Category: Articles

  • Growing Up Amid Guns and Grenades in Kashmir

    By Snober Binti Zahoor

    Couple of bomb blasts in Srinagar — the summer capital of Indian Kashmir – in late 1980s had heralded the beginning of a deadly and a protracted anti-India rebellion in the Valley of tall mountains, lush green meadows and crystal clear waters.

    On a lazy summer afternoon, my mother told me several years after my birth, the Indian security forces had locked up Kashmir, as the insurgency had caught them unawares. Imposing curfews that would continue for days together had become a routine. On that afternoon, she told me that all the populace had been locked up in their homes, the hustle bustle of the otherwise busy downtown Srinagar had given way to ghostly silence.

    Moments later, government forces barged into our house at Habba Kadal; the men were taken out for an identification parade while women were frisked in their homes. They checked every nook and corner of our ancestral house. My mother was carrying me inside her womb, and lady police constables even touched her belly to confirm that she was not hiding any ammunition. That was the picture of Kashmir exhibited to me before I came into this world.

    In the West, parents tell bedtime stories and sing lullabies to their children so that they get pleasant dreams and think beautifully about the life they are living, but I grew up hearing the stories of repression and oppression, brutality, injustice and torture, all my life…And just like every second Kashmiri, I witnessed it first hand too…

    My elders would narrate stories regarding strikes and curfews and how government forces barged into houses and frisked people and many a times hit them at will … all I heard all along was the stories of pain and tyranny which had touched all and sundry in this vale of Kashmir, which poets and emperors had called ‘a paradise on earth’.

    We moved to press colony in the heart of the city when I joined school. Initially, it seemed fun as you could get everything downstairs. As kids you couldn’t have asked for more than a market where you could buy your favourite chocolates, ice creams and candies. I used to have ice creams all day with my siblings at the café shops that used to be full of people enjoying with their friends and family.

    I was just following my daily routine after school when I went out to buy softy for my younger brother and myself. The market was abuzz with shoppers and traffic was plying normally. After buying an ice cream I started walking towards my home while my brother was walking just a few steps behind me. Suddenly I heard the sound of a massive blast. People starting running helter-skelter, the shopkeepers started downing their shutters and buses sped off.

    I turned to look for my brother and all I could see was clouds of smoke coming out from the café I had bought my ice cream from. I was not able to find my brother as smoke had engulfed the whole area. Tears started coming out of my eyes. First I thought that it was because I was worried for my brother who was too small to fend for himself, but then I realized I was breathing in the tear gas.

    I had not even heard about that gas till that time but now I was feeling the punch. I don’t know who fired that tear gas canister and why they fired it at all. I didn’t even try to inquire about that because in this part of the world, where human lives are not even worth a dime, things change fast just like autumn weather.

    A moment later I saw my brother and we ran back home and our worried parents told us to close all the doors and windows lest the tear gas smoke gets in the house. On that day I got to know what this tear gas was, as my dad explained to me how government forces use it to their advantage in various situations.

    On that very day, I came face-to-face with tragedies Kashmir has been offering to its residents for decades now, and at that very moment my journey with unusual tragedies in Kashmir began.

    Snober Bint Shora studied philosophy at the University of Kashmir

     

     

  • Where Traffic Jam is a Metaphor of peace

    By: Shadab Bashir    Editorial Kashmir Thoughts

    With the arrival of spring Kashmir is looking tremendously beautiful, visitors are coming in hordes from different part of the world. Hoteliers, Shikara-walas, Shawl-walas, and many more can be seen haggling with holiday-makers. Serpentine queues of vehicles are giving tough time to drivers and passengers, but probably this is the only place in the entire world where traffic jam is a metaphor and analogy of peace for politicians and for those who are at the helm of affairs.

    Our politicians have entirely different parameters of defining peace. Performing elections on gun point, imposing curfew after killing a youth, arranging concerts for a musician like Zubin Mehta, and caging the sentiments of those who remind them of history; all these things are a “peace process” for them.

