Security, Honour &
Dignity
What It Means For
Kashmiri Pandits
Panun Kashmir Movement
The accession of
Jammu and Kashmir State to the Union of India in
1947 brought in the sustained influence of Muslim
majoritarian politics in the State patronized by
the 'Soft-State' perceptions of the subsequent
governments at the Centre. Special status became a
bargaining chip for the political elite of Kashmir
through political machinations strengthening the
Muslim precedence. It developed into a Muslim
monolithic political culture and reaction over the
period giving rise to the secessionist movement in
Kashmir. The forced mass-exodus of three lakh
Kashmiri Hindus from Kashmir Valley was the
logical culmination of the militarized form of
pan-Islamic fundamentalism bringing turmoil in
this region. Having the experience of the Indian
governance and lack of sense of history in certain
political circles in the national politics, the
secessionist forces have over the period since
1947 succeeded in creating confusion and division
amongst the political elite of India to hoodwink
the Indian people of the real dimensions involved
which are now unfolding to the misfortune of this
country. The whole issue stands internationalised
today by these forces having created a well
designed confusion of a disputed status of Jammu
and Kashmir State, made possible by the fragile,
vacillating & contradictory approach of powers
that be at Centre and its political allies.
The leadership of the
present secessionist movement in Kashmir is quite
clear that even if the present movement fails in
achieving the ultimate objective of independence
from India, it will strengthen the ascendancy and
control of the Muslims over the politics and other
spheres of the State and thus legally convert
Kashmir into virtually a Muslim State within the
secular framework of Indian republic. The recent
statements of the Prime Minister and others in
Government of India, including some Central
Ministers regarding 'anything Short of Azadi'
'autonomy' and 'Concessions' to the State show the
sensitivity of the so-called secular and
progressive forces in India to substantiate what
secessionists in Kashmir desire. The National
Conference on the other hand, in particular, is
demanding greater autonomy or Pre-1953 status for
Kashmir as a pre-requisite to initiate any
political process in the State. The Govt. of India
with the help of the other so-called
secular-democratic elements including Farooq
Abdullah and others of his ilk, it seems, is
slowly and steadily working in the direction of
establishment of a monolithic political way of
life in the State of J&K. The moves of the
Govt. of India suggest that a morbidly
obscurantist and an un-democratic system of
governance is going to be established
notwithstanding the fact that this shall further
strengthen the anti-national forces and the move
to final secession of Kashmir will not be far off.
In such a situation or otherwise, the political
dispensation for the people in Jammu and Ladakh
for a Hill Council and a Regional Council may
formally take place keeping in view the
aspirations of the majority of the people of these
two regions of the State. Any kind of such
political re-orientation shall bring into
prominence the politically factorial position of
Kashmiri Muslims, people of Jammu and Ladakh in
the J&K State. This will also, therefore, give
official recognition to all the three factors in
the socio-political scene of the State.
The issue of the survival
of Kashmiri Hindu Displaced Community, naturally
the fourth factor in the State of J&K, shall
have to be addressed objectively and with more
seriousness. Their survival, life and tradition
are directly linked with how the community is
settled in the Valley of Kashmir keeping in view
the ground realities of the situation in the State
and particularly in Kashmir. Almost all political
and social organisations in the country are
unanimous about the return of Kashmiri Pandits to
the Valley with 'Safety, Honour and Dignity', once
normalcy returns in Kashmir. But unfortunately,
none of these organisations have till date tried
to interpret these words into the articulation of
the measures they would like to initiate in this
direction . The practical feel of life K.P.s have
been going through in Kashmir with their
experiences of the last six years of exiled life,
forces the Kashmiri Pandit Community to ask all
and sundry to explain what 'security, honour and
dignity' implies. If the purpose of this
parrot-talk is to create an impression on the
minds of the Indian people that Kashmir was all
roses and normal for Kashmiri Hindus before the
armed strife, it is not only incorrect but
misleading too. The coinage of 'security, honour
and dignity' being used conveniently has in fact
harmed this community in the context that the
entire community has been kept as hostage to
uncertainty and indecision about them. Time has
probably come when the Kashmiri Hindus themselves
will have to articulate w hat 'safety, honour and
dignity' in Kashmir, once normalcy is restored
there, means for them. It is high time we dwell
upon the issue in the light of the historical
experiences, national commitments and the new
world order.
Safety, dignity and
honour are generally relative terms. What they
mean for one individual or a group of individuals
may not necessarily be the same for all others.
The heroic attempt of Pt. Birbal Dhar and supreme
sacrifice of his family and Pt. Harkar Bakshi
paved the way for the Sikh rule in Kashmir in 1819
A.D which put an end to the 500 years era of
brutalities on Kashmiri Pandits at the hands of
the alien Muslim rulers in Kashmir. The period
witnessed hundreds of thousands of discouraged.
The State Govt's policy
of Muslim precedence was supported by
majoritarianism and mob reaction which had/has
been/become a fact of life in the Valley. The
result of a cricket match played somewhere in the
world would provoke the 'faithfuls' of the Valley
to target Hindu houses, damage to a mosque in the
Middle-East would result in desecration of
minority places of worship and property and
Pakistan's President getting killed in an
air-crash would subject the Kashmiri Hindus to
abuse at the hands of Muslim mobs. The
wide-ranging and pre-planned loot and arson of
1986 in the Valley and particularly in Anantnag
district shocked the Kashmiri Pandit Community and
they felt isolated in their own habitat despite
the existence of a colossal nation/State.
