SAFR: A Journey to Roots
"A Tale of Hate, Love, Friendship and Exile and the
search for roots in the Disputed Land of Jammu Kashmir"
By Qazi Shibli
Significant Inter religious
violence shivered Jammu Province in 1947. Pro Indian Hindus and Sikhs hammered
Muslims; Pro Pakistan Muslims harmed and massacred Sikhs and Hindus in
retaliation. Although Indians and Pakistanis have largely ignored this
violence, the evidence of the same is broadly found. A UNCIP report of the sub-committee on
western Kashmir stated that “Many Muslim refugees have lively recollections of
the Jammu Massacre of 1947”. Newspaper coverage of Anti Muslim activity began
on 26 September 1947. CMG published a massive report “Exodus of Muslims from
Jammu”. On 19th October 1947, CMG began reporting of violence incidents on
regular basis particularly in Poonch area of Jammu division. Of the specific incidents as reported by CMG
on 18th December 1947 involved a massive loss of lives and a mass exodus. “8000
Muslims were killed near Kathua and 15,000 at Akhnur Bridge. 14000 were sieged
at Sambha in Jammu and Muslim Women were taken away by State troops, 25000 were
murdered at maogoan” Massacred people
numbered to 2, 37,000, a report published in The times on 10 August 1948. There
were countless incidents of Loot and arson, rape and murder, hangings and
tortures. Commoners fled to safer places, some of them crossed over to the
other side of the border into Kotli, Muzaffarabad, Most of them failed to do
so, while other managed to.
That 21st October, the troopers
raided an attractive house positioned amongst a cosmos of tall trees. The Three
storied house was an apt reflection of rich cultural heritage of Kashmir. A large
lawn parallel to the house had chicken coops, three of them, in fact, which
gave shelter to dozens of chicken. Besides, the chicken coop stood tall a gigantic
chinar tree. The house was fenced high to escape the threat of thieves and wild
animals. The House built in mud which gave shelter to hundreds of tiny
beautiful sparrows. Outside the house surged a small stream where women from
the nearby houses used to wash clothes and utensils. The house stood on a
foothill and the track to the house was flanked on either side by knee- high
grass and speckles of white and bright yellow flowers. The same track sneaked
uphill and led to a flat field where poplars and apricots grew in clusters. The
whole village could be sighted from the roof of this house. Master Nazeer Ahmed
from downtown, Srinagar, the owner of the house desolately looked at the stream
from his window pane
The place that once used to a
gossip centre for the happenings in the village had now been pushed to silence,
the silence; yes it was the silence that had taken over to the gossips and the
happening conversations.
The
Dogra forces scrambled the tall walls into the lawn of the house, Kicked and
broke down the door. Master Nazeer Ahmed had been teaching in the village
school for the past many years now. He pleaded for Justice as the troopers
neared him. The mercy plea went unheard. The troopers started beating him ruthlessly.
All the raiders who once used to be his students did not give an ear rather
beat him mercilessly, and then there was a cry from outside, something severely
horrifying. The men flashed out of the house to chase the voice. Nazeer drank a
glass of water and ran, ran till he found an armored vehicle laden with some
more Muslims knowing not what life had in its bag for him. The vehicle was dark inside and humans inside
had a sturdy time breathing.
The next day, the vehicle stopped
and people were asked to come out. Nazeer sighted this board at a distance “Akram Khan Tailors, Peshawar” Nazeer
was taken aback. He started arguing with the Bus driver. But then a flashback,
what had happened the other day made him thank the driver. This was the reality
now. In the middle of a Refugee camp he stood, thinking about his own house. It
took him days to accept this harsh reality. As soon as he did, He started
teaching at the Refugee camp and was soon posted to a High school in Lahore,
then the University of Peshawar. Nazir had always dreamt of helping and serving
his homeland, Kashmir. But..
Sunlight peeps through Curtains
Like a sleepy child, nodding in- out
Yet you sleep, the wave of pre- dawn
Passion remaining, lost childhood dreams
It was September 1986, Faeeza, 4,
at a distance spotted a paper machee shop and got instantaneously fascinated to
visit it on the famous St. Stephen Street, in Edinburgh of Scotland. The shop read in bold letters “The feel of Kashmir." Her Parents
frisked her away from that fascinating sight and boarded the car to the
Drummond Street where her father, a professor in Middle East studies owned a
small house.
