what was the impact of the partition
Answers
Answered by
8
Largest ever land migration in human history. Almost a million people killed.
One of the biggest historical blunder, for which people are still repaying the cost.
Creation of a rogue nation, hub of International migraine, and possible epicenter of Nuclear holocaust in near future.
I hope it will help u......
One of the biggest historical blunder, for which people are still repaying the cost.
Creation of a rogue nation, hub of International migraine, and possible epicenter of Nuclear holocaust in near future.
I hope it will help u......
suvasuvi:
hey mate can u mark me as brainliest pls i have to get another rank i just want only 1 brainliest ya can u mark me ?
Answered by
6
✨Hey bud!!✨
✴Partition” – the division of British India into the two separate states of India and Pakistan on August 14-15, 1947 – was the “last-minute” mechanism by which the British were able to secure agreement over how independence would take place. At the time, few people understood what Partition would entail or what its results would be, and the migration on the enormous scale that followed took the vast majority of contemporaries by surprise.
The main vehicle for nationalist activity was the Indian National Congress, whose best-known leaders included Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru. Even before the 1940s, it had long argued for a unitary state with a strong centre; even though Congress was ostensibly secular in its objectives, organisations representing minority interests increasingly viewed this idea with suspicion, believing that it would entrench the political dominance of Hindus, who made up about 80% of the population.✴
⚡Hope it helps!⚡
#welearntogether♥
@$am..❄
✴Partition” – the division of British India into the two separate states of India and Pakistan on August 14-15, 1947 – was the “last-minute” mechanism by which the British were able to secure agreement over how independence would take place. At the time, few people understood what Partition would entail or what its results would be, and the migration on the enormous scale that followed took the vast majority of contemporaries by surprise.
The main vehicle for nationalist activity was the Indian National Congress, whose best-known leaders included Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru. Even before the 1940s, it had long argued for a unitary state with a strong centre; even though Congress was ostensibly secular in its objectives, organisations representing minority interests increasingly viewed this idea with suspicion, believing that it would entrench the political dominance of Hindus, who made up about 80% of the population.✴
⚡Hope it helps!⚡
#welearntogether♥
@$am..❄
Similar questions