    Perhaps, surprisingly external and internal mechanism of a so-called peace process complicates the prevalent situation of Kashmir. They release white pigeons in air as a symbol of peace, but at the same time they train their guns and trigger-out bullets on common Kashmiris. Both the things cannot be tolerated, and it is really a hypocritical approach.

    One can analyze that they do not what permanent peace with dignity rather they long for a silence that too for a limited time. And as far as local politicians are concerned, they do not probably have any misconception about Kashmir problem yet they want to create illusions. They try their all potential of politics to please their bosses at New Delhi.

    It is an unguided debate swirling around Kashmir that why Omer Abdullah as a Chief Minister is not colliding head-on with New Delhi to revoke draconian laws like AFSPA and work of the betterment and dignity of Kashmiri people. Perhaps, in reality, destabilization of Kashmir valley continues and Muftis or Abdullahs are quite powerless to stop it.

     

  • Those casting votes are trading blood of martyrs: Tabassum Guru

    DOABGAH: The widow of 2001 parliament attack convict Afzal Guru Wednesday said that those casting votes in the election are trading the blood of martyrs of Kashmir.

    Tabassum Guru, wife of Afzal said, that their village has been converted into a garrison and each house is guarded by seven to eight armed men.

    “Why will I vote and for who? Those casting votes are trading the blood of martyrs of Kashmir. Last year, it was my husband who paid with his life. Tomorrow, it will be one among those who are queuing up outside polling booths,” she said.

    “We have to get out priorities right and we should stand together and boycott Indian elections,” she said.

    Tabassum said her village has followed the poll boycott call and not a single vote has been cast.

    Her husband was hung and buried at New Delhi’s Tihar jail last year and the family has been asking for his mortal remains.

     

  • Maqbool’s sister assails Rashid

    Says don’t play politics over ‘martyrs’

    Srinagar: Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front founder Mohammad Maqbool Bhat’s family Monday assailed a lawmaker after he raised pro-Maqbool slogans during a poll rally in Handwara.

    Earlier today, the Member of Legislative Assembly, Rashid in a poll rally in north Kashmir shouted slogans in favor of Bhat and parliament attack convict Guru. Both of them were executed and buried in New Delhi’s Tihar prison in 1984 and 2013 respectively.

    Talking to GNS, Mehmooda, one of the sisters of Bhat said: “Being an MLA, he has no right to shout slogans in favour of Maqbool ‘Sahab’ and that too in an election rally. Once he leaves Assembly and then he can shout slogans in favor Maqbool. He has nothing to do with him”

    She said it pains us when they shout these kinds of slogans in election rallies. “It is vote politics. What has MLA to do with Bhat?” she asked, adding:  “On the one hand, he has sworn on Indian constitution and on the other, he talks of Bhat. This is unacceptable. He has no right to talk about Bhat”

    “Those who take part in elections, in election rallies and cast vote are actually betraying martyrs,” she asked. “It pains me when I hear slogans of elections. It is unfortunate that these people forget everything. People should completely boycott elections,” she said.

    She said there are ‘hundreds’ of Bhat in Kashmir and “I ask those who are in election process what answer you would give to martyrs”?

    Rashid had moved a motion in Jammu and Kashmir assembly that sought to commute the death sentence to Guru. But, he blamed the ruling National Conference and main opposition Peoples Democratic Party for scuttling the motion.

     

  • Bashir left without seeing his sister in bridal attire next month

    Tasavur Mushtaq

    SRINAGAR: It is dark, but scary in Nawa Kadal area of old city. Pall of gloom has descended around as a young man Bashir Ahmad Bhat just fell to bullets on the day of ballot. Wails, tears, slogans, smoke and shelling marked his funeral.

    Bashir, son of Ghulam Muhammad, according to reports, was in early twenties. Resident of Gratbal Nawakadal, Bashir after changing few professions was now into needle work. He is survived by parents, two sisters and a brother.

    With death of Bashir, hopes of his family are dashed. Bashir left without seeing his sister in bridal attire next month. And her would-be-bride sister is shell shocked, as her neighbours say, “the blood spilled over her mehandi.”

