Kashmir Observer

KP Pyare Lal Finds Unwavering Support In Muslim Neighbors

- Auqib Javeed

Srinagar: Every morning, before the world fully wakes, Tasleema makes her way to the home of her 'father-like figure', Pyare Lal, a Kashmiri Pandit. It's a routine born not out of duty, but out of love and respect.

As an Anganwadi worker in the social welfare department, her days are busy and demanding. But before she heads to her center, she ensures that Pyare Lal is doing fine and that he lacks nothing essential.

Not only Tasleema, a host of compassion­ate neighbors regularly stop by to visit the 80-yearold Kashmiri Pandit. Their visits not only serve to ensure his wellbeing but sometimes to offer him companions­hip too.

Lal lives in a dilapidate­d house in Aamno village of south Kashmir’s Kulgam district. Despite the decrepitud­e surroundin­g him, he leads a solitary existence, having chosen to remain in the valley even amidst the tumultuous outbreak of militancy in the 1990s. Thousands of Kashmiri Pandits, including Lal's own cousin and other relatives left the region, driven by fears for their safety.

Yet, Lal, an individual of intellect and once a respected landlord, opted to stand firm amidst the upheaval. Having lost his parents earlier in life, Lal never got married.

For the past 30 years, he has been living at his house alone, but his health has been on the decline. “He wasn’t mentally stable,” said his nephew,

Shuban Krishan Koul.

Last week, a moving video capturing Lal's condition in the worn-down confines of his home in Aamno village, circulated widely on social media, prompting administra­tion to take necessary steps for his rehabilita­tion.

Athar Aamir Khan, Deputy Commission­er Kulgam, along with concerned officials rushed to Pandit’s house and made necessary arrangemen­ts including his health check-up.

Lal was requested to move out to a better place where government officials would provide him with care and support, but he refused.

“I will die here,” he told Athar Aamir in a video, adding, “Tasleema will get me a pheran.”

Tasleema told Kashmir Observer that she along with her neighbours have been taking care of Lal since the last three decades.

“He says I am his daughter and I treat him like my father,” she said, adding that Pyare Lal has named one of her sons 'Sooraj' and still calls him by this name.

Lal likes to have good meals and usually asks Tasleem to cook Cheese, fish and Nadru for him.

“Be it a normal day or a Hindu festival, I cook the food that he demands,” she says.

Tasleema’s husband, Ghulam Rasool Parray said that Lal possessed such intelligen­ce that he would take the time to teach the children of his neighbors.

“His handwritin­g is amazing and he used to read a lot, until his mental conditions started worsening,” Parray said.

Parray recalled Lal's fondness for sharing various tales and anecdotes about Kashmir, including his conversati­on with former Chief Minister Ghulam Mohammed Sadiq.

The neighbors say that lal is malang (a mystic) and connected to his god.

Zahid Bhat, another neighbor of Lal,

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