Faeeza, a notorious kid, did her
schooling from the St. Howard’s; it was perhaps that time when Faeeza got used
to smoking along with other girls at the school. During schooling time she had a couple of
boyfriends, both Scottish. Considering the fact, that Faeeza was bright with
studies, her parents recommended her to study Literature soon after she
finished her schooling, but she desired to study International Affairs. All the
way since her schooling, she never chose to call herself a Muslim. She was convinced
by the theory of Islamophobia.
Faeeza
applied for Admissions at a few places but choose to move to the University of
Durban in South Africa. For the first few months, she rented a house. Syed Zehra,
a classmate of Faeeza from Iran used to wear Hijaab to the university. Everyone
including Faeeza ridiculed her "pathetic" attire. This still and calm
girl though never resisted. On the contrary she used to smile at Faeeza and
others. She was a staunch follower Imam Ayatollah Khomeini had been labeled as Islamic
Extremist like all Muslims in Faeeza’s school.
All Islamists were Extremists and terrorists to Faeeza.
It was during her first year in
Durban University that she fell in relation with a William who had his roots
from Palestine, an Israeli as he would call himself. After a strong relation of
a few months she chose to live in with him. A cool morning in 2005, shortly
before Faeeza’s 23rd birthday, the sky was translucent gray, and gusts of
clammy, cold wind kept flustering the screen door. That day in 2005, the west
bank was bombed by Israel. Discussing the same, resulted in a ghastly brawl
with William. Not able to defend Palestine, she felt agitated, banged the door
and stormed out of the house to go out for a walk. Drenched with tears amid
vigorous showers, she ran and ran to a place where the crowd fades away and peace
unfolds. Shivering with cold now, she sat down on a miniature bench on this
silent street, faeeza sat down
The expense of spirit in a waste of shame
Is lust in action: and till action, lust
Is perjured, murderous, bloody, full of blame,
Savage, extreme, rude, cruel, not to trust;
Enjoyed no sooner but despised straight;
Past reason hunted; and no sooner had,
Past reason hated, as swallowed bait,
On purpose laid to make the taker mad
She spotted a brawny man of fair
complexion, self satisfied, immense demeanor as he arrived closer and closer
holding something in his hand. Growing in suspense, she somehow felt acquainted
to the man who was wearing a green baggy jacket, his neck covered with an
Afghani Muffler and a round thick clothed alien cap. He sat down besides her on
the highway street and instantly asked her “Daughter, Can I invite you for a
cup of Tea?” Faeeza initially refused, but amidst the cold and the kind gestured
tender polite man who seemed more in his 50’s, she considered. They sat down
for a cup of tea in Rammy’s café on the Lake Street Avenue, Durban. Shabbir
Ahmed told her that he sold shawls and he was from Kashmir. The place was alien
to Faeeza but being a student of International Affairs, she felt briskly
fascinated to know more. Shabbir had been in South Africa for many years but
his roots are from Kashmir, “The
paradisiacal land occupied by alien rulers since 1586” he said. Faeeza said
she was born and brought up in Scotland; she had been Scottish by birth. Now
she has been in South Africa for the past two years. Her words were the tale
she had been told since her childhood. This was the first time perhaps that she
had conversed with a Muslim. The conversation ended on a positive note and
Shabbir gifted her wrapped “Something”. Faeeza moved back to her apartment to
hear William bid her a farewell.”You bloody terrorists, you all are the same.
We will neither spare you nor let you live in peace”.
Shabbir and Zehra’s perpetual sobriety and William’s hatred partially changed
her downbeat perception partly towards Muslims.