    What happened on a relatively peaceful day? Locals say, as the youth engaged police and CRPF in stone pelting after culmination of polling in Srinagar Lok Sabha constituency, “enraged CRPF men fired indiscriminately” which left Bashir dead and other five others injured.

    The bullet hit Bashir while ballot was being taken to ‘safer place’. Locals say that “Bashir was not a stone pelter and neither tried to snatch rifle.” He was, they say just standing on the roadside and had “nothing to do what was going around.”

    Official sources told a local news gathering agency that paramilitary CRPF opened fire on a group of protesters at Nawakadal following injury to one of its personnel in stone pelting. They identified the man as Sandeep Kumar.

    Police in its bulletin said, “In the evening after the polling was over a party of security forces came under severe attack by some miscreants in Nawakadal area in the jurisdiction of police station Safakadal, Srinagar. The miscreants snatched the weapon of a security force personnel. In the ensuing scuffle two persons identified as Bashir Ahmed Bhat son of Ghulam Hassan Bhat resident of Gratbal Nawakadal and Nazir Ahmed Kaloo resident of Nawakadal got injured. Bashir Ahmed later on succumbed to his injuries. While Nazir Ahmed Kaloo has got injured in arm and is out of danger.”

    What locals said and police claimed, CRPF did not buy the arguments and vehemently rejected the allegations.

    Public Relations Officer CRPF Kishore Prasad is quoted to have said, “Our men didn’t open fire. There were other forces as well.”

    On being asked a CRPF man namely Sandip Kumar was injured in NawaKadal, Prasad said: “He was not injured at NawaKadal but was injured at Soura. He has been hit by stone in his eye and sustained grave injuries,” adding that he is part of 117 Battalion. He said that the 73 and 161 Battalions of CRPF were deployed in Nawakadal on Wednesday.

    There was condemnation from across the sections. While State’s chief executive Omar Abdullah expressed grief over the loss of life. He also said that “circumstances leading to this tragic loss of life would be thoroughly probed.” His father and NC president Dr Farooq Abdullah claimed that “he stands with the family in this moment of inconsolable sorrow and loss.”

    State’s principal opposition PDP president Mehbboba Mufti expressed her “heart felt condolence” to the bereaved family and said “killings with impunity only add to tragedies and it is unfortunate that at the end of a comparatively peaceful day a precious life was lost to disproportionate use of force”

    Separatist camp also condemned the killing and called for shutdown on Thursday.

    However, the pain and agony did not stop with Bashir’s death. Eye witnesses told that while Bashir was being taken for final journey, men in uniform fired several rounds of tear smoke shells to disperse the “unruly mob”.

    With around 26 per cent polling in Srinagar Lok sabha seat, both NC and PDP claimed victory while separatists congratulated people for boycott. No matter who wins, the family in old city will never forget April 30, 2014-the day they lost reason to live and be happy again.

    As Bashir was being laid to rest, a light shower made the soil moist. The protests were on. Still come to terms of loss, the family of Bashir is in shock. And official sources said that the day next would have restrictions in place. Bashir along with polling percentage is now another figure in the list.

  • Voters are ‘bunch of thugs’, says Tufail’s dad

    Srinagar: Father of a slain teenager Tufail Matto Wednesday said that those who cast vote in this ‘fascist system’ are ‘not humans’ and are ‘bunch of thugs’.

    Muhammad Ashraf Matto, who son Tufail was killed after police fired a teargas shell at his head in Rajouri Kadal area of downtown on June 11 2010, slammed the voters and said: “This is a fascist system. The thugs, looters are getting elected. Those who cast vote are electing those whose hands are spilled with the blood of innocents.”

    Matto who has been fighting for the justice of his son said: These rulers have wiped out a whole generation. They have not only killed my son but hundreds of others and most of them were teenagers.” He added: “absolutely those who cast vote are not humans.”

    “Why should I vote? Here we have no democracy. It is a human run fascist system. Those who vote elect murderers and these voters are endorsing these murderers,” he said.

