The Asian Age

Truth , the first step to restoring J&K’s dignity

- Shiv Visvanatha­n

Sometimes I feel there is predictabi­lity, an inevitabil­ity and metaphysic­al pathos about politics which is seen as inevitable. When people talk of Kashmir, or Manipur, I feel the same sense of gloom and doom that has haunted these states since Independen­ce. Violence, brutality and continuous violation of human rights, are all considered almost normal in these states. We assume change is not possible and that these states will continue to suffer. All this destroys optimism, hope and a desire for change, so critical to democracy.

I admit problems are formidable and one can easily get despaired by the alternatin­g litany of terrorism and misgoverna­nce in Kashmir. It is as if Kashmir is a hell where anything that can go wrong, will. Yet, sometimes as I think things over, I sense a need to rethink Kashmir. There is a need for new ethical experiment­s, a set of civil society experiment­s to rethink Kashmir. There have been a few reports by civil society on Kashmir but the experiment in rethinking Kashmir is yet to begin.

On October 25, I attended a conference organised by WISCOMP, an initiative of the Foundation for Universal Responsibi­lity, under the umbrella of the Dalai Lama. I sensed the possibilit­ies of a new beginning at this conference.

It was a quiet conference, there were no VIPs and no politician­s were beating out the clichés of Kashmir at this conference. This is why I felt that a beginning can, indeed, be made.

The conference began with a statement on vulnerabil­ity and responsibi­lity. It began by accepting the need for a new moral imaginatio­n on Kashmir, by asking how creative spaces for politics could be created between the past and the future. It modestly suggested that the security expert is not only an analyst but a case study as well, and as an expert, he must reflect on the flaws of his paradigm. Doctors often use the term iatrogeny, meaning doctor-induced illness, in their conversati­ons. Iatrogeny is the ultimate paradox of medical power. Similarly, a lot of the violence in Kashmir is induced by experts or policies.

The conference, in fact, struck a different note about the vulnerabil­ity of social science and policy thinking and thus struck a different note from the usual banal outpouring, oozing with the confidence of Delhi.

The conference was an appeal to “listening” and the vital role that listening as an art and a ritual plays in a democracy.

Delhi, it emerged at the conference, was a poor listener when it comes to Kashmir and both media and securityob­sessed bureaucrat­s were “too obsessed with the project of nationbuil­ding to understand the pain of Kashmir”.

In fact, by being tonedeaf to suffering, the successive government­s have othered Kashmir, freezing it into a stereotype of response, which it unfolds like a Penelope’s cloak, again and again.

When you pay attention to Kashmir, you realise that the voices that you need to listen to are the voices of Kashmiri women, children and youth, and not of any of the tired political parties. The poignant experience­s of these people need a much bigger canvas.

Violence has destroyed the innocence of childhood in Kashmir. One speaker described Kashmir as the continent of lost childhood.

Listening to the silence of the people as also the poetry of protest, I sensed that people in Kashmir are tired of existing circumstan­ces and want a change. This they expressed through their writings, theatre and music. Such artistic endeavours, voicing dissent, must not be seen as antithetic­al to politics; these must be viewed as an extension of politics in a more evocative form.

The government’s attempt to contrast the stone with the pellet proved to be misguided. It did not understand the asymmetry of power nor did it realise that in a zone of indifferen­ce, stone is the only way in which voiceless people regain their voice.

After the conference, I felt that the government must make an attempt to understand Kashmir by beginning to “listen” to Kashmiris as also by owning up its past mistakes.

There was an openness that went beyond the critique. The conference made an attempt to see the possibilit­ies in the other. The groups present felt that home minister Rajnath Singh’s statement that India must go beyond a muscular politics and seek compassion, care and concern could be treated as a window of opportunit­y. There is no naiveté here but a sense of a politics of hope. It is the recognitio­n that the problem in Kashmir is not a Kashmiri problem but an Indian one. There is a sense that the test for Indian democracy

When you pay attention to Kashmir, you realise that the voices that you need to listen to are the voices of Kashmiri women, children and youth, and not of any political party

would be the way we behaved in Kashmir.

The conference also brought to fore the civil society’s determinat­ion to play a more determined and creative role in resolving Kashmir issue, while upholding and extending Gandhian principles of non-violence.

As I listened to the testimonie­s and the stories analysed, I sensed that Kashmir was a double failure of storytelli­ng and listening. It is almost as if democracy must begin again, in Kashmir.

Various speakers opined that there was a need for telling the truth, and reconcilia­tion. Many proposed the idea of a Truth Commission in Kashmir, arguing that truth alone can restore a sense of dignity to the place. There is a need to go beyond a legalistic idea of rights and compensati­on and do psychoanal­ysis so that healing and repair can be done. It was heartening to see several bureaucrat­s and soldiers responding enthusiast­ically to this. It was interestin­g to see bureaucrat­s demanding that we go beyond governance and think about welfare.

There, indeed, is a desperate need to turn Kashmir from a law and order problem to an issue of truth and reconcilia­tion. An attempt to go beyond security and rethink on peace is more holistic, any day.

I know this is just a small beginning; one swallow does not make a summer. But peace begins with these small prayers of hope and humility. This is the new role of civil society. The civil society isn’t just an extension counter of the official but a centre of rethinking alternativ­e imaginatio­ns and possibilit­ies. The hope for democracy and Kashmir lies in these theatres of experiment­ation.

The writer is professor, Jindal Global Law School and director, Centre for the Study of Knowledge Systems

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