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The 바카라Homeland바카라 Dream Of Kashmiri Pandits

The Kashmir Files has put the spotlight back on the displaced Kashmiri Pandits. But will their problems바카라jobs, houses, monthly relief, return and rehabilitation바카라get national attention?

Kshama Kaul, a noted Kashmiri Pandit (KP) author and poetess, turns nostalgic as she talks about her lake-facing home at Rambagh in Srinagar. Sadly, the labour of love had to be sold off at a dirt cheap price following the exo­dus of Pandits from the Valley in the wake of the Pakistan-backed insurgency in early 1990.

At her Jammu home, where she lives with her husband and nonagenarian mother, the décor testifies that her family바카라s emotional connection with Kashmir hasn바카라t weakened even after 32 years. Int­erestingly, the home is located adjacent to Kheer Bhawani temple, a replica of an ancient temple in Tulmul village of Kashmir바카라s Ganderbal district.

The inside walls of their home are adorned with paintings of Kashmiri icons바카라Tegh Bahadur, the ninth Sikh guru; Kirpa Ram Dutt, a 17th century KP leader; Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the 18th century Sikh emperor; Birbal Dhar, a 19th century taluqdar; Shriya Bhat, a 15th century physician; and Abhinavagupta, the 10th century Hindu philosopher. She says even before 1990, 바카라바카라Pandits were driven out of Kashmir six times.바카라

바카라You can바카라t separate kaal (time) from kala (art),바카라 she remarks, emphasising that 바카라바카라what happened in Kashmir in the early 1990s wasn바카라t an exodus. It was a genocide바카라바카라

Kshama has written books like Dardpur, Samay Ke Baad, Kashmir Unn Dinon, Murti Bhanjan and Baadlon Mein Aag that talk of the trauma of Kashmir바카라s displaced minority Hindu community.

Vivek Agnihotri had visited their home while he was researching for The Kashmir Files바카라 a film that has put the spotlight back on the displaced community. Like Kshama, her 96-year-old mot­her Indira Kaul too holds a grouse against the director-producer. 바카라Ask him why didn바카라t he show in the film the story of the couple from Sonamarg, who were dragged along the road by terrorists after being tied to a jeep?바카라
Kshama바카라s son works in Canada, while her dau­g­h­ter, Bhasha Sumbli is an actor and aspiring film director who has played the character of Shardha Pandit in The Kashmir Files.

Kshama didn바카라t register her grievance online. 바카라We바카라ve no faith in such initiatives. Pandits can바카라t go back to their homes and start living among the majority community.바카라
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According to Kshama, Shardha바카라s character was inspired by a real incident, in which a KP woman was gangraped and then cut into two while still alive with a mechanical saw.

Recalling the distress sale of her Srinagar home, Kshama says, 바카라We had spent our entire life바카라s savings to build it. We had no option but to sell it for our family바카라s sustenance. My children were still babies at that time,바카라 she tells Outlook. 바카라We received Rs 1 lakh for the house. Today, it would cost over Rs 10 crore.바카라

On August 13, 2021, the Union Territory administration issued an order under the Jammu and Kashmir Migrant Immovable Property (Pres­er­v­ation, Protection and Restraint on Distress Sal­es) Act, 1997, mandating field verification by district magistrates within 15 days of a complaint, and submission of a compliance report.

A month later, on September 7, a website which allowed migrants to submit their grievances was launched by the UT administration. 바카라This initiative will put an end to the plight of migrants who have been suffering since the 1990s,바카라 Lt Governor Manoj Sinha had said while inaugurating the website.

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But Kshama didn바카라t register her grievance online. 바카라We have no faith in such government initiatives. Displaced Pandits can바카라t go back to their abando­ned homes in Kashmir and start living among members of the majority community,바카라 she says, ruling out the possibilities of rehabilitation, unl­ess the government met the long-standing dem­and of Panun Kashmir, an organisation of disp­l­aced Kashmiri Pandits, that wants a separate 바카라homeland바카라 within Kashmir with UT status, for the displaced community.