    Raising fingers on the impartiality of lections, he said these elections are being held under ‘heavy military presence’ Matto, a resident of Old City’s Saida Kadal, which sided with the boycott call of pro-freedom leaders, said: “These murderers will get elected even if only one percent voting takes place. Their job is to oppress people. This is not the democracy where a minority rules majority.”

    Referring to 28 per cent turnout in Anantnag constituency, Ashraf said: “72 per cent people rejected elections and didn’t vote. But, they will still get elected because here is no true democracy.”

    While slamming Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, he said: “If Omar Abdullah’s son gets killed like my son was killed, tell me will he cast his vote?” “You have killed innocents. You have robbed my son from me,” Ashraf said.

    While blaming CM and ruling National Conference for ‘sufferings of Kashmir people, he said: “I hold Omar and NC responsible for the suffering of Kashmiris. They have committed atrocities on the people of Kashmir.” He said these people should be ‘grilled in the court of law’.

    “CM is responsible for the murder of youth and teenagers. He is after his personal gains and they matter more for him.”

    He added: “My conscious will not allow me to vote. These people are mafias and gangsters.” (GNS)

     

  • Can 500 arrested youth cast vote today?

    ECI clueless; will go by prescribed norms: Police
    Srinagar: Election Commission of India (ECI) is clueless about the casting of votes by 500 youth arrested by police in the wake of second phase of Parliamentary elections in Srinagar constituency.
    Puzzled by the query Chief Electoral Officer, Umang Narula said he has to check the guidelines.
    “Are these detained youth eligible to cast vote. Give me some time I have to check the guidelines,” said Narula.
    Meanwhile, Inspector General of Police, Kashmir, Abdul Ghani Mir said police would follow the norms set by ECI for the detained youth.
    “Whatever guidelines Election Commission has set for the people who are in jails or in preventive custody for casting their vote will be applied to these 500 youth also. We will follow the procedure,” said Mir.
    Police has arrested over 500 youth after terming them ‘trouble mongers’ and ‘stone pelters’, a claim that evoked widespread public outrage across Kashmir valley.
    Around 400 youth have been arrested in Central Kashmir alone while police has so far arrested 70 youth in South Kashmir— 25 in Pulwama, 09 in Shopian, 12 in Awantipora, 13 in Kulgam and 11 in Anantnag district.
    The chief minister too has passed the buck to Director General of Police and Chief Secretary.
    “People should pose this question (on arrests) either to Director General of Police (DGP) or the Chief Secretary. If I talk to officers now, you will accuse me of violating the model code of conduct,” Omar said yesterday.
    “At this point the security and law and order of the state is the direct responsibility of the officers who are in turn accountable to the Election Commission,” he added.
    Meanwhile, police has justified the arrests for “instilling confidence” among the voters.
    In the first phase of the polling in South Kashmir, people observed complete poll boycott. While places like Pulwama, Shopian areas witnessed heavy stone pelting and protests.
    As per the law detainees, held under Goondas Act, Cofeposa etc, are eligible to cast postal ballots.
    Justice K Chandru, former judge of the Madras high court, says there is a distinct difference that permits detainees to vote, “A detenue (detainee) is neither an accused nor a convict. He is detained only by the orders of a district collector or commissioner of police, on the apprehension that he may commit an offence or disrupt public order if not arrested. The detention order is issued to restrict his movement alone.”

     

  • The Battle of Abdullahs versus Muftis

    SHEIKH QAYOOM -IANS- AUTHINT MAIL

    As the election campaign in the three Lok Sabha constituencies of the Kashmir Valley gathers momentum, one wonders whether these elections are about issues or families or both. The relative affluence in comparison to other parts of India has made electioneering different in the Valley.

    Poll issues like farmer suicides, landless labourers, promises of largesse to people living below the poverty line are not, strictly speaking, relevant in the Valley. There is hardly any Kashmiri who does not have a house to live. Hardly anybody without two square meals, hardly a farmer who owns land that can’t be cultivated or has raised borrowings that might become a reason for suicide.

