Showing posts with label Jammu and Kashmir. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jammu and Kashmir. Show all posts

Sunday, September 10, 2017

the controversies on inter-faith marriages in Kashmir

the controversies on inter-faith marriages in Kashmir


Knot at a cost

Many youngsters are going in for inter-faith and inter-caste marriages to script the
story of a new Kashmir, but this is proving costly with various communities resorting
to violence to thwart such alliances, writes Jupinderjit Singh

Photo: Kuldip Dhiman


LOVE, they say, can bridge many a gap. Therefore, a large number of second-generation Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs and Christians are increasingly choosing the "bond of love" over a communal or caste one in the strife-torn valley of Jammu and Kashmir despite a violent suppression of such alliances. Many persons have either been killed in the process or been forced to kill their feelings. Many are living in hiding and many outside the state. Those who continue to live here are treated like outcastes by their communities and families. Yet, the inter-community love affairs go on.

Soon after Rajnish Sharma married a Muslim girl, Amina, he landed in lock-up and was later found dead in police custody
WEDLOCK: Soon after Rajnish Sharma married a
Muslim girl, Amina, he landed in lock-up and was
later found dead in police custody

Members of the Mahila Sangharsh Samiti demand justice in the Rajnish death case
FAIR PLAY: Members of the Mahila Sangharsh Samiti demand justice in the Rajnish death case
Photos: Anand Sharma

Even though such marriages are seen as a veiled bid to decimate the numerical strength of a community in the state, where the demand for a separate homeland is raging since decades, inter-faith marriages form an undercurrent of a new Kashmir. But are they a solution?
When Amina Yusuf of Kashmir and Rajnish Sharma of Jammu fell in love eight years ago in Gulmarg, they dreamt of a new life and a new Kashmir. A Kashmir where, like them, people from different faiths could not only dare to marry but also live together peacefully.

But that was not to be. By Amina’s own admission before the Jammu police and the media, the couple went on to marry against the wishes of the families and the diktats of their community leaders in August last year. But they could live together only for a few days. Rajnish was booked on the charge of kidnapping and forcibly marrying the 26-year-old Amina, aka Anchal Sharma post marriage.

He was "picked up" by the cops on September 29 and found dead in the Srinagar police’s custody on October 4. `A0 A judicial investigation is on in the case. Amina, after living with her in-laws for three months, returned to her parents’ house this January. Later, Amina retracted from the love affair in a statement before a Srinagar court. She claimed she had been forced to marry. The court hearing is on.

There are many others like them. "On an average, we get one such case daily in Jammu city itself. Often, it is easier to trace and catch a militant than a runaway couple," admits a senior police official requesting anonymity. "We go by the law. The girlparents file a case of kidnapping and add the charge of rape later. It boils down to the girl’s stand. If she deposes before a court that she had gone of her own will, which happens rarely, the law protects the couple," says the senior police officer.

He narrates documented tales of runaway couples being recovered from places as far off as Goa and Siliguri. "Couples elope the world all over. But in this state, it acquires far more serious proportions," he says, pointing towards the communal divide. "No community here wants its members to join another community after marriage. The community members fear that one by one, their numbers will dwindle and the demographic change can affect the separatist demand. Interestingly, parents don’t mind if their son brings a girl from another community and converts her".

"But when it comes to their daughters marrying outside the community, there is violence and bloodshed," says former DGP M.M. Khajuria. Enquiries reveal that such runaway couples are found in each colony and region of the militancy-hit state. Many are going through the painful process of having to face society. Others have settled down, albeit in isolation, after braving it all.

Many Kashmiri Pandits marrying Muslims or vice-versa are those whose parents are still living through the wounds of the separatist movement. Elders of different communities openly scoff at the suggestion that the younger generation is scripting the story of a new and mixed society that would never be able to seek division on the lines of community, caste or race.

The marriages between Kashmiri Pandits and Muslims arouse the strongest passions. "There was a time when Kashmiri Pandits marrying Dogri boys or girls was a big no-no. Now, you find hundreds of such cases," reveals a sociologist, preferring anonymity out of fear of a backlash. The case of Kashmiri Pandits and Muslims is significant. The Pandits driven out of the valley have a natural grudge against the Muslims. The latter, too, demanding a separate state for their community, are naturally averse to any such alliance. But their second generation is determined to follow the diktats of the heart.

