Reunions are always special; if it means transcending borders and boundaries after over seven decades, it involves happy tears.?Tears streamed down his wrinkled cheeks when Indian Sika Khan met his Pakistani brother for the first time since the partition in 1947.
"My mother could not bear the trauma and jumped into the river and killed herself," Sika spoke at his humble brick home in Bhatinda, a region of Punjab. This western Indian state was the center of Partition-era violence.
"I was left at the mercy of villagers and some relatives who brought me up."
Sika was reunited with Sadiq after numerous phone calls and assistance from Pakistani YouTuber Nasir Dhillon.
Dhillon, a 38-year-old Muslim farmer and real estate agent from Pakistan, says that he and his Sikh friend Bhupinder Singh have reunited 300 families through their YouTube channel.
Despite the continuing hostilities between the two nations, the corridor opened in 2019 and has become a symbol of unity and reconciliation for estranged families.
"I am from India, and he is from Pakistan, but we have so much love for each other," said Sika, clutching a faded and framed family photograph.
"We hugged and cried so much when we met for the first time. The countries can keep on fighting. We don't care about India-Pakistan politics."
This year is the 75th anniversary of Partition, a period of sectarian violence that may have caused the deaths of over a million people, the splitting of families like Sika's, and the foundation of two independent nations, Pakistan and India.
(With AFP inputs)
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