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Destruction and Injustice
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Index |
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Destruction and Injustice
The Tribulations Of
Kashmiri Pandits
The Story Of
Kashmir
Problem
Introduction To The Book
Maharaj Kaul, Editor
When
a person or a community hits the headlines for a while a wave of curiosity to
find out more about it is generated. People want to know more about the subject
of the sensational news, in some cases they want to go to the roots of the story
in the news.
Such
is the situation with Kashmir Problem, which has hit headlines over a
half-century. Kashmir Problem is complex as it has grown through a long stretch
of time and contains diverse elements. A vast majority of non-Kashmiri Indians
do not know it in full depth and very few foreigners have even a conversational
knowledge of it. This ignorance contributes to the difficulties of solving this
problem.
This
booklet is mostly based on a seminar Kashmir
Day presented by Kashmir Overseas Association (KOA) on
Oct. 26, 2002, at Kendal Park, New Jersey under the auspices of Bharat
Sevashram Sangha Of
North America. The idea behind the seminar was to inform non-Kashmiri Indians about the
intractable and longstanding problem of
Kashmir. It was also projected by the creators of the seminar that the seminar
materials would be used for organizing similar seminars in other cities in
U.S.A. Behind this thinking was the idea that
by improving the information level of people about the problem Kashmiri Pandits
(KP’s) will increase the support
of their Indian brethren and American friends, who will better understand the
causes of their plight. The jump from seminar to the booklet was a logical step
in the effort to maximize the
dissemination of the information about Kashmir Problem, thereby gaining support
for the cause of the rehabilitation of Kashmiri Pandits. The booklet is not a
comprehensive work on the subject of Kashmir Problem but is a useful
introductory outline for the people who are only superficially acquainted with
it.
This
booklet should have been produced by Government Of India (GOI) but that has been
very behind in this and other departments in achieving the solution of Kashmir
Problem. Throughout nineties the awareness of Kashmir Problem even among
U.S.
congressional representatives and their staff was low. Then unable to take
GOI’s passivity and incompetence anymore, and seeing Government Of
Pakistan’s strides in the diffusion of misinformation on Kashmir Problem
through its spokesman Guhlam Nabi Fayi, a Kashmiri organization, Indo-American
Kashmiri Forum (IAKF), took the wheel in its hands. Through its effective
communications
U.S.
congressional people started getting some real information on Kashmir Problem.
Some
sixty-thousand people, Hindus, Muslims, and others have died in the ongoing
Kashmir
war, without the end in sight. The recent murder of twenty-four KP’s in
Nadimarg,
Kashmir, which included two children, is a case in point, when many people thought
that the war was cooling off. The fires driving the Kashmir Problem are enormous
as they are sourced from the almost inexhaustible human weaknesses: religious
bigotry, hatred, greed, blindness, and political exploitation. Generations of
Pakistani politicians have kept the Kashmir Problem alive to keep the real
devastating problems facing that nation on the back burner. The fantasy of a
beautiful
Kashmir
hanging romantically on the horizon has seduced Pakistani people to the extent
of them becoming blind to the downfall of their nation, economy, and
institutions. Today
Pakistan
stands as a world terrorism capital, impoverished, torn asunder between the
blind, insensitive, and incoherent extremists on one hand and unscrupulous,
greedy, opportunistic politicians on the other. One thing that unites this
benighted crowd is the fantasy of them one day acquiring the charismatic
Kashmir.
We
do not know what will be the conclusion to the fight over Kashmir, if there is
one, given the intrinsic weakness of
Pakistan
as a nation and the shallowness of GOI’s determination to fight for what is
theirs. Let things be as they may but we have to save KP community. It has
almost totally migrated out of the
valley
of
Kashmir
and is struggling through the process of transplantation. It needs opportunity,
respect, and friendliness.
We
hope this booklet opens a window, however slightly, on the tribulations of
KP’s through history and thereby makes the fellow human beings understand them
better.
Suffern,
New York
4.16.03
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