It was a very emotional moment for the second-generation members of the Christian Mithu family which had separated during the tumultuous days during the 1947 Partition of India, when they met at Gurdwara Darbar Sahib at Kartarpur, Dawn reported.
Two branches of a family separated during the 1947 Partition, finally got together at the Kartarpur Corridor after 74 years as they came to know about each other through a Punjabi news channel, a report in The Tribune, says.
It was a very emotional moment for the second-generation members of the Christian Mithu family which had separated during the tumultuous days during the 1947 Partition of India, when they met at Gurdwara Darbar Sahib at Kartarpur, Dawn reported.
Shahid Rafiq Mithu, a resident of Mananawala in Nankana district, reached Kartarpur with 40 members of his family, while Sono Mithu, a resident of Shahpur Dogran, a village in Ajnala tehsil of Amritsar district in Punjab, arrived at the gurdwara on Friday via Kartarpur Corridor with eight members of his family.
The members of the family were so overwhelmed that they hugged each other and wept
Shahid Rafiq Mithu said that their elder brother Iqbal Masih had migrated to Pakistan with his family during Partition, while his (Iqbal’s) brother Inayat got lost during the tumult and was left behind in Punjab.
“Around a year ago, my interview was aired by a Punjabi news channel in which I talked about the separation of our elders during Partition, which was seen by our relatives in Punjab, who contacted us and we planned reunion at Kartarpur,” Shahid Mithu said, regretting that both the elders— Iqbal and Inayat— had died.
“I am very happy after meeting Shahid Rafiq Mithu and 35 other relatives at Kartarpur,” Sono Mithu said.
The reunited relatives had heart-to-heart chat and shared with each other their stories and memories of their late elders.
On the occasion, the Kartarpur administration served sweets to both families.
Later, the family members visited different parts of Gurdwara Darbar Sahib and had lunch together at the Baba Guru Nanak Langar Hall. They also visited a local market for shopping and kept chatting.
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