Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

A hard blow to syncretism

Amarnath killings: Hardliners mustn’t communalis­e the attack

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The shrinepeac­e terroris pilgrimsin attack Kashmir.is thata The reminderki­lled attack sevenis of also how Amarnatha blow fragile to the state’s syncretic traditions that bind Hindus and Muslims. The cave-shrine was discovered by a Muslim shepherd in 1850 and his family and Hindu priests together were its custodians for decades till a board was set up to regulate the yatra in 2000. The yatra, in fact, is incomplete without both communitie­s and local logistics are provided for by the Muslims. The pilgrimage has come under threat on several occasions since terrorism reared its head in 1989 but even through the 1990s — when violence was at an all-time high and Kashmiri Pandits were forced to flee their homes — the pilgrimage has not once been suspended.

The killings on Monday has cast a deep shadow over the Valley. The attack has taken place at a time when the state is reeling under the impact of an unpreceden­ted uprising that followed the death of militant commander Burhan Wani. The security establishm­ent is stretched and has to now ensure that there is no communal flare-up in the ideologica­lly opposed regions of Jammu and the Valley. The terrorist bullets that killed the pilgrims also took aim at a government, which has two unlikely parties as allies: The soft-separatist PDP and the right-wing BJP. It is imperative for the alliance partners to behave maturely and hold the peace that is already tentative.

The most-heartening signals of Kashmiriya­t not taking a beating in the face of extreme provocatio­n are coming from the common citizens. In an important signalling, a fresh batch of 3,000 yatris left Jammu a day after the terror attack. Kashmiris, too, are deeply disturbed by the killing of the pilgrims. The separatist­s from the Hurriyat Conference were quick to condemn the attack. Mirwaiz Umar Farooq said that the pilgrims will always be respected guests. It is important to remember that the same separatist­s were silent when militants killed policemen and government employees. As the state braces for testing times ahead and as the bodies of the pilgrims reach their homes in Gujarat and Maharashtr­a, political hardliners must desist from communalis­ing the killings.

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