When
religion is mixed with politics, the result is
what has happened at Srinagar and Jammu. Several
People have been killed; the property worth
crores has been burnt and the life in both the
regions has practically come to a standstill.
Leaders-turned-mobsters have pushed the
allotment of 100-acre land to the Amarnath
shrine management board and the cancellation to
such an extent that they have polarized the
entire state to the last person. The valley is
separated from Jammu by the range of Pirpanjal
mountains but now a wall of religious and
regional jingoism has also come up.
This is not the
first time that such a situation has arisen. Yet
every blow weakens the ties between the two
regions and lessens the space for pluralism.
Even liberal politicians in the valley are
wearing religion on their sleeves. They have
buried the Kashmeriyat, akin to Sufism,
deep.
Still the Kashmir
Valley was one area in the subcontinent where no
communal incident took place after the
partition. Sheikh Mohammed Abdullah was at the
helm of affairs at Srinagar. Many Hindus and
Sikhs had taken shelter there after traveling
from Pakistan. Some among them felt insecure.
The Sheikh arranged their transport by tongas to
Jammu. However, it is a matter of shame that
when the refugees reached safely on the Jammu
side, the Muslim tonga drivers were butchered.
This partly
explains why the all-party delegation which went
from Delhi to Jammu and Srinagar to find a
solution had to come back empty-handed.
Positions have hardened beyond redemption. The
delegation’s hope that communalism and
regionalism would be ultimately defeated is mere
wishful thinking. The two regions can continue
to be yoked together. But they have been cut
asunder: emotionally, socially and otherwise.
Yet it would be
an oversimplification of the situation if one
were to conclude that the allotment of land or
its cancellation was responsible for the
agitation. Wounds the two regions have inflicted
on each other over the years have deepened. The
land incident only provided spark to the
haystack of alienation which was there to burn.
The two regions
have been going distant from each other for a
long time. Separatists and politicians in the
Valley and Jammu have been widening the gulf to
see if they could become separate states. Some
straws have been in the wind in the shape of
demand for an autonomy for Jammu. Some Kashmiri
pandits who wanted to return to their homes in
the Valley have realized that there was no going
back.
What is
disconcerting is to see the well-read young
Muslims participating in the agitation. Some of
them have worked in India at important positions
in the private sector. This is a message far
beyond the allotment of the land. It reflects
anger and desperation. It is clear that the
normalcy seen at Srinagar is far from real. Once
the chips are down, practically every one is on
the streets. That the religion has played a key
role in consolidating the Kashmir community is
something which should make the intelligentsia
in the country thinks that the status-quo in the
state cannot last indefinitely.
The BJP agenda is
to bring about the separation of Jammu and
Kashmir. A few liberal Kashmiris who have
contacted me suspect such a design because of
the ferocity of the Jammu agitation. The BJP
has already created a situation where it is
difficult to imagine that the two regions can
ever be united.
Remarks made by
leaders of political parties in the Valley
reflect a particular thinking. The Amarnath
pilgrims’ huts were compared to the Jewish
settlements in Palestine. Some said the land
allotment was meant to change the demography, to
turn the Muslim majority state into a Hindu one.
This allegation is not true because New Delhi,
even under the BJP-led government, has never
tried to put Hindus from other states in
Kashmir. The law prohibits non-Kashmiris from
purchasing the land in the state. Jawaharlal
Nehru, India’s first prime minister, was
categorical in his pronouncement that no
outsider would be allowed to settle down in the
state.
I can understand
the BJP exploiting the situation for its
Hindutva ends because it has no faith in India’s
ethos of secularism. But I have been greatly
disappointed to find the Hurriyat leaders and
the Mufti People’s Democratic Party, vying with
the fundamentalists, to out do them. It is well
known that Mehbooba Mufti talks irresponsibly
for the sake of effect. But this time she has
beaten all records. Her observations on a
channel TV reminded me of a Jehadi who did not
mind setting Kashmir on fire so long as she got
applause from the fanatics of the community.
When religious
frenzy takes over, people do not think straight.
India’s politics as it is going to get more
vitiated because of coming elections. The
Central government is on its last legs and
probably a long-term solution of Kashmir is not
possible. But some exercise should begin. The
Valley, Jammu and the Ladakh should become a
federation so that each unit feels that it has
an identity of its own. The over all solution of
the Kashmir problem should follow.
The idea of
blocking the Jammu-Srinagar road, the only land
link between the two regions, was that of RSS,
the BJP’s mentor. Thousands of karsevaks were
brought from the different states to sustain the
road blockade. It is another matter that the
army was able to pierce through the blockade and
sustain supply of essential goods to the Valley.
For some reasons, the inept government at
Srinagar and still more inept at Delhi did not
think of measures to keep the road open from the
day one.
The threat of
Kashmir fruit growers to cross the Muzzafarabad
border to take their produce to Pakistan should
have made the RSS realise the repercussion of
its bandhs and blockades. Instead, the BJP
threatened chief minister Prakash Singh Badal
that it would withdraw its support to his
government if he did not stop trucks moving to
Kashmir. Correctly, he did not yield to the
threat. Still two BJP ministers in his cabinet
were able to disrupt the supply for some time.
The government once again woke up to threats of
going across to Muzzafarabad late. When people
took to the streets, the police action began.
The protest was bound to spread to other places
because after a long time, people had a chance
to ventilate their age-old grievances. It is a
bigger question of Kashmir which unfortunately
has been reopened on the religion lines.
The whole situation has a lesson from New Delhi.
Having opposed the two-nation theory, India has
a point that the Hindu majority Jammu and the
Muslims majority Kashmir cannot be separated
because it will tell upon India’s secular
polity. However, after the recent happenings in
the Valley and Jammu, the whole thing becomes a
question mark.