In an attempt to break
from the ancient past, names of hundreds of places
were conveniently changed in the Valley. Disputes
were given birth to in regard to the rights of
possession and property in respect of places of
historical and cultural importance . A concept of
so-called 'Kashmiriyat', which is nothing but a
bundle of half-truths and brazen lies regarding
historical facts about the Valley, was introduced
in connivance with the instruments of the
Governance to distort the cultural impact of
Kashmir . To this on-going process, the Government
of India has all along been a mute spectator,
willingly.
The Kashmiri Hindus,
people of Jammu and Ladakh share common
experiences in regard to the discriminatory
policies of the State Govt. towards them from 1947
onwards. Fundamentally, the treatment meted out to
them was due to the fact that K.P.s and majority
of the people of Jammu and Ladakh were/are
non-Muslims and that the State had/has overtly or
covertly endorsed the fact of Muslim precedence in
almost all the spheres of politics and economics
in the State.
Despite this important
similarity in experience of Kashmiri Pandits,
people of Jammu and Ladakh, there are some
pertinent dis-similarities as well. The Kashmiri
Pandits have undergone a long barbaric era of 500
years prior to Sikh rule in Kashmir which squeezed
them from an overwhelming majority to a minuscule
minority in their own habitat. Secondly, the
Muslim mob reaction to the community in Kashmir
established the fact that Muslims did/ do not
desire any co-existence. Thirdly, but very
important is t he factor of forced mass-exodus of
Kashmiri Hindus and their displacement throughout
the country. And here lies the difference in the
framework of the ideograph as to what 'safety,
honour and dignity' means for each of these
peoples.
The continuous struggle
of Buddhists in Ladakh for a Union Territory and
lately for a Hill Council and an overwhelming
support by the people of Jammu to the demand of
Regional Council for Jammu province are valid
pointers in the direction of the aspirations of
the people concerned. The Councils with wide
executive and legislative powers will be able to
take care of the rights of the people of the two
respective regions. This arrangement has potential
to guarantee the 'security, honour and dignity' of
the domiciles of the two regions. In case of
Kashmiri Muslims, the State of India has already
gone too far to accommodate them. Beyond a
Constitutional provision of Art. 370 (which has
been instrumental in creation of a State within a
State and has also give n rise to' vested
interest), pumping in thousands of crores of
Rupees into Kashmir and maintaining precedence of
Kashmir in the politics of the State, the
Government of India, it seems, is ready to concede
more which in their thinking may be able to
further consolidate the identity of 'security,
honour and dignity' to the 'faithfuls' in Kashmir.
In case of the Kashmiri
Hindu community, the fourth factor in the State of
J&K, the members of which have been forced to
live as refugees in their own state/country,
'safety, dignity and honour' to the community
means free flow of life. Ordinarily, there are
three components of free flow of life. But so far
as the experiences of K.P.s with the system in
which they lived/ live and guarantee of right of
franchise to the subjects of India is concerned,
the free flow of life for them has four
components. A system which provides commitment in
regard to all the four essential components of
free flow of life can only ensure 'safety, honour
and dignity' to the Kashmiri Pandit Community in
Kashmir on their return to the Valley.
- The community should
be able to maintain its homogeneity and
compactness, protect and promote its cultural
tradition and keep on contributing to the
overall Indian ethos.
- Its members should be
able to live as free citizens of the country
without fear of any discrimination from any
quarter, enabling the community to contribute
to scientific advancement and the
civilizational process of the new world order.
- The community needs to
be ensured of a secured future to its
posterity in its historical habitat and the
future generations should not be compelled to
leave their homeland due to any political,
economic, educational or administrative
reason.
- The Kashmiri Hindus
should be given an equal right to take part in
the democratic political process at all levels
to shape the destiny of their community and
nation as per the aspirations of the majority
of the people.
Since the community of
Kashmiri Hindus have enough of an experience of
'co-existence' with the Kashmiri Muslims and the
system that was allowed to grow and flourish in
the State from 1947 onwards, it would be in the
fitness of things that the constitutional
provisions are invoked to specifically guarantee
the community in respect of all the four
components of free flow of life. It is only
through such a constitutional arrangement that the
community will be ensured of 'normalcy' and
consequent 'security, honour and dignity' in the
valley.
The demand of the
community for a Union Territory for seven lakh
Kashmiri Hindus in the north and east of river
Vitasta (Jhelum), besides the demand's strategic
value in the national context, should be viewed in
this perspective that it ensures them a permanent
constitutional guarantee in respect of all
essential components of free flow of life. If a
comprehensive exercise at national level is not
evolved for a lasting solution of Kashmir and
Kashmiri Pandit problem, the day is not far off
when small communities in the country making the
nation shall extinguish and entities like Kashmir
making the State shall secede. And thus shall also
start the beginning of a process for balkanisation
of India, dismemberment of Indianness and murder
of an immortal ethos.
All those who speak in
terms of return of Kashmiri Pandits to the Valley
with 'safety, dignity and honour', on restoration
of 'normalcy' in Kashmir, are enjoined upon to
initiate a well meaning and effective response in
this regard. They are also expected to contribute
to a solution that saves the community from a
further genocide in future and consequently the
nation, in case the K.P community is forced to
return to the Valley only on the basis of goodwill
gestures of the Kashmiri Muslims, the State of
India including its instrumentalities in the State
of J&K and of the Government of Jammu &
Kashmir.
The above document was published in
'The
Hindustan Times'
New Delhi of 7th January,
1996, with the caption "Kashmiri Hindus
Denial of Dignity & Security" in Guest
Column and in
'Daily
Excelsior'
Jammu, of 12th November, 1996
captioned "Can KPs return with honour ?"
under the signatures of Sh. Ashwani Kumar,
Convener, Panun Kashmir Movement (PKM) with minor
alterations.
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