Her husband, Agnishekhar, a prominent Hindi poet and author, blames successive governments and political parties for downplaying 바카라genocide바카라 and 바카라jihad바카라 in Kashmir. After the Kerala Congress rec­ently posted a series of tweets, listing 바카라Facts about Kashmiri Pandits바카라 issues바카라, he had posted a Facebook video, in which he described the tweets as 바카라바카라rubbing salt to our bleeding wounds바카라.

According to the official website of the Relief and Rehabilitation Commission (Migrant) Jam­mu, 바카라Approximately, 60,000 families, majority of them Hindus, migrated from the Valley during the turmoil. Most of these families preferred to settle in Jammu and adjoining areas, whereas approximately 23,000 displaced families settled outside J&K.바카라

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While the government is building flats for displaced KP employees in Kashmir, other components of the return and rehabilitation policy remain unimplemented.

For KP migrants living in dilapidated camps on the outskirts of Jammu city, the Manmohan Singh-led UPA government in 2004 had started constructing townships with allied facilities such as community halls, higher secondary schools, hospitals, roads, drainage system and parks under the Prime Minister바카라s Reconstruction Programme.

These townships at Muthi, Purkhoo, Nagrota, Jagtai and Butta Nagar have flats comprising a room, a small lobby, a kitchen and a washroom. While families living in these flats have grown over the years, those without gainful employment and can바카라t buy new houses are finding it difficult to stay together.

Middle-aged Bansi Lal, for example, lives with some members of his family in Purkhoo township, whereas his two sons shifted to the prefab struct­ures at the 30 year-old camp바카라an unsightly exp­a­nse of slums바카라when they started raising their own families. Despite the lack of basic amenities at the camp, it has over 100 registered families who have been awaiting allotment of flats and can바카라t afford to pay monthly rent.

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Abandoned by all Protest at Jagati camp Photographs: Ashutosh Sharma

One of Bansi바카라s sons at the old migrant camp alle­gedly committed suicide last year due to financial problems. 바카라When Narendra Modi came to power (in 2014), he had promised our rehabilitation in Kashmir. We were quite hopeful. But he couldn바카라t even enhance our monthly relief,바카라 says Bansi, with helplessness and despair writ large on his face. 바카라The government should seriously think about our rehabilitation in Kashmir.바카라

Amid heated debate over the exodus of Pandits, a week after The Kashmir Files was released, an ongoing protest at Jagati township, 20 km from Jammu city, completed 600 days of sit-in. The protesters have been demanding a monthly cash relief of Rs 25,000 per family, jobs to unemployed youth and eviction of encroachment from the aba­ndoned land and properties of displaced Pan­dits in Kashmir. They say the government should start providing displaced KPs a monthly financial compensation against their abandoned properties in the Valley바카라farms, orchards, houses and shops­바카라­before it begins to rehabilitate them.

While a majority of migrants at the township refuse to talk on record, fearing reprisals in Kash­mir, they demand that KPs should be given min­o­rity status. They also want the government to set up a Truth and Reconciliation Commission, on the lines of South Africa, to ensure their dignified and safe return.

A family at Purkhoo camp Photographs: Ashutosh Sharma

When Lalita Pandita and her husband Shadi Lal fled Kashmir 30 years ago, they had a steady ann­ual income amounting to over Rs 1 lakh from their orchards in village Tangwari Pain in Baramulla district. 바카라The government must compensate for our economic losses, as we can바카라t use our land and properties in Kashmir,바카라 says Shadi Lal, who runs Soan Kashmir Front that works for the rights of displaced KPs. 바카라Our double-story house with 22 windows was burnt down in 1992. The governm­ent gave me as compensation Rs 90,000 out of the Rs 2 lakh value for the house it had estimated. But even at that time, the total worth of our home was over Rs 1 crore.바카라

On March 17, 2021, the home ministry informed the Rajya Sabha about the compon­e­nts of the policy for return and reha­bi­litation of Kash­m­iri migrants under the Prime Minister바카라s package. Bes­i­des employment to displaced Pandits, it offers cash assistance of up to Rs 7.5 lakh to repair damaged houses or to build new houses for those who had sold their properties between 1989 and the enactment of the J&K Migrant Immovable Property Pres­er­vation, Protection and Rest­r­a­int of Distress Sale Act of 1997.

