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The Crucible of Resettlement: Refugee Agency and Socio-Economic Transformation in Pindi Bhattian (1947–1957)

Authors
  • SHERAZ AKBAR

    Author
Keywords:
Refugee Rehabilitation, Pindi Bhattian, Socio-Economic Transformation, Partition, Cultural Hybridity
Abstract

I examine the complex process of refugee rehabilitation in Pindi Bhattian during the critical decade following the 1947 Partition. I propose that this period (1947–1957) was marked by a profound socio-economic transformation driven by the influx of Muslim refugees, who quickly filled the commercial and educational void left by the migrating non-Muslim communities (Hindus and Sikhs). The study asserts that the rehabilitation process was not merely a state-led logistical exercise; rather, it was a dynamic, grassroots negotiation where the refugees’ prior education and business expertise from East Punjab acted as the primary catalyst for the town's modernization. This study utilizes the concept of history from below to foreground the agency of refugee families, detailing how their skills introduced new trade practices, fostered agricultural revitalization, and led to the formation of a distinct cultural hybridity (e.g., new culinary and religious practices). I propose that Pindi Bhattian's refugee resettlement experience demonstrates that displaced populations are not simply burdens, but powerful agents of urban and economic development, reshaping local societies despite bureaucratic and social challenges.

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Published
2025-12-03
Section
Articles
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Copyright (c) 2025 SHERAZ AKBAR (Author)

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

How to Cite

The Crucible of Resettlement: Refugee Agency and Socio-Economic Transformation in Pindi Bhattian (1947–1957). (2025). The Historian, 63-71. https://doi.org/10.65463/32