The Partition of India in 1947 brought about massive dispersion and migration of people across the borders of today’s India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, and led to the diasporic existence for the people of this region who lost their homelands. As the Partition took place on the basis of religion, people of both religious groups, Hindus and Muslims, had to leave their homelands in search of places determined for them according to their respective religious identities. A large number of Muslims of West Bengal, consequently, migrated to Bangladesh (then East Pakistan) leaving their homeland. Apart from the hurdles of the new economy and culture, they were tremendously affected by the questions of identity and belonging. They could neither take Bangladesh as their home nor could return to West Bengal that they left. They emerged as a diasporic community in post-Partition India. Hasan Azizul Huq, a prominent writer of Bangladesh, portrays the life of the migrated people of West Bengal in Bangladesh in their formative period as a diaspora. The characters of his works dealing with migration represent the unacknowledged diasporic community of post-Partition India who are kept invisible or ignored in diaspora studies mainly because of political reasons. This paper attempts to bring them to visibility as a diaspora through a close examination of their life, as portrayed by Huq in his stories, against the backdrop of the established diaspora theories in the historical context of the Partition.