining interested and involved in their own culture and heritage. Indeed, in his educational writings the need for synthesis is strongly stressed. It can also be found in his advice to Indian students abroad. In 1907 he wrote to his son-in-law Nagendranath Gangulee, who had gone to America to study agriculture:

To get on familiar terms with the local people is a part of your education. To know only agriculture is not enough; you must know America too. Of course if, in the process of knowing America, one begins to lose one’s identity and falls into the trap of becoming an Americanised person contemptuous of everything Indian, it is preferable to stay in a locked room.

Tagore was strongly involved in protest against the Raj on a number of occasions, most notably in the movement to resist the 1905 British proposal to split in two the province of Bengal, a plan that was eventually withdrawn following popular resistance. He was forthright in denouncing the brutality of British rule in India, never more so than after the Amritsar massacre of April 13, 1919, when 379 unarmed people at a peaceful meeting were gunned down by the army, and two thousand more were wounded. Between April 23 and 26, Rabindranath wrote five agitated letters to C.F. Andrews, who himself was extremely disturbed, especially after he was told by a British civil servant in India that thanks to this show of strength, the “moral prestige” of the Raj had “never been higher.”

A month after the massacre, Tagore wrote to the Viceroy of India, asking to be relieved of the knighthood he had accepted four years earlier:

The disproportionate severity of the punishments inflicted upon the unfortunate people and the methods of carrying them out, we are convinced, are without parallel in the history of civilized governments, barring some conspicuous exceptions, recent and remote. Considering that such treatment has been meted out to a population, disarmed and resourceless, by a power which has the most terribly efficient organisation for destruction of human lives, we must strongly assert that it can claim no political expediency, far less moral justification … The universal agony of indignation roused in the hearts of our people has been ignored by our rulers – possibly congratulating themselves for imparting what they imagine as salutary lessons … I for my part want to stand, shorn of all special distinctions, by the side of those of my countrymen who for their so-called insignificance are liable to suffer a degradation not fit for human beings.

Both Gandhi and Nehru expressed their appreciation of the important part Tagore took in the national struggle. It is fitting that after independence, India chose a song of Tagore (“Jana Gana Mana Adhinayaka,” which can be roughly translated as “the leader of people’s minds”) as its national anthem. Since Bangladesh would later choose another song of Tagore (“Amar Sonar Bangla”) as its national anthem, he may be the only one ever to have authored the national anthems of two different countries.

Tagore’s criticism of the British administration of India was consistently strong and grew more intense over the years. This point is often missed, since he made a special effort to dissociate his criticism of the Raj from any denigration of British – or Western – people and culture. Mahatma Gandhi’s well-known quip in reply to a question, asked in England, on what he thought of Western civilization (“It would be a good idea”) could not have come from Tagore’s lips. He would understand the provocations to which Gandhi was responding – involving cultural conceit as well as imperial tyranny. D.H. Lawrence supplied a fine example of the former: “I become more and more surprised to see how far higher, in reality, our European civilization stands than the East, Indian and Persian, ever dreamed of …. This fraud of looking up to them – this wretched worship-of-Tagore attitude is disgusting.” But, unlike Gandhi, Tagore could not, even in jest, be dismissive of Western civilization. Tagore was forthright in denouncing the brutality of British rule in India.

Even in his powerful indictment of British rule in India in 1941, in a lecture which he gave on his last birthday, and which was later published as a pamphlet under the title Crisis in Civilization, he strains hard to maintain the distinction between opposing Western imperialism and rejecting Western civilization. While he saw India as having been “smothered under the dead weight of British administration” (adding “another great and ancient civilization for whose recent tragic history the British cannot disclaim responsibility is China”), Tagore recalls what India has gained from “discussions centred upon Shakespeare’s drama and Byron’s poetry and above all … the large-hearted liberalism of nineteenth-century English politics.” The tragedy, as Tagore saw it, came from the fact that what “was truly best in their own civilization, the upholding of dignity of human relationships, has no place in the British administration of this country.” “If in its place they have established, baton in hand, a reign of ‘law and order,’ or in other words a policeman’s rule, such a mockery of civilization can claim no respect from us.”"

The Nobel Prize in Literature 1913 was awarded to Rabindranath Tagore "because of his profoundly sensitive, fresh and beautiful verse, by which, with consummate skill, he has made his poetic thought, expressed in his own English words, a part of the literature of the West"

Here are some pictures of the dining places for the students that need immediate repair, especially for the roof. Probin...
02/02/2026

Here are some pictures of the dining places for the students that need immediate repair, especially for the roof. Probini built them 2 or 3 decades ago. As it is in the remotest corner of India — east of Bangladesh and west of Burma/Myanmar, everything has to be imported through mountainous roads from rest of India. Here are some pictures just sent to me.

We plan to send funds soon, so that they can finish the repair project in their winter-dry season. They may need around $2,000. A large number of Buddhist tribal refugees are from Bangladesh who fled to India. (The Bangladesh Chittagong Hill district was 99% non-Muslim at the time of 1947 partition, but now barely 25% to 30%.)

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85-60 Parsons Boulevard
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Thursday 9am - 5pm
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Saturday 12pm - 5pm

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+19175240035

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