The
next day she apologetically went to Zehra. Zehra after a brief conversation
invited Faeeza to move in with her. She accepted without any hesitance, as she
had no other options. Faeeza moved to her apartment, packed her belongings
and atop, she placed the wrapped “something” shabbir had gifted her. From that
night, Faeeza and Zehra did their chores together, they sat in the kitchen and
rolled dough, chopped onions, minced garlic, offered bits of cucumber to each
other, they discussed about their cultures. Zehra had her roots in Afghanistan,
but after the Russian occupation they had moved to Iran. They used to converse
a lot, discuss, argue, as Zehra always used to be Pro Islam finding Faeeza
seconding everything that was Pro Muslim and that's what connected them
strongly to each other. “Arguments are
lessons, arguments can make us love, if the aim is learning, not defeating”
Faeeza slowly grew accustomed to this tentative but pleasant
companionship. She was eager for two cups of “Doogh” that zehra loved to make
for Faeeza . They used to share and discuss international affairs in the yard.
In the mornings, Faeeza found herself looking forward to the sound of Zehra’s
Prayer in the early dawn. When Faeeza spotted Zehra her eyes always sprang
open. Faeeza sprang her arms open to hold Zehra, Zehra in return used to give
blessings. But Faeeza forcibly pushed
Zehra and hugged her. Of all the earthly pleasures, Faeeza's favorite was lying
next to Zehra, so close that she could watch her big pupils dilate and shrink.
Faeeza loved her fingers over Zehra’s pleasing soft skin, over the dimpled
knuckles, the folds of fat at her elbows. She lay on her belly and her eyes
staring at nothing, and let her mind fly on. Yes, she let it flew distant until
it found a place, sound and safe, calm and peaceful where the barley fields
were green, where the water ran clear and the cottonwood seeds danced by the thousands
in the air, she thought of a place which was red akin to an aflame sunset, she
saw an alien house, three storied built in some Martian place, in a strange
manner. A stream flew outside that house, where she dip her feet beneath an
Acacia tree where women folk gathered near the lake and then it was zehra who always
transited her back to life. That day Zehra told her of the Russian invasion and
the American interference in Afghanistan had unwillingly pushed her father to
leave Afghanistan and settle down in a distant land. Faeeza was all blank. She
knew her father and an old age grandfather who hardly used to talk. Zehra’s
roots got her immensely curious to know her own ones.
The
course was done. With wet eyes they bid farewell to each other. Zehra moved
back to Iran whilst Faeeza got selected in an International Human Rights firm.
Considering the fact that she had
a gap of One month to join the office, she flew home to Edinburgh. After a
brief rest, she talked to her grandfather, a man who wore the same kind of
shawl, that Shabbir had gifted her she was taken aback. The Grandfather who
used to sit on a chair was a gaunt, stooping old man with a toothless smile,
blue eyes with curly hair and plain shaved. He twirled the beads of his Tasbih
rosary as he talked and in his quivering voice he answered the question of
Faeeza .
The
12th of July, 2014, I met this appreciably gripping honey haired lady on a
Social networking site, hair falling down over her shoulders , 6 Feet tall, blue
sharp eyes, face designed to perfection, She was so beautiful that my 3rd grade
vocabulary can’t put it in words. Just the mystical Words of a Persian
legendary poet
“Aariz ast een Ya Qamr, Ya Lala e Humras Een.
Ya Shua e Shams, Ya Aaena e Dil Haas Een”
“It’s impossible to figure out if I am the complainant, or
you are the moon or you are the pearl in a deep ocean, I feel you are akin to
sunrays, No it’s just the mirror of my heart that reflects you as such”
“I clearly loved the fall, but what should one do, so full
of love and admiration, when a striking girl like her is in front of you, and
if she walks into prastical parlor or a Saal or a drug bar and everyone’s
reaction will be ‘ is that an Angel’. Yes, she looked ideally Angelic”
The first day we talked alike all
the creatures do it the first time, introducing ourselves and something, the
fact I was from Kashmir fascinated her, I reasoned International Studies as the
fact, But it was something else. We talked about Palestine in the identical
tone, discussed our diverse cultures, our fascinations and desires, likes and
dislikes. Perhaps, Kashmir was the sole reason that she loved talking to me
frequently. I tried to explore the facts and then one fine day, she told me the
reason. I lasted to talk to this lady, and more than her beauty and appearances
now, her delightful talks and wit used
to fascinate me.
Earlier tracing her roots, her grandfather had quoted
Jahangir.
