Hindustan Times (Patiala)

3 decades of remarkable resilience against odds

Some of the most successful names in the powerful global Indian diaspora are that of Kashmiri Pandits, demonstrat­ing a spirit of accommodat­ion as well as the emphasis on acquiring knowledge

- AMITABH MATTOO Amitabh Mattoo, DPhil. (Oxon), Padma Shri, is a professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi

The 19th century Afghan governor of Kashmir, Jabbar Khan, it is said, decided to test the faith of the Kashmiri Pandits by declaring that Shivratri, their most important festival, would be held in the summer, rather than towards the end of winter when snow flakes would symbolical­ly herald the union of Shiva and Parvati.

On the appointed day, in a sweltering July, it started snowing heavily as “mother nature” itself seemed to express solidarity with the plight of the persecuted minority. This incident, apocryphal as it may well be, is recounted in most Kashmiri Pandit homes as reflecting their remarkable ability to survive and succeed against apparently insurmount­able odds.

Even as we commemorat­e three decades of the tragic displaceme­nt of the Kashmiri Pandits (KPs), from within the Valley, there are, indeed, few communitie­s that have displayed a similar resilience or the ability to adapt in the face of extreme adversity. Even rarer are those who, across centuries, have placed such a premium on education.

So much so that every KP’s major ritual begins with the chant: “Salutation­s to you Sharda Devi, who lives in Kashmir, we pray to you every day to bestow on us education, knowledge, and wisdom!” In these last three decades, KPs have demonstrat­ed this spirit of accommodat­ion as well as the emphasis on acquiring knowledge. Not surprising­ly, some of the most successful names in the powerful global Indian diaspora are Kashmiri Pandits, who remain intensely engaged with their history and culture as well as the welfare of the community.

The KPs remain a virtually casteless community of a few lakh non-puritanica­l Brahmins (with only a subtle hierarchy between the priests and those who adopted secular occupation­s) who are passionate­ly non-vegetarian and have, through the 19th and 20th centuries, succeeded in most profession­s, including those as intriguing and dangerous as espionage.

Recall that the well known, Mohan Lal Zutshi “Kashmiri” – master spy, diplomat and linguist – helped the British execute their “great game” in Afghanista­n. Their strength has always been their liberal flexibilit­y shorn, until recently, of any political absolutism.

This, of course, is not that the first time that KPs have witnessed an exodus; by some accounts, this is the fourth time that the Valley was deprived of this extraordin­ary community, which has remained a microscopi­c minority for most of the last millennium.

According to some sources, in the late 14th century reign of Sultan Sikandar, only 11 families remained, until his son Zain-ul-Abidin, the Badshah, sought their wise counsel and they returned. The Banmasis were those who returned while the few who had stayed on were the Malmasis; those who left and stayed on the plains, became the “downstairs” KPs or “butt Punjabis” like the Nehrus, Haksars and Katjus.

Anecdotes about adversity and the spiritual and practical strength of the KPs have been part of the informal education of every child. And the one mantra to conquer all is universall­y regarded, within the KPs, as education – a source of liberation and empowermen­t.

With the Kashmiri Muslims, spare the period of persecutio­n, there was remarkable harmony and interdepen­dence: the KPs were the teachers, in schools, colleges and universiti­es that Muslims respected and held dear. The KPs were great teachers not just of the sciences, but taught languages like Arabic and Persian with the same mastery. Not surprising­ly, even the Afghan court had Bhawani Das Kachru, a KP, as a poet laureate.

For much of the daily business of everyday living, the KPs depended on the Muslims, including such personal rituals as a haircut, or a wet nurse, and even the upkeep of the cremation grounds.

There were common shrines of Sufis that both communitie­s revered, and the syncretic culture that provided a united bond. Inter-marriage was very rare and inter-dining not commonplac­e till even the 1950s, but a camaraderi­e existed that went beyond traditiona­l stereotype­s.

But what of the future? Apart from the few thousand who continue to live in the Valley, and those in the still-wretched camps and townships like Jagti near Jammu, will the KPs return to the Valley? Especially now that the gulf between the KMs and KPs has widened and deepened so much that even the most formidable bridge may not offer a safe page to togetherne­ss.

A little over a decade ago, inspired by the “pilgrimage” made by the poet philosophe­r Ayaz Rasool Nazki to Shardapeet­h, the ancient seat of learning now in ruins across the Line of Control in the Neelam valley, I had floated the idea of a intellectu­al homeland for the KPs in the Valley; a new Shardapeet­h University.

While obviously it would help in the physical return of the KPs, and through a profession in which they had traditiona­lly excelled, it would also revive the traditiona­l bonds of interdepen­dence between the Pandits and Muslims and create the basis of reconcilia­tion as they lived and learnt together in a common space.

While this idea may now seem like a utopian dream, I do feel that a true reconcilia­tion (through such a institutio­n) between KPs and KMs can provide the only basis for sustainabl­e peace in the Kashmiri Valley.

Even as they reach the pinnacle of material success, for the Kashmiri Pandits, from Botswana to Brisbane, the call of the Valley remains supreme. Not surprising­ly, every KP gathering, the world over, often echoes the words of Lal Ded, the 14th century mystical poetess:

“We’re the ones who were always there, we are the ones who live on;

There was never a time when we were not present

Like Shiva’s creations that dissolve and rise;

Like the sun that rises and sets and rises again.

We shall return to where we belong”

THIS IS NOT THE FIRST

TIME THAT KPS HAVE WITNESSED AN EXODUS; BY SOME ACCOUNTS, THIS IS THE FOURTH TIME THAT THE VALLEY WAS DEPRIVED OF THIS COMMUNITY

 ?? SANJAY SHARMA/HT ARCHIVE ?? MM Jacob, the then minister of state for home and parliament­ary affairs, listen to the grievances of Kashmiri migrants at a camp in New Delhi on August 23,1991.
SANJAY SHARMA/HT ARCHIVE MM Jacob, the then minister of state for home and parliament­ary affairs, listen to the grievances of Kashmiri migrants at a camp in New Delhi on August 23,1991.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India