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What it's like to be a Kashmiri in an Indian city

War Thunder

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How Kashmiris are navigating the increasing threat of Hindu nationalist mobs in big Indian cities and why many of them are moving back to their conflict-torn home.
On a late February morning, with border tensions gripping India and Pakistan, I received phone call after phone call from my family members and relatives, each one asking me to return to my home in India-administered Kashmir.

I was on a postdoctoral teaching fellowship at a university in a small north Indian town close to New Delhi. I was so engrossed in teaching the winter course on 'critical thinking' that I rarely paid attention to daily news reports citing incidents of mob violence against Kashmiri people in the different towns and cities of India. But when my parents urged me to return, I suddenly felt exposed to the possibility of encountering violence just like my fellow Kashmiris were facing in other parts of the country.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars over the disputed Kashmir since the two entities emerged out of the ashes of British colonialism. The two countries have engaged in countless border skirmishes but never before have mobs led by Hindu nationalists pursued Kashmiri people in India's urban strongholds in supposed retribution for Indian soldier casualties in the restive Kashmir region.

This time, the trigger was a suicide bombing on February 14 that claimed the lives of 45 paramilitary soldiers in Pulwama, a southern district of India-held Kashmir.


War talk dominated leading Indian news channels. Loud and rambunctious prime time TV hosts held vacuous debates and fuelled the frenzy of revenge. The hysteria found its public expression in the form of countrywide protest rallies, seeking military action against Pakistan and inciting hatred toward Kashmiris. Outside several college dorms where Kashmiri students resided, menacing mobs gathered — in some instances breaking in and beating up a few — calling out "shoot the traitors of India", while many others elsewhere asked for "nothing short of a war".

The mob anger was vindicated by Indian politicians from the ruling establishment including the country's Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who spoke with a shrill nationalist rhetoric. While India's then Home Minister Rajnath Singh said they would choose the time and place to avenge the killings, Modi assured Indian soldiers stationed in Kashmir that they "have been given a free hand" since "the blood of the people is boiling".

Although my parents were concerned about my wellbeing, they didn't seem to care much about themselves. They seemed to have reconciled with the possibility of facing a military reprisal, a resolve Kashmiri people have gained over three decades of conflict, in which custodial killings, torture, rampant detentions and raids and curfews have been a norm. I envy them in some way. At times I feel being away from Kashmir for 16 years in pursuit of an education and academic career has left me with a burden of longing for home and a smouldering guilt for leaving my parents behind. It becomes worse when you begin to feel vulnerable to frequent bouts of public outrage triggered by the acts of rebellion the Indian state faces in disputed Kashmir. And suddenly with a hard thump reality hits and you realise your identity makes you distinguishable in mainland India and you can be harmed for no crime of yours — no matter how accomplished you are. You're just a Kashmiri, navigating different forms of hostilities. From renting an apartment to setting up business, the odds are stacked against you.

In search of a home

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21-year-old Junaid, an engineering student, moved back to his home in Kashmir after a violent mob gathered outside his college dorm in Dehradun, India, asking them to leave or face violence. TRT World's Off The Grid interviewed Junaid in March. (TRTWorld)
Almost a decade ago, when I moved to New Delhi to pursue a masters degree in philosophy at India's prestigious Jawaharlal Nehru University, I struggled to make a home for myself. Although real estate agents tried their best to negotiate an apartment for me and my friend, a fellow Kashmiri, many simply slammed their doors on us, and on one occasion we were asked to chant the favourite slogan of Hindu nationalist groups — Bharat Mata ki Jai, or Long Live Mother India. On another occasion, a hotel owner backtracked on his room offer after scanning my identity card and reading my Muslim name and Kashmiri identity.

The portrayal of the Kashmiri struggle for the UN-sanctioned right to self-determination as an "anti-national" movement began in 1989, when an armed rebellion against New Delhi's rule broke out in Srinagar, the summer capital of India-administered Kashmir. Almost every political party of India — from the far-right to center to left — demonised it, first by describing it as Pakistan's "proxy war" and later by conflating it with terrorism caused by groups like Al Qaeda and Daesh.

In the following decades, Kashmir became one of the most underreported stories, while repression by Indian armed forces went unrestrained. Although India has long maintained at international forums that Kashmir is its "internal matter", denying access to the United Nations and other human rights groups to investigate alleged war crimes, it has unabashedly weaponised its soldiers with black laws like the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), which allows an Indian armed personnel to kill anyone on a whim.

