The Grand Trunk Road - Behind the Scenes
Introduction
This learning journey will be of use to those studying the following QCA Units:
Citizenship
KS1/2 Living in a diverse world
KS3 Britain- a diverse society?
Geography
KS3 Making connections, Images of a country
Religious Education
KS2 Learning about celebrating festivals abroad
The Grand Trunk Road is one of the longest and most historic trade and military routes in the Indian subcontinent. The road is almost 1,500 miles long and runs from Calcutta in India, across Pakistan, all the way to Kabul in Afghanistan. During March 2006, writer Irna Qureshi travelled along the stretch of the Grand Trunk Road (also known colloquially as the 'GT Road') from Delhi in India to the Khyber Pass on Pakistan's border with Afghanistan, with photographer Tim Smith.
The purpose of the trip was to photograph people and places from along the famous road, and to collect their stories for a photographic and oral history exhibition called The Grand Trunk Road - From Delhi to the Khyber Pass. Irna and Tim were particularly interested in this part of the road because along it are dotted the homelands of the majority of people who have migrated to the UK from the North of India and Pakistan. Most people from India and Pakistan who have made Britain their home hail from places like Jalandhar, Ludhiana, Amritsar, Mirpur, Jhelum, Rawalpindi and Attock. Tim and Irna wanted to understand what linked these towns and villages on the Grand Trunk Road with migration to Britain.
In this learning journey, Irna Qureshi offers a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the remarkable journey she made with Tim Smith, and she shares some of the highlights. As an added bonus, this learning journey includes some quotes and pictures that were not included in the exhibition and have never been seen before.
See where the Grand Trunk Road begins in Calcutta.»
Learning article provided by:
Bradford Industrial Museum, Home of Horses at Work |
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