Under the UPA, the Prime Minister바카라s Rehabilitation Package, announced in 2008, had provided 5,797 government jobs to displaced Pandits. While the government has also been constructing flats for displaced KP employees in Kashmir, other components of the return and rehabilitation policy remain unimplemented to date.

Flats at Jagati township for Pandits Photographs: Ashutosh Sharma

Speaking to this reporter in early October last year, officials of the Assistant Commissioner (Cen­tral) Kashmir, which deals with issues rela­t­ed to displaced KPs, feigned ignorance about policy components other than employment, while emails to the office of the Divisional Commi­ss­i­o­ner of Kashmir went unanswered.

Speaking to this reporter last month, Ashwani Kumar Chrungoo, a prominent displaced KP lea­der and state in-charge of BJP바카라s department of political feedback, had said: 바카라Resettlement is a political issue, while employment is an issue of economic sustenance. Post-retirement, these emp­l­o­yees are likely to leave Kashmir and settle elsewhere. In fact, the government lacks a clear vision regarding our rehabilitation. It coul­dn바카라t even resettle the internally displaced, militancy-affected people in Jammu pro­vince.바카라

On complaints regarding encroachment of properties of displaced Pandits in Kas­h­mir, Ashok Kumar Pandita, Relief and Rehab­i­l­i­tation Commissioner (Mig­r­a­nts) of the UT, says, 바카라Of a total 7,659 complaints we have rece­i­ved, 5,186 have been processed. In as many as 2,500 cases, the encroachm­ent has been removed. We have closed 2,586 cases after the land was retrie­ved in some cases or the complaints were rejected on merit in others.바카라

Against forgetting Kshama Kaul with one of her books

When the government started rem­oving encro­achments from the properties of Pan­dits last year, Tej Tickoo, an executive member of the Delhi-based All India Kashmiri Samaj, had told this rep­orter, 바카라The properties will get encro­ached again if Pandits don바카라t go back and take the possession.바카라 Str­essing on sustained financial and security bac­king to encourage the return of Pan­dits to Kash­mir, he had added, 바카라Those who have benefitted from our exodus and made millions are not going to let go of our properties so easily.바카라

Incidentally, the UT administration took a ser­ies of steps regarding protection of abandoned properties of displaced Pandits, after the J&K high court had issued an order in March 2020, on a petition filed by the All India Kashmiri Samaj. Seeking directions to the government for the safe return of displaced Pandits, the plea had originally been filed in the Supreme Court in November 2006. But the apex court had transferred it to the Jammu wing of J&K high court in March 2016. The petition had also reiterated the community바카라s long-pending demand that the displaced KPs be declared 바카라internally displaced per­sons바카라 as per directions of the UN High Com­missioner for Human Rights.

Back at the Jagati migrant colony, many residents lament the miserable lives they have been comp­e­lled to live in exile. 바카라If you conduct a survey, you will get to know how many displaced Pandits here have been suffering from serious health issues. The number of people struggling with mental health issues will shock you,바카라 says Shadi Lal, convener of the Pradesh Congress Committee Mig­r­ant Cell, accusing the ruling party of using disp­laced KPs for electoral gains.

Scores of Muslim and Sikh families who had also migrated with the Pandits corroborate his views. 바카라Apart from creating noise, the BJP government has done nothing to redress even our basic issues or ensure our return and rehabilitation바카라a process that was started by the previous UPA government,바카라 Shadi Lal says. 바카라The government has failed to provide even residential facilities to the majority of PM package employees, who live in homes of local Kashmiri Muslims.바카라

(This appeared in the print edition as "The 바카라Homeland바카라 Dream")

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