    All children in cities, suburbs and villages go to schools and colleges. Post-graduates and even doctorates not getting jobs do not surprise visitors who once thought a matriculate had an inalienable right to get a government job in Kashmir.

    Roads in cities and towns have potholes, but thanks to the national flagship road building programmes in rural areas, villages in Kashmir have blacktopped roads that make connectivity and access easier for people living there.

    You hardly come across a Kashmiri who does not own a mobile phone, and many have phones with dual SIM cards.

    Arch rivals in these elections are the ruling National Conference (NC) and the opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), while the Congress is an alliance partner of the NC.

    The Valley has three Lok Sabha seats – Srinagar, Baramulla and Anantnag.

    Both the NC and the PDP have promised better healthcare, more employment opportunities and better governance.

    While the NC is headed by the Abdullahs (Chief Minister Omar Abdullah and his father Farooq Abdullah) their traditional rivals, the Muftis, head the PDP.

    Both these families strongly dismiss allegations of family-driven politics, but it is a fact that elections in the Valley have been political wars between these two families as the separatists stay away from these elections.

    The Muftis accuse the Abdullahs of misgovernance and corruption, while the Abdullahs say the Muftis hobnob with the Bharatiya Janata Party at the national level and are forging an unwritten understanding with the separatists in the Valley.

    Both the NC and the PDP are trying to chip into the separatist sentiment by promising internal autonomy and self-rule.

    The NC calls this brand of perceived “Independence within India” as autonomy, while the PDP calls it self-rule.

    Chief minister Omar Abdullah says elections in Kashmir are only about development and routine administration.

    “These are about Bijli, Pani and Sadak (electricity, water and roads), while the ultimate resolution of the Kashmir problem will have to be worked out by New Delhi and Islamabad,” he says.

    The PDP tries to be one up on him and says if people bring it to power, It has a roadmap for the resolution of the Kashmir problem.

    The separatists have called for a complete boycott of the Lok Sabha elections, but they know their appeals in the past haven’t moved beyond major cities and some towns.

    “Who takes care of our day-to-day problems of unemployment, education, healthcare, the menace of drug abuse? Do these vital issues wait till the Kashmir dispute is finally resolved”, said a senior Jamaat leader, the parent organization of hardline Syed Ali Geelani.

    Farooq Abdullah is seeking re-election from Srinagar, while Mehbooba Mufti seems to be well entrenched in south Kashmir’s Anantnag.

    PDP’s senior leader Muzaffar Hussain Beigh is challenging Sharief-ud-Din Shariq of the NC in Baramulla.

    Farooq Abdullah is a heavyweight, but many here believe PDP’s Tariq Hamid Karra could spring a huge surprise if he manages to dismantle the fortress the Abdullahs have built for over 60 years.

    Baramulla, it is generally believed, can be won by either the NC or the PDP with both having an equal chance of victory.

    Anantnag goes to the poll April 24, Srinagar votes April 30 and Baramulla May 7.

     

  • OF LAND INVESTMENT

    Here real estate market is a seller’s market!
     By  » [Sajjad Bazaz]
    One of the most attractive investment avenues has been real estate sector. Sale, purchase and renting out of immovable property for earning a profit are summed up as real estate activities. Jammu & Kashmir is a place where real estate has outperformed almost all investment options. The margins in real estate deals are so attractive that once an investor parks his money in the sector, he stops looking at other investment opportunities around him. This they do despite the fact that real estate is an asset form with limited liquidity and is highly cash flow dependent.

