My Life, Pakistan and the Great Balidan: The Story of an Ordinary Man Through the Maze of Religion and Politics
Every act of creation has the potential to change the world, whether a little bit at a time or all at once. The creation of Pakistan, in 1947, certainly changed the geopolitical landscape of the world forever. But the lives of more than fifteen million people were changed as well, with the partitioning of India sowing hatred and division between generational neighbors, turning long-standing harmony into brutally violent dissonance, and displacing entire families from their ancestral homes.

This is the personal memoir of Author Zaki Sabih, who nearly eighty years ago found himself among those displaced millions, torn from both his homeland and his idyllic childhood for reasons he was far too young at the time to understand.

But it is more than a memoir as well: It is the story of the millions of Indian Muslims who were slaughtered and betrayed in the name of Pakistan; an overt criticism of religious extremism and ultranationalism; and finally, a fiercely taken stance on the vital importance of secularism in all aspects of the political sphere.
1148316458
My Life, Pakistan and the Great Balidan: The Story of an Ordinary Man Through the Maze of Religion and Politics
Every act of creation has the potential to change the world, whether a little bit at a time or all at once. The creation of Pakistan, in 1947, certainly changed the geopolitical landscape of the world forever. But the lives of more than fifteen million people were changed as well, with the partitioning of India sowing hatred and division between generational neighbors, turning long-standing harmony into brutally violent dissonance, and displacing entire families from their ancestral homes.

This is the personal memoir of Author Zaki Sabih, who nearly eighty years ago found himself among those displaced millions, torn from both his homeland and his idyllic childhood for reasons he was far too young at the time to understand.

But it is more than a memoir as well: It is the story of the millions of Indian Muslims who were slaughtered and betrayed in the name of Pakistan; an overt criticism of religious extremism and ultranationalism; and finally, a fiercely taken stance on the vital importance of secularism in all aspects of the political sphere.
49.99 In Stock
My Life, Pakistan and the Great Balidan: The Story of an Ordinary Man Through the Maze of Religion and Politics

My Life, Pakistan and the Great Balidan: The Story of an Ordinary Man Through the Maze of Religion and Politics

by Zaki Sabih
My Life, Pakistan and the Great Balidan: The Story of an Ordinary Man Through the Maze of Religion and Politics

My Life, Pakistan and the Great Balidan: The Story of an Ordinary Man Through the Maze of Religion and Politics

by Zaki Sabih

Hardcover

$49.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    In stock. Ships in 1-2 days.
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

Every act of creation has the potential to change the world, whether a little bit at a time or all at once. The creation of Pakistan, in 1947, certainly changed the geopolitical landscape of the world forever. But the lives of more than fifteen million people were changed as well, with the partitioning of India sowing hatred and division between generational neighbors, turning long-standing harmony into brutally violent dissonance, and displacing entire families from their ancestral homes.

This is the personal memoir of Author Zaki Sabih, who nearly eighty years ago found himself among those displaced millions, torn from both his homeland and his idyllic childhood for reasons he was far too young at the time to understand.

But it is more than a memoir as well: It is the story of the millions of Indian Muslims who were slaughtered and betrayed in the name of Pakistan; an overt criticism of religious extremism and ultranationalism; and finally, a fiercely taken stance on the vital importance of secularism in all aspects of the political sphere.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781038335579
Publisher: FriesenPress
Publication date: 07/31/2025
Pages: 300
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.94(d)

About the Author

Author Zaki Sabih has long been a student and serious reader of history, focusing particularly on that of India, Pakistan, and Islam. After witnessing the generational trauma inflicted on his people and his family by the partition of India, and the suffering of his mother, in particular (who carried with her the pain of it for the rest of her life), he was determined to gain a deeper understanding of both how and why it was ever allowed to come to pass. It is with this long- and hard-earned understanding that he has now chosen to write this book ... in the hopes of ensuring that its story is never repeated, and its people never forgotten.

When he is not writing, working, or reading, Zaki enjoys simple pleasures, such as gardening, coin and stamp collecting, playing chess, and writing poetry, with his first collection of poems, The Weightier Matters (AuthorHouse) having been published in 2022.

Zaki lives with his wife, Shaheen, in New Jersey, USA.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews