In Midnight's Furies: The Deadly Legacy of India's Partition, Nisid Hajari brings his extensive reportorial experience--he works as the Asia editor for Bloomberg View--to bear on the horrific violence that accompanied the creation of Pakistan and the end of the British Raj in India. Hajari provides an almost day-to-day account of the disastrous political posturing and egregious miscalculations that eventually culminated in genocidal riots and proxy wars in the summer of 1947.
He frames the events surrounding Partition like a Greek tragedy, with epic, larger-than-life figures--such as Jawaharlal Nehru, leader of the Indian Congress; Mohammad Ali Jinnah, founder of Pakistan; and even Mahatma Gandhi--at best failing to ease religious tensions between Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs, and at worst encouraging sectarian violence. None of the major players, however, could have predicted the immense tsunami of hatred that would wash over India in the months prior to and immediately after independence. Built-up tensions and escalating reprisals erupted into full-scale slaughter, which Hajari depicts with horrific intimacy.
Nightmare visions of trains full of hacked-apart corpses and peasants turning on their neighbors with agricultural implements pepper the pages of this often-overwhelming history, but it's to a purpose. Hajari succeeds in vividly depicting the psychological scars that have dogged Pakistan and India, leading to everything from outright wars to state-sponsored terrorism and nuclear armament. He makes a convincing case that before these wounds are addressed and healed, little progress can be made in the subcontinent. --Hank Stephenson, bookseller, Flyleaf Books