Kothari, RitaRitaKothariThadhani, JasbirkaurJasbirkaurThadhani2025-08-302025-08-302016-10-0110.1080/00856401.2016.12337162-s2.0-84991486069http://repository.iitgn.ac.in/handle/IITG2025/21820This paper argues for the inclusion of ‘Sindhi Sikhs’—a minor group in terms of religion, language and number—into the archives of Partition, Sindh and Sikh scholarship. Terming this group as the ‘missing people’, we draw attention to contexts that might have made them slip through the cracks of the three archives. At a more fundamental level, the paper critiques the processes by which straitjacketed definitions of a ‘Hindu’ or a ‘Sikh’ make invisible those who, in the logic of modern nations, appear to have oxymoronic identities. What role did Partition play in this matter? Did Partition cause further ruptures, and what kinds of negotiations did the Sindhi Sikhs undertake during and after Partition?.falseHindu | Language | Muslim | Partition | Punjabi | Religion | Sikh | SindhiSindhi Sikhs in India: The missing peopleArticle14790270873-8901 October 20163arJournal1