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I grew up hearing some stories of the Partition from my grandparents, and at the end of each story, I would see vacant eyes, eyes that said a lot and yet did not want to go beyond what was said. The memory of it all would haunt them all their lives. Train to Pakistan is perhaps the first book that comes to most minds when speaking of the partition of the country. If not the first, then at least second.
The starkness, honesty, and empathy of the novel has spread over decades in terms of being relevant sadly and continues to do so.
The plot is about a fictional village named Mano Majra and its residents Muslim and Sikh , and how they are caught up in the turmoil of Partition, how it affects their relationships and lives. It all starts when a train filled with the dead bodies of Sikhs and Hindus arrive in Mano Majra.
Train to Pakistan to me is all about human nature, its relation to religion, its connection with the concept of life and death, and how suddenly it is either each man for his own or coming together of people in times of crisis. What I loved the most about this novel even in the third read was that Singh never loses his grip on empathy. There is this sense of brotherhood, of community, and yet in the face of the larger event, people seem helpless. Or are they? Train to Pakistan is about common people.