Interestingly, the first family of the state, the Abdullahs, are the most secular. Union Minister and former Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah is married to a Christian. His son and serving Chief Minister Omar Abdullah is wedded to a Sikh girl. His sister is married to a Hindu, the Union Minister of State for Telecommunications, Sachin Pilot. But it isn’t smooth sailing for everyone.


"What wrong did we do?" asks Shabnam with her husband Ravi Sharma (names changed) holding her hand tightly in their two-room rented house in the city. "We are both working in a multinational company. We liked each other, respect each other’s religion and told our parents of our decision to marry. But there was a volcano of a protest. We had no option but to elope. We got married but were caught. He was booked for kidnapping but the court came to our rescue. Now, we are living happily," she says. Some even take the fight up to the Supreme Court. The case of a Muslim girl from Doda and a Hindu youth from Nagrota is a case in point.

The apex court provided security to this love-lorn couple, hounded by relatives and cops. Anjum, 19, a Muslim from Doda, and Khemraj, 24, a Hindu from Nagrota, eloped few months ago. Both belong to influential families. They are reportedly living in hiding.
The undercurrents have not escaped the eye of social observers. Dr Niharica Subash, assistant professor, sociology, Jammu University, has met 115 such couples who have crossed the social boundaries, "Couples from Hindu, Sikh, Muslim and Christian families, especially the Dogris and Kashmiri Pandits, are running from their homes and marrying. Of these, a Hindu-Muslim, and specifically a Kashmiri Pandit-Muslim marriage, is a cardinal sin and
often results in violence, as happened in the Amina and Rajnish case".

Conversion after marriage becomes the main issue. The DGP remembers how a Sikh girl despite marrying a Muslim in England spent a torturous life for years. She wanted to follow her religion but there was opposition. She pulled along for a few years. But when it came to the children’s religion, she left the family.

Dr Niharica recalls her experiences in meeting two such couples, "Some Hindu girls had got converted. One of them agreed to talk to me on the condition that I wouldn’t disclose that she was originally a Hindu. She had adjusted so well in her new life". Another case was even more telling. "This woman, originally a Hindu, just refused to acknowledge that. She showed me the door, saying she was born a Muslim".

And it is not that all are living unhappily. "Ayaz and his Hindu wife are living happily in Jammu with both practising their respective religions. Even Ayaz’s sister, married to a Hindu, is living happily. Both had got their marriages solemnised outside the state in a court.

"This trend of going outside the state for marriage has been noted in most of the cases," asserts Dr Niharica, "Most of the couples I have met, married outside the state, especially in Chandigarh and New Delhi. A few return to the state. They can get married here but the repercussions would be immediate, while outside the state they can get a safe haven."

Saranjit Kaur cites from her M. Phil study on emerging trends of marriages, "There was a time when no community married out of caste or clan. But slowly, a change is coming. Dogris and Pandits are marrying, though there is opposition, but most of the parents accept the alliance once the grandchildren are born.

"The children of Kashmiri Pandits, especially those born in Jammu after migration, identify themselves with the people and culture here. They accept them, unlike their parents, who were forced to leave the valley."

The biggest opposition is to Hindu-Muslim marriages. "In Jammu and Kashmir, it is feared that such marriages can affect the majority of a population in a given area. For instance, if Hindu and Sikh girls marrying Muslims practice their faith, the Muslim majority is affected in the valley. The whole aim of the secessionist movement, or demand for leaving India for Pakistan is the rendered useless," she reasons. There is trouble for Dalit-Brahmin marriages as well. Rahul Dev of the Progressive Students Association shares the trouble he faced on marrying a Pandit girl.

He belongs to the Other Backward Classes. His wife, Rosy, is a Brahmin. Both studied law together in college. When they decided to marry, all hell broke loose." "The religious and caste lines are so deeply set. My father is an ex-serviceman. He accepted after two years that I was marrying a Brahmin girl. He still says he did not feel as much pain from the two bullets that pierced him while fighting the enemy as much he did at his son marrying outside the caste," says Rahul. "But he still doesn’t visit our house," adds Rosy.

first published in -- http://www.tribuneindia.com/2010/20100207/spectrum/main1.htm


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Monday, March 26, 2012

A journey through river Vitasta...stories of divided families of jammu and kashmir

THE CREW:
Mohd Urfi (L), a Pakistani journalist, and Pawan Bali, a Jammu-based woman scribe, with their team.
A Tribune photo

Bridging divide on the Jhelum
Jupinderjit Singh/TNS
Jammu, March 25


For many years, Altaf Mir (50) has stuck to a daily routine. He walks down to the banks of the Jhelum near Muzaffarabad in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK) and stands there gazing at the gushing waters of the river.

