Looking for
a silver lining beyond Valley
-- Rashid
Ahmad, Srinagar
A car pulls up, rather
noisily. Pulwama villagers stop and gape: it’s
Iqbal Yaqoob at the wheels. And he is driving
a Honda City, a sign of success in these parts.
Yaqoob had disappeared
on a cold tense morning in January 1994, just
shortly after an encounter between security
forces and militants and the following cordon-and-search
operations in his village.
Youngsters like him had
been rounded up by the security forces and taken
to an undisclosed destination. They returned
after a bit with telltale signs of physical
torture – cuts, bruises and welts. The
family decided this was no place for a young
man and he should leave, except there was no
safer place in Kashmir then.
The young man, who had
studied till class 12, headed for Srinagar,
which was in a worse situation than Pulwama.
Yaqoob kept going. And has not stopped yet –
even after setting up a pharmaceutical business
spanning several states including Haryana, Punjab
and Himachal Pradesh. He is a rich man today.
Ghulam Ahmad Ghani, similarly,
would never have left his village, also in Pulwama.
Life was good. He made a living rearing cattle.
And then suddenly militancy started and everything
changed, very fast. He left for Srinagar, and
started work as a dyer in a small carpet factory.
Now, he is a successful businessman making and
selling carpets.
Kashmiris are an inward
looking people. They are happiest at home, which
could be anywhere from the remote villages of
Kashmir to the bustling Jammu and Srinagar.
But militancy changed that quite drastically
– it were as if someone came home and
turned it upside down, but left it looking rather
good.
“The exposure to
outside world affected a psychological change
among them, and they began to think and act
in new terms,” says Khursheedul Islam,
a sociologist. He says that many Kashmiris sent
their children to the cities for quality education.
There are no official
figures but estimates show that over three lakh
people—other than Kashmir pandits—moved
out of the valley in the years of trouble, of
whom many set up businesses like Delhi, Chandigarh,
Kolkata, Chennai, Mumbai, Bangalore, Goa and
Kerala.
Imran Tak, an MCA student
from south Kashmir, landed jobs at Indian airlines
and IT Company HP in Bangalore simultaneously.
He chose HP and returned recently after three
years in Saudi Arabia and London. “It
was a great experience. I had never thought
that I would get such a position and exposure,”
he says.
It’s been the same
for thousands of Kashmiris, not all of whom
left the state but they did leave the numbing
comfort of a simple village life for the state’s
urban areas – like the capital Srinagar.
Around 50 new colonies
came up in and around Srinagar during the insurgency
years, which mainly house migrants from rural
Kashmir. And this coming out has not been just
geographical.
“The exposure to
outside world affected a psychological change
among them, and they began to think and act
in new terms,” says Khursheedul Islam,
a sociologist. There was a gradual acknowledgement
of the importance of education, for one. An
official of Kashmir University says that students
with rural background account for 80 per cent
of in the post-graduate classes.
And there is more. Irfan
Ahmad, executive director of Jamkash, a big
car dealer, says that out of 300 cars they sell
every month over 200 are bought by Kashmiris
from the villages. “Money was never a
problem in rural Kashmir. But they hadn’t
the exposure to such things,” Ahmad says,
adding, “their (village residents) outlook
has broadened by way of their interaction with
the outside world, and now a car appears to
them as a need.”
But for some Kashmiris,
the outside world was not good enough. It could
offer just nothing to offset the longing for
home. Mufti Wajid, a man from Shopian, worked
for a while at Patni Computers as a software
engineer. And then gave it up all up, returned
home and joined the Jammu and Kashmir Bank,
at a much lower salary.
“Kashmir is a landlocked
valley with moderate climate. People are not
used to hot and humid climatic conditions. They
prefer to stay back than moving outside,”
said Shoukat Hussain, who teaches geography
at a local college.
And for some, it was the
pull of the old family home, teeming with relatives
– the big joint family. “We have
a deep family system in place. Many people still
prefer joint families,” says Mufeed Ahmad,
a research scholar in sociology. “Even
those with nuclear families love to live in
neighbourhood of their relatives,” he
adds.
Even those who came back,
did not completely erase whatever they learnt
or saw outside. Wajid is not the same person
as he was when he left to become a software
professional. He has changed, he has grownup,
and is a lot less insular than he was. |