    The problem with this sector is that even a commoner tries his hand in real estate investment to make not quick but big bucks in a single deal. He hardly acquaints himself with the risks associated with this kind of investment. What I have observed is that these raw real estate investors get themselves into negative cash flow that too for a period that is not sustainable. This immediately forces them to resell the property at a loss. In many such cases I have seen people going bankrupt.Negative cash flow is an investment situation where cash expenditures to maintain an investment ( taxes, maintenance, etc.) exceed the cash income received from the investment. In other words, when a company spends more than it receives during a set period of time, the company is said to have a negative cash flow. This is often viewed as an indicator of financial ill health.
    So for the lack of knowledge about the real estate market dynamics, these investors make big losses instead of accumulating big bucks! The common real estate activities at our place are sale and purchase of built houses and land. Investing in land is a very different ballgame. With new market drivers coming in, investing in a plot of land having appropriate dimensions for residential/ office purpose in an area has become an investment attraction. We see lot of such areas here, especially in the periphery of Srinagar city and even beyond that where real estate investors have been developed plots for residential colonies etc. and have begun to saturate. This saturation has led to increase in value of the plots manifold and has also turned the real estate market into a seller’s market. Precisely, it’s the seller who dictates the price of a plot or any other property in such conditions.
    So, investing in land is a magical investment which can earn you huge margins in a single deal. But let me tell you investing in land is not as simple as it appears. The first thing which an investor has to bear in mind that there might be a series of legal requirements to meet and procedures to follow before a piece of land is converted into a saleable item. Let me explain – we have agricultural and non- agricultural land. As far as agricultural land is concerned, you cannot construct any kind of structure on it. It’s simply banned. For non agricultural, you still need clearance from the various authorities to build on it.
    You also need to avoid in investing in a land which is included in some other developmental plan drafted by the government. You can own the land but will have no right to do anything with it. Even, may be, you cannot sell it.
    Remember, there is no getting around the government’s prerogative of eminent domain. There is a high risk when you consider investing in land situated in the cheaper rural areas. Precisely, when you decide to invest in land, you should ensure that it has a clear title and is demarcated properly. Land gains value only over periods of time. If left unattended, encroachments take place and this raises legal issues. So to keep the land marketable, you should not overlook to develop it further, even thought it was already developed when you owned it.
    Lastly, you should seek knowledgeable guidance for investing in real estate if you want to mitigate the risk of being cheated. You need to engage the services of a real estate consultant in the case of sale or purchase of land. It’s the consultant who only can foresee all the difficulties that can emerge with any kind of property which you intend to own. You should know the person fully from whom you are purchasing the land – be it a property dealer or an individual.
    I haven’t seen at any point of time the prices of real estate falling. What I have come across is the careless attitude of retail real estate investors while purchasing a piece of land. Over a period of time, I have also observed that the real estate sector in our state is witnessing an upward trend where people approach it as a lucrative business venture rather than treating it as a channel of investment.

