Refuge and Reinvention: Rehabilitation, Camps, and Resettlement in West Bengal after 1947
MTA
Policy histories and human stories of refugee rehabilitation, land allocations, and resettlement programs in post-Partition West Bengal
2nd Edition
*Refuge and Reinvention* provides a comprehensive historical analysis of the displacement and rehabilitation of millions of Bengali Hindus following the 1947 Partition. The book moves beyond official policy to explore the "social process" of resettlement, tracing how refugees navigated transit camps, organized "squatter colonies" in Calcutta, and engaged in agrarian projects in the West Bengal countryside. It highlights the stark transition from the early "bhadralok" migrants to the later, more impoverished waves of Scheduled Caste peasants, illustrating how caste, gender, and class dictated access to land, credit, and state resources.
The narrative details the evolution of state response from temporary relief to long-term experiments in "self-reliance," including the promotion of cooperatives and vocational training. A significant portion of the text is dedicated to the controversial "dispersal" policies, specifically the Dandakaranya project, which attempted to resettle refugees in central India. This sparked fierce resistance among refugees who sought to remain within their linguistic and cultural homeland. The book reaches a tragic climax with the 1979 Marichjhapi massacre, where the Left Front government violently evicted Dalit refugees from a protected forest island, marking a definitive rupture in the state's relationship with the displaced.
The book also examines the cultural and psychological dimensions of exile, showing how faith, festivals, and the "culture industries"—literature and the films of Ritwik Ghatak—became essential tools for processing trauma and asserting identity. It documents the vital role of civil society and movements like the Matua Mahasangha in providing "relief from below" and political advocacy. By weaving together official archives with oral histories, the authors give voice to the refugees not merely as victims of history, but as active agents who used collective protest and informal economies to reinvent their lives.
In its concluding chapters, the work connects these historical struggles to the present day, analyzing how economic liberalization and modern citizenship laws, such as the CAA, continue to shape the precarity of refugee descendants. By situating West Bengal’s experience within a global comparative framework, the book offers lessons for contemporary humanitarian crises, emphasizing that durable rehabilitation requires more than just shelter; it necessitates pathways to dignity, political recognition, and a genuine sense of belonging.
This book will be invaluable for scholars and students of South Asian history, migration and refugee studies, development studies, and post-colonial politics. Practitioners and policymakers working on displacement, rehabilitation, and humanitarian response will find concrete lessons on the interplay of state policy and refugee agency. General readers interested in the human consequences of Partition and the long‑term process of rebuilding home will also benefit from its rich blend of archival research and oral testimonies.
April 4, 2026
43,294 words
3 hours 2 minutes
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