Monday, June 7, 2010

Tragedy of Being a Kashmiri Pandit!!!!!!!!

This blog is not just any other blog. It’s a subject that’s very close to my heart. It’s about the journey of a child who saw 2-3 generations trapped in ill-fated militancy, and witnessed all the misery it got along. Even if I was a kid, I felt the blow so hard that it’s still fresh in my memory. I can still hear those dreadful words from the mosque, I am still aware of the trauma we were in. I still remember those fearful nights….those dreaded moments that anyone will just walk in our house and kill us. I used to be hell scared if my mother went out to buy something and hoped that she will come back alright. I can’t tell you how it feels to be a victim for something you didn’t even do….

No matter how much we Kashmiri’s are proud of our heritage, we were hurt and betrayed by our own people. Our own land is no more the same, we were thrown out saying that we don’t belong here. I don’t know if any of my non-kashmiri friends will ever understand what it is to be a ‘cursed Hindu’. What is it to be a child whose childhood didn’t see innocence but responsibilities? What it is to see your family torn? The bitter feeling of losing everything! From a luxurious life to life in a box; yes we stayed in a box, what else will you call when a whole family stays, cooks and sleeps in one room? Migration from a big house to a box was just phenomenal, but I guess we were so traumatized that it didn’t matter what we had and what we didn’t as long as we were alive.

I belong to that generation of unlucky kids who witnessed the upsurge of militancy. It is sad, very sad to be one of them. I feel sorry not only for myself but my grandmother, who had to leave her proud legacy and was forced to stay in the box. I am sorry for my parents who had to stay away from each other for as long as 15 years…. just because they had a family to support. I feel sorry for a wife, a mother and a daughter who had to do everything all by herself for her family. I have not known anyone as strong as my mother. I was strongly influenced by her; she planted roots of a strong personality with an optimistic mental outlook in me. My mother stood like a pillar of strength for our family and never let us feel as to how disturbed and traumatized she felt. My mom being an intelligent lady was never conservative and always had progressive ideas. She used to encourage us to learn to stand on our own feet and pursue our professions with oozing self-confidence. Her main ambition was the prosperity of her children.

I feel sorry for my father, who was kind of trapped in his job. As a son, husband and a father, he had his responsibilities. My dad, a disciplined, dedicated and an honest man, who approaches issues with an alert mind and goes about his job in a methodical manner but he was not given a fair chance to get transferred to Jammu so that he could be with his family. All useless government and so called human rights agencies just pretended to help the Pandits….but I know what they did. Ask any Kashmiri Pandit and they will tell you what all have they suffered.

I feel sorry for the son and the daughter, who could never have a full fledged family. No mentor around during their career building years. Even if my dad is a living encyclopedia, with all the information in the world…. be it religion, science, occult sciences, agriculture, anything and everything…. A very well-learned man but at the same time, he is an expert in finding fault with others and castrating them for their shortcomings. I wish, I and my little brother had a good guidance and support of our father when we were growing up. May be I would have been much more than what I am now. It’s not that I am not happy with what I am but I wish I had a chance to do it even better. It’s not that I am not proud of what all I have accomplished in all these years, but I don’t think it’s my success… This success and its credit belong to my parents without whom I would never have been able to come so far. I owe so much to them and all the pain and sacrifices they made for both of us. I am so blessed to be their daughter, even if I had ups and downs in my life…. They never gave up on me. Their faith in me and their whole-hearted blessings have taken me all the way up.

The worst thing is to be a refugee in your own country. When not only other cities, states and communities treat you like a bunch of losers but they also make fun by saying “hey, I can’t believe you fled from your homeland, how can you? How can anyone? You are too weak to let go of your house and age old legacy”. Can someone go and tell them, it’s easy to say but god forbid. I hope no one ever on this planet has to go through anything like this. I can’t tell you how hurt my whole community is….. Where should we go and seek answers when even our own gods have turned their backs on us. Life was difficult and impossible. People just talk and talk; they never did anything for the benefit of a ‘migrated Hindu’ – even if we are in majority here. There were very few people who came up to help.

I don’t know if anyone reading this blog will ever be able to relate to the trauma faced by us. I don’t think anyone can believe or imagine how difficult it was for all the Kashmiri Pandits. We started from scratch… actually from a twig. Even if we had everything a night before, the next day we were beggars, just beggars who had nothing but just a hope that we will come back soon. Newspapers covered with blood everywhere – ‘5 people killed’- ’10 people killed’ – ’20 people killed’. Who kept the count? We all were busy thanking for each day we were alive (oh sorry) survived. With my father in Srinagar and we surviving in Jammu, I have not seen a single day, when my mother and grandmother were not worried about my father’s safety and safe arrival. Prayers were all we had.

