More than twenty million lives were torn apart when British India was divided in 1947-an upheaval that redrew borders, displaced families, and left wounds that continue to echo across generations. For artist Tanya Momi, the Partition is not a distant historical event but a living inheritance, carried through memory, silence, and survival.
Born to refugee parents who fled the violence and uncertainty of the time, Momi grew up in the long shadow of displacement. Their stories-fragmented, painful, and often unspoken-shaped her understanding of identity, loss, and belonging. In this deeply moving memoir, she pieces together those fragments to reclaim voices that history has too often reduced to numbers and footnotes.
Blending meticulous historical analysis with intimate family letters, oral memories, and her own evocative paintings, Momi creates a layered narrative that is both personal and collective. She examines the policies and politics of the British Raj that led to the "Great Rupture," while grounding those forces in the everyday realities of ordinary people-parents, grandparents, children-who were forced to abandon homes, languages, and lifetimes in a matter of days.
Art becomes a central thread in this journey. Through her paintings, Momi gives form to inherited trauma and unexpressed grief, revealing how creativity can act as a bridge between generations and a tool for healing. Her visual work does not merely illustrate the past; it converses with it, offering spaces for mourning, reflection, and hope.
At its heart, this book is a daughter's tribute-to her parents' courage, to the resilience of refugees who rebuilt their lives from nothing, and to the fragile yet persistent possibility of unity after division. It is also a call to remember: to acknowledge the human cost of political decisions and to honor the stories that survive through memory, art, and love.
Powerful, reflective, and emotionally resonant, this memoir stands as both a historical reckoning and a testament to the healing power of storytelling. It reminds us that while borders may divide land, memory and humanity continue to seek connection across time and space.