“The water brings with it the fragrance of my motherland, Anantnag, where I was born,” he says, pointing towards the Indian side of Kashmir. His misty eyes have just one dream in them - to travel to his homeland.

Across the border in Tangdhar in India, Mubina Begum (55) looks at the same river, hoping to reunite with her younger brother, Javed, who had crossed over to Pakistan in 1989. “I wish I turn into a drop of water and along with this river flow to the place where my brother is,” yearns Mubina’s elder brother, Izaz Ahmed.

Jhelum, which originates from VeriNag in Srinagar, acts like a natural barrier and a virtual Line of Control between India and Pakistan at many places. But for Altaf and Mubina and many other families separated for decades by the long-running conflict between India and Pakistan, it is also the river of hope. These families want to move freely back and forth to meet their near and dear ones on the other side of the border. This hope and also the suffering of staying away from your loved ones is aptly reflected in VITASTA (another name for Jhelum), a short film made by two journalists - one from India and another from Pakistan.

In a first ever initiative of its kind, the duo - Pawan Bali and Mohammad Urfi - overcame constraints of language, communication, apart from traditional barriers, to come up with the film, which was virtually edited online via SKYPE.

“Jonathan, Director of Conciliation Resources, introduced us in 2010 over phone. As direct calls between Indian and Pakistan were not allowed, we struggled to be in touch with each other,” says Bali.

“Our plan was to travel along the Jhelum. I started from VeriNag, the source of the river in the Valley, and he started from a dam on it on the Pakistan side. The idea was to do shoot some footage on the way and meet at the LoC. I reached there, but Pakistan authorities didn’t allow him to meet me,” recounts Bali.

The scribe said she was struggling to understand Urdu and Urfi wasn’t comfortable with English. “When nothing worked out, we turned to Skype to remain in touch and even edited the film online. It was eventually in August 2011 that we met in Dubai in a conference organised by CR and gave final touches to the film,” says Bali.

Talking to The Tribune, Urfi says the film doesn’t touch upon the causes and reasons of the divide. “We have shown the human side of suffering and hope that things move on between the countries.”

The film shows real-life scenes of divided families meeting each other in Poonch in Jammu and Tangdhar in Srinagar.

“At Tangdhar, people from both countries come on the opposite banks of the Jhelum. They wrap their letters on stones and hurl these at each other. It is pity that in this age of communication, they have to rely on this method of remaining in touch. We hope our film brings the two countries closer,” says Pawan and Urfi.

Funded by a UK-based NGO, Conciliation Resources (CR), the film was screened at a conference of UK parliamentarians in London and in PoK Legislative Assembly early this year. It is yet to be screened in India. However, the film has found its way on the YouTube and already has many hits.

story link : http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120326/main6.htm

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Sarkanda and songs--life and death for soldiers on Indo-Pak border



Here film songs, swaying grass may mean life or death

Jupinderjit Singh at Chicken Neck Point

The tall elephant grass serves as a natural fencing on the Indo-Pakistan border at the famed Chicken Neck point in Jammu region. The average distance between Indian border outposts on either side of Pakistan ranges between 2 km and 15 km. The Chenab, which flows along the north-west side of the man-made fence that abuts the tall grass, makes the land fertile on both sides of the border.

For the gun-totting uniformed men of the Border Security Force (BSF), who maintain a 24/7 vigil on the border in perhaps the harshest working conditions, ‘sarkanda’, as the elephant grass is known in local parlance, and songs, mainly of Hindi movies, may mean life or death at times.

It means life as the dried up ‘sarkanda‘ sticks held together by ropes make up for walls and roofs of the border outposts, which unlike the concrete blocks of Pakistan, are covered with tin sheets only. The grass keeps them warm as the bone-chilling winter sets in. The grass on the opposite side of the fence can have death lurking around. This grass hides the movement of the Pakistani troops and helps terrorists hide for infiltration bids.

There is not much to cheer about at the border where life is always on the edge. Poor mobile connectivity, wild boars, reptiles, snakes, and above all hostility across the fence make survival the top priority. Yet, the place is abuzz with Hindi movie songs played on radio stations. The BSF’s counterpart - the Pakistan Rangers- appear to enjoy listening to Indian songs too which they play on their loudspeakers. Music clearly knows no barrier.