I don’t blame anyone. I don’t know why it happened? I don’t know what went wrong, that our own people turned against us. I don’t have an answer, but I have so many questions that I want to ask. These questions never leave me; they are always there in my head. And I keep wondering, what was it that I did wrong? What was my fault?
I salute the whole brigade of Kashmiri Pandits for their fighting spirit. They have fought against all odds. I don’t think there can be any other community that could have survived this tragedy. Even a mighty country like the US couldn’t survive 9/11….. and a handful of Kashmiri Pandits survived and rose above all odds. It wasn’t a miracle nor did happen in one night…………they worked hard and never gave up. I guess our rich culture; our values, ethics, morals and above all our education came to our rescue. I salute all the parents who stood up to make their children’s life peaceful.

I salute, I salute, I salute………

7 comments:

  1. Mis.DW
    I read the blog,loved it . I felt really sad about the bitter experiences you and your family has gone through.I don't know why it happened in my country.
    I hope all odds have fallen back and let all the past glory will return to you.

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  2. dad calls me the migratory kid as i was born just after 6 months after migration...i havent seen it...i never knew what that terror was all about...but i know that when we went to kashmir...mom was dam scared which was weird because having lived in a place for the half of your life and being afraid of that place...i just try n relate that with delhi...n i can't..but i know the hardships they all have faced...and i am proud of all of us who have come out of it brave... and are still shining stars....yes we SALUTE all of them...

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  3. Dear devika,
    It was a emotional blog and i felt proud that people like you survive and thrive though outside kashmir.Its hard to say "we reap what we have sown" but i cant falsify Gita. Sometimes we should acknowledge that we know only a drop in the ocean of knowledge.Belief in "Truth alone triumphs" and some action is warranted. Its a pity that not even a single in your community took up to politics. You say that yours are in majority then somebody should've been in politics and do something.May be everybody is interested in their family alone(i'm saying if something is wrong, clean up and not wait for somebody to clean up).If a entire community suffers then some in the community should take responsibilty for the suffering or take politics. Its pretty easy for me to say all these but one cant expect me to go to kashmir and fight for them. May be you miss a true leader. I salute a few but not all of them.

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  4. this rendition has taken me back to the years when me and my family fled the valley..4th march 1990.. i remember to this day exactly as it happened. i was told we would be going out for a month and then return when things get better..they never did and it will be 21 years next year.
    but maybe it had something for us all. we all are wiser now.will never ever trust "them" again. we are richer by experience and by better education. we are better as we have had better chances to educate ourselves and rebuild what we lost..and finally we have a generation that appreciates sacrifices made by our families to ensure we reach where we are destined to.. 990992@gmail.com

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  5. Dear Devika,
    God is always there with you, Did u listen a song " Tu Na Jane As Pas Hai Khuda...Tu Na Jane As Pas Hai Khuda". I salute none other than your Mother for Your Success cum being with us, She must have fought for you with an equivalent efforts that Shivaji Maharaj (A Maratha blessed by Ma-Jagdamba) fought for "Hindhavi Swarajya". i have many points to comment on, i will go as per you reply me on facebook on vsvilas.avhale@gmail.com

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  6. Just imagine once----of people from other religions and communities who have migrated in a similar fashion and faced worse conditions than yours? Being raped, family members killed in front of your own eyes and then thrown out of your own land forcefully and not migrated. Sweetheart it is these kinds of atrocities that can shake you...talk about just leaving your land!

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  7. Dear Devi ka
    I am sure you didn't have to struggle much while writing this blog because words must have flown freely from the core of your heart and were potent enough to touch strings of many more bleeding ones like yours.Battles are not fought on the battlefields under such circumstances but everyday is a new challenge a new battle to be fought while one is living in holes called homes.We survived. I agree we owe it to our moms who raised the kids with all the pain wrapped inside themselves and a smile on their faces.Thisturmoil rendered us stronger.Strong enough to face any situation.We continue the journey .This rootless existence.We live to pass on this legacy to the new members of our community. Count your blessings and be inspired by all the mothers who were the pillars of strength in those difficult times.Be positive and never lose hope .We will return to our homeland.

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