The years of an unflinching military approach to the dispute not only resulted in gross human rights abuses in the troubled region but also galvanised hatred in mainland India against regular Kashmiris. We have now come to a point where a common Indian refuses to look at Kashmir from a rational humanistic perspective. Whenever Kashmiri militants or unarmed civilian protesters are gunned down, Indian Twitter and Facebook users applaud the killings, drawing sadistic pleasure from them and writing messages such as, "Pigs dispatched to hell" and "killing terrorists is okay, why is the government handing over the bodies to their families?"

Amidst the growing climate of antagonism, I still don't want to give up on Indian society. I believe there are a few spaces left in India where a Kashmiri is allowed to thrive. For instance, Jawaharlal Nehru University, where I pursued my masters and later postgraduate doctoral degrees in philosophy, continues to be an institution devoted to intellectual engagement on Kashmir. Both liberals and Marxists in such spaces, at least, acknowledge the complexity of the Kashmir dispute and oppose human rights excesses committed by the Indian military.

But even liberal or left-leaning institutions of India are facing an onslaught from far-right groups backed by the ruling BJP. In 2016, the BJP government charged several student leaders at Jawaharlal Nehru University with sedition. They were accused of hosting an event in the memory of Afzal Guru, a Kashmiri man who was hanged in 2013 for his alleged role in attacking the Indian parliament in 2001, and chanting "anti-national" slogans.

The arrests triggered a debate on Indian nationalism. As most of India's television journalism is heavily influenced by the ruling BJP, the party dominated the debate and also took the liberty of labelling anyone critical of them as anti-nationals.

As Marxist and centrist parties faced another electoral defeat from the right-wing BJP in the recent elections, a small minority of Indians who previously made efforts to understand the Kashmir conflict from human rights perspective are now fighting their own battle; a struggle to defeat the Hindu nationalist forces who celebrate Mahatma Gandhi's killer Nathuram Godse and have no regard for one of the country's prominent founding fathers, Jawaharlal Nehru.

Today's India leaves Kashmiris between a rock and a hard place. The choice of abandoning the professional life in big Indian cities is as difficult as leaving home in the first place. In Kashmir, we have to navigate the military conflict. In Indian cities, we now live with the fear of lynch mobs. Both ways, it's an awful situation.

https://www.trtworld.com/opinion/what-it-s-like-to-be-a-kashmiri-in-an-indian-city-27499
 
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acts of rebellion the Indian state faces
Jihadist terror, not "acts of rebellion"

Happen to know a few Kashmiri muslims, things are just fine for them. Shame about innocents having to face angry mobs and being discriminated against, though, but those are isolated incidents. There are a lot of markets all over India in many major cities where the Kashmiri trader community is present in big numbers, they are ok, not as bad as this write up would have one believe. He should stop playing the victim, oppressed by the state, for that is a completely false narrative.

Tough situation, but there's blame to go all around. The Pakistani state and it's military and intel apparatus along with their jihadist networks aren't exactly angels, neither are the locals in Indian Kashmir who take up arms and want to die for their religious cause, and neither are the Indian state and it's deployment of their security forces and their heavy handed tactics.

All they need to do is convert the "LOC" into an international border, completely eliminate all militancy and bring the security situation under control. Then drastically reduce troop presence in the state and have them manning the border, not dealing with terrorist networks all over the valley, eventually normalize travel for Pakistanis and you guys should be able to come visit our Kashmir and we can all have a beer, or a kahwa !
 
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Jihadist terror, not "acts of rebellion"

Happen to know a few Kashmiri muslims, things are just fine for them. Shame about innocents having to face angry mobs and being discriminated against, though, but those are isolated incidents. There are a lot of markets all over India in many major cities where the Kashmiri trader community is present in big numbers, they are ok, not as bad as this write up would have one believe. He should stop playing the victim, oppressed by the state, for that is a completely false narrative.

Tough situation, but there's blame to go all around. The Pakistani state and it's military and intel apparatus along with their jihadist networks aren't exactly angels, neither are the locals in Indian Kashmir who take up arms and want to die for their religious cause, and neither are the Indian state and it's deployment of their security forces and their heavy handed tactics.