But death lurks around here also. “We have noticed that there is always some movement, some conspiracy when songs are played on high volume. There is always an attempt to smuggle stuff or to push terrorists in our territory,” revealed a BSF source. “So, while we enjoy songs, we remain alert,” he stressed. The “Pardesi, Pardesi” song of Raja Hindustani is the Pakistan forces’ favourite. The Pakistan farmers on the tractors, however, have a special liking for songs from the film ‘Border’. BSF sources revealed, “We are rather surprised as the movie shows Pakistan forces being humbled yet they play it a lot.”

AFSPA J and K police got no means to take over from Army


We need more training, men to replace Army: DGP
Jupinderjit Singh
Tribune News Service

Jammu, December 13
Though there may be a lot of talk about and lobbying for the revocation of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) from some parts of the state, the ground reality reveals that the state police needs more manpower, training and infrastructure to take over the responsibility of tackling militants from the Army.

Though the police is in the process of enhancing its capabilities to take over the responsibility of countering militancy and it has raised five battalions this year, it still needs about 40,000 more personnel for effective presence and domination in the state.

While refusing to link the issue with the debate on the AFSPA, DGP Kuldeep Khoda, in an exclusive chat with The Tribune, said the police needed more men and machinery for effective domination over a region like the Army.

“We are on the way to achieve that. But we need about 50,000 personnel against the present strength of 31,000 of the armed police. And the civil police has to go beyond one lakh from the present strength of 82,000.”

The DGP said the police was capable of handling any responsibility but for the complete takeover of the responsibility to counter militancy, training, capability and infrastructure were also needed to be enhanced.

The militant attack on Law Minister Ali Mohammad Sagar in Srinagar two days ago has brought new focus to the demand for the revocation of the AFSPA. While the opposition parties, especially in Jammu, view the attack as testimony to their demand for the need of the Army in the state, others question why the AFSPA could not stop the attack.

Army sources say the fight against militancy had always been a joint effort of all security agencies. “The unified operations made the fight against militants successful. The Army and the police can never alone claim credit for it. But everyone knows which is better trained and equipped for counter-insurgency operations.”

Well-known defence analyst Maj Gen Goverdhan Singh Jamwal (retd) said even if the police had the required strength it could not take on the enemy which was well trained in modern warfare. “The police has a soft role to play. It deals with civil society. The Army is trained to kill the enemy. Terrorists are motivated to kill. Only a better trained, better battle-hardened security agency like the Army can handle them face to face.”

Maj Gen Jamwal said the militant attack on the Law Minister testified that militancy was not yet over. “We have less attacks because the AFSPA is there. Just imagine if there is no AFSPA, how many such attacks could happen?”

first published in The Tribune dated : December 14, 2011
link :http://www.tribuneindia.com/2011/20111214/j&k.htm#2

Monday, December 21, 2009

unique medical corps of militants in Jand K

Pak trains medical corps of militants
Jupinderjit Singh
Tribune News Service

Jammu, December 19
A unique “medical corps” comprising 30 militants has been trained by Pakistani forces to take medical care of militants injured while infiltrating into the state or in encounters with security forces later.

Some of these are doctors, while others have the basic degree in medical science and have been trained to treat bullet injuries as well as save militants from frostbite in acute winter conditions.

DGP Kuldeep Khoda told The Tribune that a militant holding an MBBS degree was arrested in Srinagar in March this year. During investigation, it was learnt that 30 others were being specially trained. Later, intelligence reports also confirmed that a special “medical corps” was being raised.

Sources revealed that it was now that these trained medicos could be pushed into the Indian side and some may even have infiltrated already. With a long winter ahead, forces are already on a high alert against infiltration bids. It is unusual for the Pakistani forces to try to push maximum number of militants during winter.

At the most, one such trained doctor would accompany each group of militants. Just a few days ago, militants had reportedly crossed into the Gurez sector traversing snow, the sources said.

Already, over 20 major infiltration attempts have been made in the Jammu division in the last three months. The Central government also admitted in the Rajya Sabha two days ago that about 700 militants were active in the state.

Last year, a large number of militants had crossed even snow peaks, newspaper reports revealed. One of them suffered frostbites and was caught by people. The militants had worn white clothes so that they could pass over snow unnoticed.

The police and intelligence sources revealed that the militants had made many attempts to sneak into India in the Jammu division, but they may try to scale snowy peaks also.