Unlike most partition narratives, the narratives of the Sindhis is not  marked by violence and bloodshed. The Hindus of Sindh came to India by ship,  camel and train, and were unharmed most of the time. The Burden of Refuge is  about Partition, and the resettlement and fragmentation of the Sindhi Hindus of  India. Rita Kothari traces the trajectory of the Sindhi Hindus from Sindh to India, specifically to Gujarat. 
       The Burden of Refuge tells the story of the  Sindhi Hindus of Gajarat beginning with colonial Sindh and tracing the  socio-political dynamics of the pre-Partition days. Through personal  narratives, Kothari begins to life the story of various Sindhis as they migrate  to India  and begin their process of resettlement. She delineates the contexts that made  an atypical commodity like the Sindhis re-modify themselves to suit more  textbook notions of Gujarati bourgeois society. In their desire to assimilate  with the India (especially Gujarat), the Sindhis   gained much, but also suffered many losses. Though Sindhis have risen  from the ashes of Partition as a model immigrant community, the Sufi  syncreticism that informed their former life has been tragically damaged and  they have also suffered the loss of their language. In Gujarat,  their loss are accompanied with a desire to become ‘popular’ Hindus by adopting  a more monolithic Hindu identity and by denying their ‘Sindhiness’.
    Using intergenerational voices and combining  history with personal narratives, Kothari’s book examines the phenomena of  psychological violence during and after Partition, and explores a different  facet of Partition Studies. Going beyond Partition Studies, this book also makes  an important contribution to the area of identity politics in contemporary India. This  multidisciplinary study is relevant to everyone interested in India’s past  and present.