“Agar Firdous Bar roi Zameen Ast
Hamein Asto, Humein Asto, Humein Ast”
If there’s paradise on the earth, it’s here, it’s here.
Continuing his talk, Nazir Ahmed
told her that he had a family in Indian Controlled Kashmir. He used to have a
house which used to stand incredibly tall; he had two sisters and a brother.
His Father used to be the president of Mohallah committee in Koker Bazaar area
of Kashmir’s capital Srinagar. “My
Mother was loving and Kind, smart and resourceful, outrageously competitive and
utterly maddening, she was a mind reader too. She was my biggest fan as a
child. My ‘Boba’s’ delight for the most mundane of the family gatherings was
something to be savored. She derived her pleasure from all of us being at one
place together. She was honest to a fault while this honesty sometimes made me
wince. My Mother, My Boba. She was the most fastidious person I have ever met.
She was the one who with her fascinating talks and her strong honest character
used to bond the family together. Sitting besides the DAAN, she told us fables
of the old dates, the Jinns and the Paris.”
He
told Faeeza of the childhood fables, the friends he had and the Shikara ride
that cost them 50 Paise those days. “You know the Dal Lake is one of the most
beautiful Lakes, The Whole lake freezes in winters, we used to play Hockey on
the Frozen Lake, What should I tell you my child, But yes, it is the land where
the sun and the moon envy the Land, the moon wants to stay there and the sun
wants to spread its splendid charm over the snooty mountains to make itself look more stunning.
Jaleel, me and Farooq used to be cronies till I was posted in Poonch area of
Jammu Division, You see my child, Kashmir is one, But they just to oppress
filthier, they have divided it into three divisions, named Ladakh, Jammu and
Kashmir. I was 21 years when the Dogra King, Hari Singh unveiled a reign of
Terror of people of Jammu who resisted against his imperialistic approach. I
left my family behind, never looked back.”
I can’t remember
Skipping rocks on the pond
My childhoods forgotten,
My Childhoods Lost.
Going to the lake,
Sitting under the Chinar
Playing with Friends or
Dancing in the snow
“In winters, It Snows and then we have the kangris, the
earthen fire pots, we have the long woolen jackets, phiran, we have handsomely
knit shawls, the one I wear now, the children yearn eagerly for the snow and so
do the old, making heavy preparations, the temperature never exceeds ZERO. In
Springs then, we would Chant, SHEEN GALE, WANDIH CZALIH, BEY YIYI BAHAAR, The
snow will melt, The winter will fade away and the sun will come out, the season
of Spring, the birds will come out and chirp to gleefully welcome it. The snow
on the mountains starts melting down and the frozen waters start to gush again,
The summer is perhaps the finest season, the beauty returns, the colourful
valley shines day and night, the flowers grow and then the callous autumn, we
find it amusing too, the roads you never find them, they are all covered with
leaves of trees, That’s Kashmir my Child. That’s where I belong. The people
there they do not rustle to the shoddily changing scenario of the world, they
are hospitable and admiring, loving and sound, intelligent and caring, and you
know as a human it’s all you need. That’s what we grew up with” Nazeer Ahmed
said.
He
also expressed his protracted longing to visit his dwelling place. He asked his
daughter to show him some photos of Kashmir on the internet. The notebook was
turned on. www.Google.com/images. Here you Go, Grand Pa. She instantly turned to
her grandfather to find him drenched in tears weeping glumly. Seeing the
repulsive sights Faeeza ran to her poignant grandpa and hastily hugged him.
“Grand Pa, I will find you your family and take you there” I promise.
That night in her bed, she
realized, her dream was about the house her grandfather talked about. She now
knew, it was all about Kashmir, that fascination to that paper Machee shop in
Edinburgh, the man whom she used to meet frequently in Durban who had given her
a Shawl, the girl in her University, the boy whom she liked in the University
and that man she loved to talk to, on the highway street. It was all related to
her roots. She did not sleep that night, in fact a choking noise came up her
throat. Her knees weakened. Faeeza suddenly wanted, needed to grope Zehra’s
arm, her shoulder, her wrist, something, anything, to lean on. But she did not
dare. She did not dare move a muscle; she did not dare breathe or blink even.
