This article draws on the critical role of partition refugees in Delhi's cultural and economic history to assert that assimilating refugees contributes to state-building economically and culturally. It begins by reviewing the Relief and Rehabilitation Policy of 1948 in the capital, its push to make refugees "self-sufficient," and the enterprising refugees' economic contributions to the city. The commentary touches on the material and social "refugee resources" and "state-building" argument as postulated by Jacobsen and her contemporaries to conclude that if there is anything to be learnt from Delhi's history and scholarship, it is that investing in refugees flourishes the cities they reside in.