Blue is the colour of hope in Kashmir

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prasad1

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If the colour of the holy spring at Kheer Bhawani at Tul Mul village in Kashmir’s Ganderbal district is good evidence, Kashmir may be on the cusp of a new beginning.
As thousands of devotees gathered at the annual mela of Kheer Bhawani, Kashmir’s largest Hindu festival (a gazetted holiday in the valley), the gentle interdependence and mutual respect that Pandits and Muslims have enjoyed for centuries was also on display.

The Pandits’ principal deities have mostly natural forms. Sharika is the holy hill at Hari Parbat adjoining the great fort that Akbar built, while Ragya is the spring at Tul Mul. And on Tuesday — under the bed of rose petals showered by the pilgrims — the water was a gentle aquamarine blue: the colour of hope and with the promise of a better future. My mother remembers the spring as dark purplish and then almost black in the troubled Nineties.

As thousands of Pandits and other devotees prayed at the holy spring at Kheer Bhawani at Tul Mul village in Kashmir’s Ganderbal district, there were Muslims too.
All the shops that sell the puja samagri — including the kands (sugar lumps), diyas, and agarbati — are run by Muslims. There were a range of stalls and service centres to help the devotees and provide free kehwa, luchi (a flat Kashmiri deep fried roti) and even lunch.
But perhaps the most striking was one run by Sameer Kaul and Suhail Ahmed. A Pandit and a Muslim, one teaching Computer Science and the other Management, both teachers of the Islamia College of Commerce, have been serving the “community” for more than the last decade. Their bond was one of a shared past that could lead to a new future.
I asked an elderly Muslim gentleman from downtown Srinagar why he was there. He said that he had been coming to Tul Mul for 40 years and added, with the proverbial Kashmiri sarcasm: Azkal cha Gaunah?” (Why, have they made it crime?).

But in deference to Ragya, every Muslim I met said that he would never enter the shrine’s compound after eating mutton, fish or fowl nor would anyone from the neighbourhood. It was evident from the gathering at Kheer Bhawani that the yearning for reconciliation is intense on both sides and this year could be a game changer. Perhaps that is what the colour at the holy spring was telling us.
Lifting the fog: Blue is the colour of hope in Kashmir - The Hindu
 
The devotees, who have come here on a purely religious trip, seem to be unaffected by the recent controversy over the proposed resettlement of Pandits in separate townships in Kashmir. The proposal had evoked sharp reactions from national and regional political parties, besides all separatist groups. For Tikka Lal and his wife Sarla, life has “moved on too much’’ over the past 25 years to even think of “resettlement” now. “We have come to attend the mela because we want to keep in touch with our roots and traditions. Our children simply refused to join us. They were born and brought up outside Kashmir. Their life is there. They are not willing to come back and settle here,” said Tikka Lal, a teacher who once lived in Magam in the Valley, but is now a resident of Delhi.
For Roshan Lal Mattu, another pandit who had settled in Jammu after 1990, the resettlement issue is just a “political gimmick”.
Resettlement a political gimmick, say Kashmiri Pandits
 
Most of the Kasmiri Pandits that I spoke would like to return to the valley once the separate townships for Pandits are created with ex servicemen providing security...I think this should be implemented at the earliest
 
The govt has given the nod for return of hindus and sikhs who face an uncertain future or harassment or violence in any country. And Modi said in his rallies - where will they go, india is their mother country and they will be allowed to settle here.
 
Settling of kashmiri pundits is not enough. Special status for kashmir must be revoked, and all indians must be allowed to purchase property, start business and settle down. And kashmiri saivism must be allowed to bloom in its old splendor.
 
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