It was just a mirage shimmering in the distance, a brittle illusion that would
vanish at the slightest provocation. She leaned erect revering those arctic
shades under the incredible Chinar, the NUN Chai from fine-looking Samavaar,
the voluble stream that flowed besides her ancestral abode, the mesmerizing Dal
Lake. A rigorous headache made her sleep that night.
A Few
weeks later, she flew to New Delhi International Airport where Faeeza booked
one more flight for Jammu. Hiring a Taxi, She reached the Poonch area. Poonch was
a crowded, bustling place. When the taxi passes the shrine of Shadra Shareef,
Faeeza cranes her neck to get a better view of its gleaming tiles and the
famous orange tree, the minarets, all of it immaculately and lovingly
preserved. She thinks of the monuments in Scotland, her own country, but she
seconds that thought, this is my country, this is where I belong. On the way,
she saw an Army camp. To Faeeza , it is a blur of yellow dust and black tents
and scanty structures made of corrugated steel sheets.
After
crossing Poonch city, the path is rough, winding, and dim, beneath the
vegetation and undergrowth. The wind makes the tall grass slam against the taxi
on one side and on the other side of her taxi is a kaleidoscope of flowers
moving with the wind, some tall with curved petals, others low, fan leafed, few ragged buttercups peep through the low
bushes. Faeeza hears the twitter of swallows overhead and the busy chatter of
grasshoppers on the taxi window. Driving uphill, the taxi stops “Mam, This is your destiny.” She looks
from a distance. This is the house she often dreamed of.
Faeeza opens the main gate, untouched,
rusty now. Yes this was the place she dreamt about. The lawn is big almost four
times the size of her house in Edinburgh. The Chicken coops are there, there
was a wooden outhouse, she approaches towards the house, the door is gone. She
can hear flies buzzing inside.
To get
in she has to take help of the driver who gets a candle from the nearby shop as
it is dim inside. Faeeza has to give a few minutes to her eyes to adjust. When
she goes in she finds the interior even bigger than what she imagined. The
house is still in a good condition. The walls stand strong. The floor is still
carpeted with torn “PATIJ” a Kashmiri flooring, broken bottles discarded
chewing gum wrappers, wild mushrooms, old yellowed cigarette butts. But mostly
the floor was full of weeds, some stunted, some springing impudently halfway up
the walls. Faeeza leans against the wall. She listens to the wind flittering
through the willows. There are more spider webs stretched across the ceiling.
There’s a deserted bird’s nest in one corner and a bat hanging upside down in
another corner where the wall met the low ceiling. Someone has tried to paint
something on the wall, but much of it has faded away. Faeeza couldn’t initially
recognize what was the language. She captured the same in her camera.
Faeeza sits down and closes her eyes awhile.
Then
suddenly the weeds begin to recede as if someone is pulling them by the roots
from beneath the ground. They sink lower and lower until the earth in the house
has swallowed the last of it’s spiny leaves. The birds nest disassembles and
the spider webs disappear. The graffiti in some alien language is erased off
the wall automatically. A Teacher is coming back from his duty tired takes off
her shoes and a woman calls him for food. He anxiously runs, not for food but
to see his mother who had travelled all the way from Srinagar to see him.
Faeeza also sees two girls knitting sweaters and gossiping something. From the
window she witnesses a boy feeding the chickens outside the house. Zehra is not
there to wake her up. One of the girl leaves the sweater and goes to the
kitchen where there is a wooden table, an iron stove, shelves along the walls
decorated with utensils, pots and pans, a steel kettle, cups and spoons, the
distant gurgling of the stream, which snaps her eyes open.
Outside she looked for the stream, but an elderly woman from the nearby
comes to tell Faeeza that the stream had dried up. She also told him that
Nazeer’s family had been visiting the place often. They have given us their
address with a hope that someday Nazeer will come looking for them. The old
woman told her that Nazeer was a great teacher and people of the locality had
great regards for him. The old woman was saddened to hear the news of Nazeer’s
death who couldn’t make it to Kashmir due to his brief illness.
The
next day she boarded a flight to Srinagar Airport and landed in down town Srinagar.