All they need to do is convert the "LOC" into an international border, completely eliminate all militancy and bring the security situation under control. Then drastically reduce troop presence in the state and have them manning the border, not dealing with terrorist networks all over the valley, eventually normalize travel for Pakistanis and you guys should be able to come visit our Kashmir and we can all have a beer, or a kahwa !

Spoken like a true Bharti Hindutva terrorist.

Kashmir is a disputed territory whose fate has to be determined by its people, not Pakistanis not Bharti. You are just holding them at a gunpoint, sooner or later they will get freedom. All Indian govt forces are occupier terrorists and both Kashmiris and Pakistan have right to defend their territories against Bharti occupier terrorists.
 
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Jihadist terror, not "acts of rebellion"

Happen to know a few Kashmiri muslims, things are just fine for them. Shame about innocents having to face angry mobs and being discriminated against, though, but those are isolated incidents. There are a lot of markets all over India in many major cities where the Kashmiri trader community is present in big numbers, they are ok, not as bad as this write up would have one believe. He should stop playing the victim, oppressed by the state, for that is a completely false narrative.

Tough situation, but there's blame to go all around. The Pakistani state and it's military and intel apparatus along with their jihadist networks aren't exactly angels, neither are the locals in Indian Kashmir who take up arms and want to die for their religious cause, and neither are the Indian state and it's deployment of their security forces and their heavy handed tactics.

All they need to do is convert the "LOC" into an international border, completely eliminate all militancy and bring the security situation under control. Then drastically reduce troop presence in the state and have them manning the border, not dealing with terrorist networks all over the valley, eventually normalize travel for Pakistanis and you guys should be able to come visit our Kashmir and we can all have a beer, or a kahwa !
how about put yourself in home for 2 months without net and electricity and see what happend to your personality and we talking about entire provience who have 900 thousands army on top of them, shame on you that you came here and giving lecture like its tough situation which you understand only..
 
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Spoken like a true Bharti Hindutva terrorist.

Kashmir is a disputed territory whose fate has to be determined by its people, not Pakistanis not Bharti. You are just holding them at a gunpoint, sooner or later they will get freedom. All Indian govt forces are occupier terrorists and both Kashmiris and Pakistan have right to defend their territories against Bharti occupier terrorists.
While admirable on some level, but your absolutist stance will never accomplish anything, not in this age of nuclear weapons anyway. It might have, a hundred years ago or so, but not anymore. In order for a lasting solution to be found, there will have to be give and take on both sides. With nukes in play, Pakistan has effectively cancelled out any manpower/equipment or economic advantage India might have had in case of a full blown war.

Stop being so emotional and think logically.
 
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Like a black dude among the southerns in the midst of the Civil War
 
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how about put yourself in home for 2 months without net and electricity and see what happend to your personality and we talking about entire provience who have 900 thousands army on top of them, shame on you that you came here and giving lecture like its tough situation which you understand only..
Unlike you, I'm sure, I actually have spoken to many of those affected by the lockdown and recent administrative changes there. It is being blown out of proportion, which is not to say that things aren't bad, but the hysteria is not justified. There's a lot of nasty politicking going on by an increasingly irrelevant opposition in India too, which is making things worse, the Ghandy family.

The Uighurs in China are facing down a regime and are having to deal with a lot worse than muslims from the valley in Indian Kashmir.

Mine was just an opinion from an irrelevant nobody who wants to see peace, not a lecture.

Cooler heads must prevail, and compromise will absolutely have to be made by all stakeholders if we are ever to fix it.

"eternal hellfire for you and your lot, but a house in heaven for me, for murdering you and you lot" <- yeah ?

how about NO ? :nono:

fukk all expansionist ideologies, how about embracing pragmatism, even if a bit painful, and actually getting something done that will actually help the people ??

@jamahir as an Indian muslim, aapki rai ? but pls don't start on about communism being the solution :P
 
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From the op
"21-year-old Junaid, an engineering student, moved back to his home in Kashmir after a violent mob gathered outside his college dorm in Dehradun, India, asking them to leave or face violence. TRT World's Off The Grid interviewed Junaid in March. (TRTWorld)
Almost a decade ago, when I moved to New Delhi to pursue a masters degree in philosophy at India's prestigious Jawaharlal Nehru University, I struggled to make a home for myself. Although real estate agents tried their best to negotiate an apartment for me and my friend, a fellow Kashmiri, many simply slammed their doors on us, and on one occasion we were asked to chant the favourite slogan of Hindu nationalist groups — Bharat Mata ki Jai, or Long Live Mother India. On another occasion, a hotel owner backtracked on his room offer after scanning my identity card and reading my Muslim name and Kashmiri identity."
When you make up stories at least make a good one .A 21 year old moved to Delhi a decade ago to do his master's .lol
 
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As far as I can remember, as a Indian Muslim local to the Deccan region, I have never faced any discrimination.

