Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: 1948 Police Action—A Silenced History of Hyderabad
- 1 No Longer a Nawab: The Making of a New Hyderabadi Muslim
- 2 “All Muslims Are Not the Razakars”: The Political Idiom of an Independent Hyderabad
- 3 “I Am Going to Fight …”: Muslim Women’s Politics and Gender Activism
- 4 For the Love of Urdu: Relocating Urdu in Postcolonial Hyderabad
- Conclusion: The Afterlife of the Police Action and Contemporary Muslim Debate
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Introduction: 1948 Police Action—A Silenced History of Hyderabad
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 August 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: 1948 Police Action—A Silenced History of Hyderabad
- 1 No Longer a Nawab: The Making of a New Hyderabadi Muslim
- 2 “All Muslims Are Not the Razakars”: The Political Idiom of an Independent Hyderabad
- 3 “I Am Going to Fight …”: Muslim Women’s Politics and Gender Activism
- 4 For the Love of Urdu: Relocating Urdu in Postcolonial Hyderabad
- Conclusion: The Afterlife of the Police Action and Contemporary Muslim Debate
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Police Action was an end of many good beginnings in our lives. We lost not only many friends, our personal careers, and houses, but also and most importantly, the tehzeeb of our shared culture. If someone says it is just about few Muslims, no, not at all. It's a pain about the entire community of the then Hyderabad and Telangana.
—Abdul Quddus Saheb, September 20, 2006.In September 2006, during the field research for my previous book The Festival of Pīrs, I took an early morning bus to Karim Nagar, an urban town famous for the public rituals of Muharram. Almost 200 miles away from the city of Hyderabad, this urban town has a significant Muslim population and was also greatly influenced by the Shi’i Islamic practices of Hyderabad. In Karim Nagar, I met 78-year-old Abdul Quddus Saheb, who began our conversation by talking about the songs of his youth during Muharram, the commemorative event of the martyrdom of the Prophet's family. After a while, he surprisingly took a detour just to talk about the Police Action of 1948. Being a young man of around twenty at the time of this violent event, Quddus Saheb was one of the witnesses of that traumatic era and the consequent divisive politics that partitioned Muslims and Hindus. Many of his memories, as I document here, narrate the story of the new generation of Muslims whose everyday lives and future dreams were brutally shattered by the Police Action of 1948.
According to Quddus Saheb, “It was a nightmare for us, as every Muslim in the Hyderabad state had suddenly become an enemy of the people. We were experiencing the height of every form of hatred and could not even step out of our homes.” Growing up in such a hateful environment, Quddus’ own story offers a lens through which to glimpse both the external and interior struggles of many Muslims during this period. Before this tragedy, Quddus Saheb was known for his mesmerizing performance of the songs of Muharram, both in Telugu and Urdu. When the Police Action was executed between September 13 and September 17, 1948, along with many other traditions, this narrative performance, according to Quddus Saheb, “started fading out” too. He recalled many memories from this period.
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- Information
- Remaking History1948 Police Action and the Muslims of Hyderabad, pp. 1 - 48Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024