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Prose, Poetry, Pain, Pathos

Verses with razor-sharp words and thoughts are cutting through the post-370 winter in the Valley

Prose, Poetry, Pain, Pathos
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Poetry, they say, speaks the language of the heart.  Of love and  hope, of loss and grief. And anger and resistance. In the frozen valley of Kashmir, where the Jhelum and the chinars wait for spring, woman writers are channelling their emotions into words and verses, echoing the mood of Kashmiris caught in a time warp. Verses of hope of a new dawn. Angry words that cut through the silence in the Valley. These writers are painting their pain and pathos on a broad canvas with dark, bold strokes of the pen.

Most Kashmiris felt a sense of betrayal after Jammu and Kashmir lost its semi-autonomy and statehood and was sliced into two Union territories in August, 2019.  A months-long communication black-out, which was (partially) lifted only recently, and the preventive detention of hundreds of people across the Valley only added to the despair and gloom.

Every day while
going to school
the unknown voices
from the concrete bunker
would tease us with
Bollywood songs
and sordid songs
Today when I,
my eyes, my bosom
my dreams, desires
and my entire being
are porous by their pellets
I spend my time
On lonely hospital bed
Making some sense
of songs and sounds

­바카라Hina Khan

For Hina Khan, a Srinagar-based poet and translator, survival seemed more important than everything else since the abrogation of Article 370 last year. She thinks that her multiple identities바카라that of a Kashmiri, a poet and a professional바카라바카라all evaporated from the surface  of conscience바카라 and 바카라survival as a human being appeared to be the most important job at hand바카라. Survive to tell the tale, perhaps. She ended up writing A Letter, a poem that speaks about 바카라avalanches of despair바카라 in a 바카라valley of surplus gloom바카라.

바카라They (the Centre) stripped us of all that we ever identified with. When you lose your identity that is when poetry shelters you in the warmth of its cadence,바카라 says Hina, who uses the nom de guerre Rumuz for her literary work. 바카라Nothing makes sense if you are shown how powerless you are.바카라 Hina feels that the relationship between Srinagar and Delhi is fundamentally an asymmetrical power struggle.

Revealing their star-faces, to us by the evenings 바카라 Where did they go?
Dazzling the hearts of this light-starved city 바카라 Where did they go?
Those snatched by the bullets, are safe in their graves
Sleeping those were, by their mother바카라s side 바카라 Where did they go?)

바카라Nighat Sahiba

Over the centuries, woman writers of Kashmir have produced some memorable work, both in prose and poetry. The contemporary writers are more nuanced, their writings often layered with metaphors and imageries that convey Kashmir and Kashmiris바카라 tales even more effectively. Some of these writers, including Dr  Nitasha Kaul, Ather  Zia, Uzma Falak, Mona Bhan, Insha Malik, Nighat Sahiba, Dr Rumana Makhdoomi, Anjum Zamrood Habib and Hina Khan, and others have been writing about Kashmir in their novels, books, poems, memoirs, and songs. Some of them are based in Kashmir, some live and work in distant Europe and the United States.

바카라Voices of women are no longer supplementing men바카라s voices, but are individual and pivotal in their own right,바카라 says Ather Zia, a US-based Kashmiri academic, writer and poet. 바카라Kashmiri women have never been away from political travails바카라they have lived and taken part in it equally. It is heartening to see Kashmiri women today in the footsteps of their foremothers doing what is the need of the moment, which is to speak truth to power.바카라 She adds that earlier, 바카라not being literate, most Kashmiri women supplemented the struggle by taking part in protests and helping men, as of now they use the tools of writing and speaking to speak truth to power in their individual capacity and that can only grow.바카라

An assistant professor of Anthropology at the University of Northern Colorado, her latest book is Resisting Disappearance: Military Occupation and Women바카라s Activism in Kashmir. 바카라It is written in a storytelling format and interwoven with poe­try which will appeal to a wider audience and will provide the Kashmiri vantage of the political dispute that prevails,바카라 she adds.

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Well-Versed

Ather Zia, a US-based Kashmiri academic, writer and poet.

Ather is also a poet and often writes resistance poetry. 바카라As for writing poetry, I have always been drawn to this medium of expression. I also use it as a tool of resistance and a means of what I term as ethical surfeit.바카라 Her current poetic lens, in her own words, is singularly focused on the urgency of the political situation of Kashmir, which has ramifications on all aspects of daily life바카라the themes she writes on.