Maybe my experience will be different if I go through Bombay, Ahmedabad, Jaipur etc.
except they killed your 40,000 people in operation polo right after partition and state of hyderabad usurped by force..your army was decimated.. you dont know what freedom is because you were born into slavery..
 
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As far as I can remember, as a Indian Muslim local to the Deccan region, I have never faced any discrimination.

Maybe my experience will be different if I go through Bombay, Ahmedabad, Jaipur etc.

I may also face discrimination if I was a Kashmiri.
Your experience will NOT be different in the cow belt either, my fellow Hindustani.

UP riots had bullets going both ways ! CM Yogi ne bola, "jao khatam karo inko"

I like that, India likes that, and dare I say it, UP muslims like that too.

neither the irrelevant Ghandys, nor their external enemy allies will ever divide us again !

Jai Hind, Bharat Mata ki jai ! :cheers:

except they killed your 40,000 people in operation polo right after partition and state of hyderabad usurped by force..your army was decimated.. you dont know what freedom is because you were born into slavery..
and you were born into a murderous cult where plurality is a sin
 
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indians lost couple planes

so they pick on tens of millions of civilians

how peaceful and spiritual of them
 
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From the op
"21-year-old Junaid, an engineering student, moved back to his home in Kashmir after a violent mob gathered outside his college dorm in Dehradun, India, asking them to leave or face violence. TRT World's Off The Grid interviewed Junaid in March. (TRTWorld)
Almost a decade ago, when I moved to New Delhi to pursue a masters degree in philosophy at India's prestigious Jawaharlal Nehru University, I struggled to make a home for myself. Although real estate agents tried their best to negotiate an apartment for me and my friend, a fellow Kashmiri, many simply slammed their doors on us, and on one occasion we were asked to chant the favourite slogan of Hindu nationalist groups — Bharat Mata ki Jai, or Long Live Mother India. On another occasion, a hotel owner backtracked on his room offer after scanning my identity card and reading my Muslim name and Kashmiri identity."
When you make up stories at least make a good one .A 21 year old moved to Delhi a decade ago to do his master's .lol

I stopped reading the article after that sentence :D
 
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Unlike you, I'm sure, I actually have spoken to many of those affected by the lockdown and recent administrative changes there. It is being blown out of proportion, which is not to say that things aren't bad, but the hysteria is not justified. There's a lot of nasty politicking going on by an increasingly irrelevant opposition in India too, which is making things worse, the Ghandy family.

The Uighurs in China are facing down a regime and are having to deal with a lot worse than muslims from the valley in Indian Kashmir.

Mine was just an opinion from an irrelevant nobody who wants to see peace, not a lecture.

Cooler heads must prevail, and compromise will absolutely have to be made by all stakeholders if we are ever to fix it.

"eternal hellfire for you and your lot, but a house in heaven for me, for murdering you and you lot" <- yeah ?

how about NO ? :nono:

fukk all expansionist ideologies, how about embracing pragmatism, even if a bit painful, and actually getting something done that will actually help the people ??

@jamahir as an Indian muslim, aapki rai ? but pls don't start on about communism being the solution :P
By the way i many friends who actually live in valley u dont know nothing about their pain again giving lecture about prevaling peace and diverting about your internal bad poloticians. This NRC brought whole india on the streets those poor kashmiries cant even protest are you or any or you providong food to them i am sure its a NO!
Matter fact i talk to one doc from kashmir this morning feom valley and he said if you talk about anything they disappeard you.
About ughur muslim its not a disputed area and india was involve thr afg in that area what ever is the reason we dont know only india and usa bashing about, do you think we buy your propaganda.
Kashmir was not india and will never be either they wanna be us or no one thing for sure they dont wanna be with india.. now put more force cuz thats all your terrorist gov can do and have been doing.
 
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