Ishaal Zehra
Meanwhile, as 22 former
panchayat members associated with the Kashmir’s ruling People’s Democratic
Party (PDP) and opposition National Conference (NC), in south Kashmir’s Pulwama
district announced to quit the pro-India parties and join the ongoing
resistance movement, the death toll in the ongoing Kashmir Intifada has risen
to 87 after a youth was martyred in Srinagar due to teargas shell fired by
Indian troops.
The 22 panches and
sarpanches made the public announcement and sought forgiveness from the people
and pledged to take part in the ongoing freedom movement. What compelled them
to make this decision? Probably it was their inner conscious, which at some
point in life forces one to choose right over wrong thus fortifying the concept
of being human.
And probably because of
this same inner conscious the Ex- Indian Army Major Dinesh
Tiwari was also compelled to
scribe his feelings for as to why Kashmir still burns at the hands of India. He
wrote it on his Facebook wall and it is so true to heart as well as quite
heartbreaking. Especially when he feels the agony of not loving Kashmiries for
who they are. When asked by a little Kashmiri boy if Dinesh was a Kashmiri too
this is what he replied, “No, my friend, I am not a Kashmiri. I could not
be one. I was not expected to be one. Therefore, I was not educated to be one.
I was not trained to be one.
And
I do not love you and your Kashmir. I could not. I was not expected to. I was
not educated to. I was not trained to.”
This is what Dinesh
Tiwari wrote and I couldn’t resist sharing it.
“I have been to Kashmir.
No, not as a tourist.
I have lived there. I
have worked there.
I was part of the heavy
military instrument of the Indian State in the paradise, guarding it from the
heaven dwellers themselves. And some mischievous neighbors too.
As a 21 year old, with
the might of one of the biggest militaries in the world behind me and its
command pinned on my shoulders, its determination manifested in the AK in my
hand, I have roamed the towns and villages with authority which none of the
Burhan Wanis or Bhatts or Wazirs or Bhans or Wattals or anybody else whose land
it was, would have dared to.
Ironically, as a Citizen
of Nepal, serving in the Indian Army, I was a bundle of contradictions myself.
When I led a group of
armed men through a tense neighborhood, I could not help recall the state I was
in myself as a teenager, back home in Nepal, angry and frustrated because of
the curfew imposed in my hometown, from six in the evening to six in the
morning every day for years.
When the Maoist
insurgency was at its peak, I was a teenager. I have been frisked, violated,
insulted; made to do pushups and squats just because I asked the police man at
the check post to repeat himself when he instructed something and I did not
properly hear.
There were regular
visits to our houses-- by police in uniform, by police without uniform, by a
secret police who everyone knew was a secret police; also from unknown people
with weapons prominently hidden under wraps, meant to be seen and feared,
demanding food, shelter, and money.
I was angry, very angry.
I was angry at the then mysterious figure of Prachanda, whose only one picture
in combat fatigues was public at that time. I was angry at the ideologue Dr
Baburam Bhattarai -- legendary nepal topper (Board First) and PhD from JNU --
who was known to be the brain behind the movement.
I was angry at the
people who marched in my town with weapons held high, after they blew away the
local bank and the police station.
I was also angry at the
policeman who frisked me, dragged me by my arm, threw my bag scattering away
all my stuff on the floor and pinned me down to the ground and poked the back
of my neck with a pointed object. It wasn't a stick. It was cold and heavy. I
did not see it but a chill ran down my spine.
It blew up the anger. I
was angry at the government. At the state, which had ignored so many people for
so many years that they were ready to fight, and kill and die.
Also, I was angry at
myself. Without knowing the reason, without a target, the anger was building up
and building pressure and engulfing me.
I was lucky. I had
options to flee. I fled at the right time.
When I looked at a
beautiful Kashmiri child, who approached me with an innocent admiration and a
genuine query, 'You must be Kashmiri, are you Kashmiri?', I was fumbling for an
answer.
I would have liked to
tell him -- 'Yes, I am.'
I would have loved to
say -- 'Yes, we are. We are all Kashmiris. We are all heaven dwellers.'
I would have wanted him to
know--'We are here for you. We are your men.'
I would have wanted to
give him a smile, a nudge, pinch his cheeks, and ruffle his hair a bit and say,
'Yes, I am a Kashmiri. And I love Kashmir. And you.'
But I did not. Because I
did not. I did not love Kashmir. And I did not love that child.
I was not a Kashmiri.
And I was not a tourist.
Kashmir, for me was a
duty. An assignment, an ardous task that had to be fulfilled to my utmost
capability and most importantly, survived.
I did not pack a camera,
few romantic novels and Faiz and Gulzar's poetry books before stepping on to
the heaven.
I was trained to kill,
and armed for it. My literature was bloody.
As a preparation, I was
not educated on the beauty the land was but on the contours of terror that
prevailed within the landscape.
I did not go through
accounts of romantic unions in the scenic backdrops, but brainstormed over
hundreds of case studies of bloody and fatal encounters in the terrain.
For me Kashmir was not
to be appreciated, but assessed, analysed and acted upon, and survived.
For me the innocent
child was not that innocent.
The images of children
carrying messages, supplies and even weapons, read in the extensive case
studies, immediately cropped up in my mind.
Even before noticing his
sparkling beautiful blue eyes, pink apple-like cheeks, and loveliest smile, I
had to scan through his whole body to know what was hidden.
Images of children
blowing themselves away infront of security forces flashed before me even
before I could comprehend the emotions in his voice.
Even before I could
think of extending my hand to ruffle his hair, the grip on the AK tightened
automatically and my trigger finger was alert.
No, my friend, I am not
a Kashmiri. I could not be one. I was not expected to be one. Therefore, I was
not educated to be one. I was not trained to be one.
And I do not love you
and your Kashmir. I could not. I was not expected to. I was not educated to. I
was not trained to.
I was fumbling for an
answer. I did not reply.
The child's mother came
running, lifted him up and dragged him away hurriedly, slouching a bit, without
even looking at me.
Today, he must be
Burhan's age. And we don't love him still. And that is one of the reasons why
Kashmir burns.
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