For some decades now, literature lovers, opinion makers and public intellectuals in Kashmir have been expressing their unhappiness over a narrative vacuum in English language. The Kashmir story has usually been told by outsiders. But there has been a significant shift in the last two decades or so. Now, some serious efforts are in full swing to fill this narrative vacuum바카라particularly the literature of resistance바카라but the Kashmir story in English still remains a work in progress.

Professor Shafi Shauq, a well-known Kashmiri author, poet, fiction writer, critic and linguist, told literature lovers during a recent book release function in Srinagar that most of literature that is written in the Kashmiri language is a 바카라statement, not stand바카라.

Nitasha Kaul, a London-based Kashmiri academic and novelist born to a Kashmiri Pandit family, has also come up with Future Tense, her second novel since she wrote Residue. She is of the view that the narratives, writings and memoirs are 바카라the traces of history바카라 and they are really important for the present and for the future. Future Tense, in the author바카라s words, is political fiction. 바카라I feel stories of conflict, struggle and suffering in fiction are told in a way that can potentially reach across and affect those who may not otherwise know.바카라 Why she prefers writing fiction?  바카라Fiction is not about taking sides. It is about und­erstanding. It is about solidarity. It is about getting people to see why and how injustices are legitimised, how and why they are perpetuated, and how and why they need to be undone,바카라 she says. On writings exclusively by women, she bel­ieves that women have always been speaking and writing, but do not get the same attention, their work is not read or reviewed in the same manner as are the writings by the men. 바카라Writing by women is really important for it gives us an insight into the ways in which multiple marginalised identities experience life,바카라 she says in an e-mailed conversation.

Your lush olives and dreams when torn asunder,
our apple orchards and maples바카라captive,
howled too
Beyond fortified towers of meaning,
an unintelligible stutter of longing
made borders porous...

바카라Uzma Falak

Uzma Falak, a Kashmiri anthropologist based in Heidelberg, Germany, wrote a poem in which she drew parallels with Palestine. According to Falak, 바카라The people of Kashmir have continued to resist for more than six decades now.바카라 Anjum Zamrooda Habib, a Kashmiri political leader, wrote her prison memoir, Qaidi Number 100 (Prisoner No. 100: An Account of My Nights and Days in an Indian Prison). Similarly, Dr Rumana Makhdoomi, a senior doctor at Srinagar바카라s Sher-i-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences (SKIMS), has written White Man in Dark, which documents the sufferings of doctors and paramedics during the years of conflict.

In Urdu too, several young Kashmiris have written memoirs, prison diaries, short stories, novels, and poetry that bring to light various asp­ects of the conflict.  Nayeema Ahmad Mahjoor, former BBC broadcaster-turned pro-Delhi politician, wrote her debut novel, Dehshat Zadi (Lost in Terror) in Urdu.

For some, however, the lockdown in Kashmir has manifested in their own locked creativity. Nighat Sahiba, a young poet and award-winning writer from south Kashmir, confessed to have hit a wall. She felt that writing had no purpose; it was futile. 바카라This period since August 2019 has not been fertile for me. I have tried hard to write. I have put pressure on myself. Nothing has come out,바카라 Sahiba says. 바카라I have never felt so helpless in my life, ever.바카라 She says she thought of herself as very 바카라ordinary and dispossessed, and as helpless as a small ins­ect바카라. A writer, she says, finds no meaning in life if he or she is not convinced of doing something to bring about a change. 바카라I am nothing. We are nothing,바카라 she says.

Things were different for her earlier. She has broken barriers, challenged stereotypes and busted many a myth by writing about womanhood, violence, resistance, resilience and rom­ance. She has been writing about bullets and blood, pellets and blindness, militarisation, custodial disappearances, mass graves and unk­nown graves, rapes, 바카라eve teasing바카라 and stalking.

This young poet from Kashmir바카라s Anantnag district mostly writes in her mother tongue, Kashmiri. She is also prolific in Urdu. For her debut book Zard Paneik Dair or Piles of Pallid Leaves, which is her first published work in Kashmiri language, is a collection of her ghazals and nazms. The second volume of her poetry collection is also ready. In 2018, she won Malika Sengupta National Award. A year bef-ore, in 2017, she won the Sahitya Akademi바카라s Yuva Puraskar, given to young writers.

Kashmir바카라s new literature of resistance by women cannot be brushed aside merely as literature of protest. Rather, this new culture of writing and documentation offers an outlet to suppressed aspirations and an articulation of collective memories of pain, struggle, sacrifice and resilience.

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