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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper offers an argument in support of the partition of India in 1947. Furthermore, this paper explains what occured, why it occured, and the results of the partition. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_GSParInd.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
supported the desire for independence by the Indians but there were serious debates occurring between the Hindus and Sikhs and the Muslims, and the British didnt want to leave India
in turmoil. It was 1946 when things finally came to a head and violence erupted between the Hindu Congress Party and the Muslim League. The British sent in
troops and it took them a full week to restore order, but the violence was quick to spread to other locations, such as Bombay, Delhi and Punjab. It was
because of this continued fighting and the inability of the British to restore order that they realized that the only solution was partition.
Therefore, on June 2, 1947, Britain accepted and announced that India should be divided: into the mainly Hindu region of India and into a mainly Muslim area that
would be called Pakistan (India Partition, 2004). This partition was to go into effect on August 15, 1947 (India Partition, 2004). Partition was not easy in many ways
(India Partition, 2004). It required the resettlement of many Muslim, Sikh and Hindu communities and in the beginning, there was some violence associated with the changes (India Partition, 2004).
However, the overall result of partition was that it was a great success and served to address many of the internal problems that plagued India for years (India Partition,
2004). Partition was a positive solution to the problems India faced because the problem had become so wide-spread that there was
no longer any hope of restoring order (Kashmir, 2004). There were over 580 princely states within India prior to partition that controlled 43% of British Indias territory (Kashmir, 2004).
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