The narrow bye lanes, no less than a maze, the unvoiced BUND, the evening barbeque,
the captivating Dal lake, perhaps this was the Kashmir her grandfather talked
of. She visited the old home of Nazeer Ahmed, her grandfather in koker Bazaa.
She discovered that the sisters of Nazeer had died a few years back and his
brother had been killed during in early 90’s during a search operation by
Indian Army. It was here that she discovered how an entire generation had been
victimized, reason given: Conflict. But that made no sense to Faeeza . She
heard how her second cousins, three of them had been murdered as a case of
Miss-identity.
Ahmed
accompanied her to the graves of the mother of Nazeer, her great grandmother
and the sisters of Nazeer. They later went to Martyrs Graveyard, Srinagar where
Faeeza found innumerable, thousands of graves, all killed, martyred by Indian
Army. “When Slaves are martyred they are relieved of all their pains, Sister,
We are trapped here, But we do not rustle or bow, we resist and resist, till we
free our lands from the alien rule, I do have the right to stand for my rights,
if my rights are snatched away from me, I stand not a human, I stand a servant
to some dictator, I resist for my rights, my identity” Ahmed said after
seeing tears rolling down the eyes of Faeeza . This young boy remembered Faeeza
of Zehra.
She stayed there for a week. On the way back to the Airport,
the family accompanied her with wet eyes. They gave her a wooden box.
On the
44th floor of her office in Durban, Morningside KZN, she looked down at the
Umgeni River. There was a Kashmiri embroidery shop besides the river. She sat
down to look at the pictures for the twelfth time at least. But this time she
stopped on a photo that she had taken in Nazir’s house, their Poonch house, she
now believed, The Graffiti that said something Alien. With the help of an Indian colleague she
discovered it was Hindi reading “Kashmir is our Land, it always has been, and
we will not let Muslims rule or live here” The words were nostalgic and
freshened the memories of William.
She opened the box that her
great grandmother had kept for Nazeer Ahmed, She found some amulet and a letter.
13 August, 1966
Asalamualikum
May you live long!
Hopes continue to be our breath. Long have we
craved to sound your footsteps inside this house. Long have we longed to hear
your melodious whimpers. Long has your mother lingered to hear the faults in
her cooking. Long have your sisters dreamed for clumsy brawls over the pettiest
of issues. Long has been the isolation. Long has been the separation.
The
sweater that your mother planned to knit for you is done now though it may not
fit you anymore. You must have grown into a handsome man. We remember the sweet
dimples of your plump cheeks. The lawn of Ashraf awaits you and your friends
Jaleel And farooq. Jaleel has joined the mahaz I rai Shumari while Farooq is a
school master. Farooq was imprisoned the last month after he publicly
recommended that kashmiri history be included in school syllabi. My Son, the
land awaits you, your talent and creativity. I still remember how your fiction
used to amuse and entertain the greatest of writers of our locality. The nation
awaits your talent, your skills.
Your
mother has wept her eyes out at the shrine of makhdoom sahib, tied knots on the
shrines of all awliya from Chrar e Shareef to Aishmuqaam. She fasts on every
Thursday in a protest against God and in your hope. She serves you food every
day, your plate is still your. Come back, your mother, the empty rooms of the
house await you.
Hope
to see you soon
Allah Nigebaan.
Later in bed that night, Faeeza
lying on the bed besides her husband thought about the graffiti. She thought “How
her family had moved circles, from a small village in Poonch to a refugee camp
in Karachi to Edinburgh Scotland and now Durban Africa. She crossed seas and
continents, vibrant cultures, Infinite races, and something stayed though, the
tag of being a Muslim, an extremist.
"I am not the only one,
people all around the world have negative perception, prejudice, and
discrimination targeted against Muslims" she thought. With so much
Islamophobic rhetoric being used, in many cases by politicians looking to score
points by feeding people’s fear, oppressed muslims have been pushed to live in
Isolation. The world needs to give feeder to all races as all religions are
crossing boundaries of race, culture, creeds and nations.
The world needs to be more tolerant, Lessons of tolerance need to be
preached yet again


I love whatever you write... But this one has really moved me... Masha Allah keep up the good work man!!
ReplyDeletePeace!!
Really admirable and appreciable..keep it up dear
ReplyDelete