  • What Kashmiri kids learn at school

    ‘Ali is a barber but Ankit is a doctor’
    Saif Ahmad is the first standard student at a private school in south Kashmir. His father Ghulam Ahmad Sofi runs a tea stall in Pulwama, which earns him a near-sufficient income to feed his family. Mr Sofi wanted to become a doctor but financial problems afflicting his family forced him to drop out of school at a young age soon after he wrote his senior secondary exam papers. But he hasn’t let this lack of fortune touch his son Saif, 6, and ensures that his son gets best available education. Often in the evenings when Saif has returned from school, Mr Sofi sits by his side to guide him in doing school assignments.
    Some days ago when Mr Sofi was routinely quizzing his son on what he had learnt in school, the answer of Saif left him puzzled: “Papa, is God my father?” Saif asked.
    Mr Sofi was perplexed and he asked Saif who had taught him so.
    “Imtiyaz sir taught us a new rhyme today. Here, look at this,” Saif replied innocently, handing over the book to his father which contained the rhyme ‘O God, O God, You are my father; I am your Little Child.”
    The book published by Delhi-based Impressive Publishers is part of English textbook series “Classmate” for lower primary classes which are being taught at various private schools in Kashmir. Mr Sofi thought the parental characterization of God in the textbook was offensive. Next day, he went to the school and raised his concern with the management who told him that the books can be changed from next session only.
    “If teachers and parents don’t guide students, they will be misguided by books. Even if the content is offensive, the books are designed in such a way that it looks appealing. If the books teach that God is Father, the child will end up losing his religious and cultural moorings. How can God be Father? It is against the basic tenants of our religion. I looked on the face of my child. He was waiting for my answer, but I didn’t know what to tell him,” he said.
    Saif studies at Career Care Institute of Education and Training which is located inside a single-storied complex in Newa village of Pulwama. The office of the school is housed on the first floor of a large, double-storied building, adjacent to which is SKM College of Education and Training which offers 10+2 and B.Ed courses. Both the institutes are owned by Ghulam Hassan Talib, a KAS officer who retired as transport commissioner from J&K government. Mr Talib says he has no role in selecting which books are taught to the primary class students.
    “We teach books recommended by Board of School Education to students of higher classes. However, for primary class students, there is a panel headed by the school principal which decides which book should be taught,” he said. Asked whether he had gone through the content of the books, he said: “I am a busy man. I don’t have time to do that.”
    But the problem is of a bigger scale and it is not limited to one child or one school. I visited almost a dozen schools in south Kashmir to investigate this story. In another textbook series ‘Evershine English Reader’ by Delhi-based Evershine Publishers, the socio-cultural deviations in the books which are taught to the puerile minds of young children are starker and even obscene. In the ‘Evershine’ series, a majority of the characters used in the illustrations have names like Vishu Sharma, Avinash Gupta, Kavita, Tinki and Shweta, despite the fact that the children can’t identify with these names. The principles of classroom-teaching learnt by a qualified teacher in a B.Ed course obligate him to lead students from simple to complex, known to unknown, near to far and concrete to abstract.
    But these principles are brazenly violated in the sample of books lifted from almost a dozen schools in south Kashmir. The characterization of Muslims in these books is distasteful and may come across as offensive for many people. Consider this: a Muslim character is always associated with downtrodden professions in both ‘Evershine’ and ‘Impressive’ series of textbooks. In an English textbook for class 1st students, there is a chapter named ‘Our Helpers’ in which Juned (sic) is a barber, Ali is a mason and Akram is a tailor but Amit is an engineer, Ankita is a doctor and Prashant is a policeman. Then there are chapters on mythical Hindu chronicles ranging from the virtues of Lord Vishnu to the importance of Onam festival while the Muslims festival or Id is mentioned in a passing reference.
    Mr Sofi didn’t want his son’s thought process to get infected by adulterated information. “Answering his question was necessary, otherwise it would have created a conflict in his mind. Education helps a child in growing mentally as well as intellectually. But here, his religion, cultural values and social beliefs were being violated to influence his thinking. I went through his other books and found a number of similar flaws. I talked to the school management who took up another series of textbooks but it too has serious issues,” he said.
    The office of Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education, the regulatory body of school education, is located near Baramulla-Srinagar highway on the outskirts of Srinagar city. The board is presently headless with Hridesh Kumar, the State’s secretary of school education, acting as its in-charge. Repeated attempts to meet him didn’t fructify and his phone was switched off. The ‘mission’ of the board declared on its website is to ‘achieve excellence in the development and implementation of academic plan for the students studying up to higher secondary level in the state’. The board come under the directorate of school education which passes strictures from time to time in revising and implementing the guidelines for school education.
    The office of the director of school education, Mir Tariq, is located at Barbar Shah near the historic SP College in Srinagar. On the first day when I called him on his phone to seek an appointment, he asked me to come over to his office. Once I reached there at around 1 pm, his personal assistant told me that ‘sir’ had left the off

    ice to attend an ‘important’ meeting. I tried to reach him on phone but he didn’t answer my calls. From then onwards, I made it sure to give him a phone call at least once or twice every day, but all my calls went unanswered. On the seventh day, I went straight to his office. His personal secretary didn’t let me in initially but asked me to come after 2 pm. I had to wait for two more hours. There was nothing I could do more to speed up the time of appointment than to wait.

    At the appointed time, the secretary led me into a finely furnished office overlooking a small manicured garden. Mr Tariq, a clean-shaven, round-faced man with a thick moustache, is slouched into a revolving chair which he swirls from one side to another. His bureaucratic style of speaking is hard to miss. I handed over a couple of flawed textbooks to him. After reading the books, Mr Tariq admitted that the books had ‘serious flaws’ and he insisted on revealing the names of schools where these books are taught. When he was asked whether the board had any internal mechanism to monitor the textbooks taught at various schools, he said such a mechanism didn’t exist. “But I will order an inquiry and if what you are telling me is true and these books are taught to students, we will definitely take action against the schools,” he said.
    The matter of formulating syllabi for schools is handled by Subject/Courses Committee of the Board of School Education (BOSE). A senior board official who didn’t wish to be named said that all the private schools are directed to teach textbooks published by National Council for Educational Research and Training, or their ‘localized versions’ to the students.
    “There is no specific series of books that is recommended by board for primary class students. Up to class 7th, the private schools are left at their discretion to decide which books should be taught while from class 8th to class 12th, the board has made NCERT books mandatory for all schools recognized by it. All the private schools have been asked to adopt only those books for primary classes which reflect and respect the social and cultural sensibilities of the place,” he said.
    However, Authint Mail learnt that in most of the cases, the private schools go out of way and select their own textbooks which may or may not fit into the socio-cultural milieu of Kashmir. With no regulatory body to check the ‘adulteration’ of education, the problem has persisted and remained unnoticed. “To show another community or religion as developed and the other it’s opposite, is a deliberate attempt to malign a particular community. When a child is consistently and regularly taught that people of one religion are associated with a noble profession while others are downtrodden, this is a deliberate propaganda and not education. It is an attempt to dehumanize a particular community, a sort of Blacks-in-America type picture being projected,” PG Rasool, a prominent citizen and a newspaper columnist with daily Kashmir Reader said.
    He demanded that the board should monitor what type of books are taught in schools and if someone has done a mischief, he should be identified and punished. “It seems to be an anti-intellectual campaign against the people of Kashmir. When the State wasted no time in curbing anti-State projections in textbooks, how can they allow anti-people campaign?” he asked.
    Mr Rasool was referring to an Urdu textbook “Baharistanae Urdu” prescribed in 2011 by the State’s education department in which the picture of a uniformed man with a stick in his hand was used to depict a ‘Zalim’ (tyrant). The department of school education banned the book and withdrew all its copies from the market following objections by the security agencies, and the BOSE chairman was booked for sedition.
    However, the distasteful characterization of a particular community has remained unnoticed with subject experts and academicians describing it as ‘manipulation’ and ‘indoctrination’ of children at a young age. Noted academician Dr AG Madhosh said the government must be held accountable for what is being taught in schools.  “In absence of any guidelines, such a distasteful characterization will seep into the vulnerable minds of children and affect their thought process. The government must investigate the matter,” he said.
    A source in the BOSE said there are no specific guidelines from the government to private schools as to which books or syllabi should be taught. “BOSE prepare syllabi for classes up to 12th and prescribes texts for all the schools of the state registered with the department of school education. It has been made mandatory for the private schools to adopt these books in their curriculum only after which a certificate of registration is issued to them,” he said.
    A top official in education department said the BOSE even sends inspection teams headed by concerned chief education officer of a district to private schools from time to time to check whether they follow the prescribed texts and, in case of any violation, ensure that only BOSE-certified NCERT books are taught to students.
    “Unfortunately the teams are often deceived or even bribed by private schools on the day of inspection. In many cases, the BOSE officials alert the target school a day prior to inspection so as to give them time to be prepared to face the inspection team. Once the team leaves, they revert to their own books,” the official said. I tried to get the reaction of J&K’s deputy CM and school education minister Tara Chand but he didn’t answer repeated phone calls on his mobile.
    At his single-storied Wahigub home in south Kashmir, Mr Sofi says the parents need to be careful in ensuring that their children are not exposed to mischievous ideas which can affect their thought process, “Today’s children face a bombardment of information from all sides. Parents and teachers have a role to guide the children in picking up only relevant information which will add meaning to their intellectual growth, not that which uproots them from their socio-cultural moorings and value systems,” he says.

     By  » [Javd-U-Salam]