POLITICS: CHILDREN OF CONFLICT
In 2015, I met Ifat Ghazia, a filmmaker from Srinagar, at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), where I was enrolled in a Master’s programme. We often spoke about her experience of growing up under occupation and my personal affinity with the troubled land of my ancestors.
Through the ‘Kashmir Solidarity Movement’, a student society at SOAS, I met other young Kashmiris living in London. My friends introduced me to other young Kashmiris on Facebook and Twitter, who were kind enough to agree to be interviewed.
Kashmiris who grew up in the 1990s saw more death before their tenth birthdays than most people see in their entire lifetimes.
The 1990s saw some of the most turbulent days in Kashmir’s history. Crackdowns were common and families would spend the nights huddled in the dark to hide from soldiers patrolling the streets. From the earliest memories of her childhood in Baramulla in India-held Kashmir, Rabea Bukhari recalls most vividly the darkness. “The mere barking of dogs would make people turn off their lights. With the setting of the sun, only fear would inhabit the streets,” she says.
The image of a body under the canopy of a walnut tree haunts Bukhari all these years later. When she was four, her uncle, an imam at the local mosque, went missing. The family waited for a day and a night in apprehension. Bukhari remembers going to see her grandmother and finding her sitting under a tree with mourners surrounding her uncle’s body. “His daughter wailed inconsolably. I bundled myself into my grandmother’s lap. I didn’t cry. But that day, I felt the terror of the conflict seep into my bones.”
Manzoor Sadiq*, 28, is studying for his PhD at an Indian university. His childhood friends are buried in a cemetery, a few metres from his house. For him, their graves are a daily reminder of the brutalities of an occupation.
Far from home, young Kashmiris are still haunted by their childhood
The memory of one night from back in 1994 remains with him. “We were woken up by a loud bang and shrieks from outside. The windowpanes broke. We made our way out and in the darkness. We could see that some houses in our neighbourhood were ablaze.”
Sadiq and his family managed to escape but returned in the morning to find a massacre. “Seven members of a family we were very close to had been burnt alive. Three of them were my age. We had played together in each other’s homes.”
Twenty-seven-year-old PhD student Mehreen* studies political science at a university in New Delhi. She finds it problematic when words like ‘unrest’ are used in the context of India-held Kashmir. “Unrest gives the impression of a temporary disturbance of sorts. And Kashmir is anything but. To not look at violence and the resistance to it in a continuum is to not understand Kashmir at all.”
She insists her childhood in Kashmir was “normal”. “Much of it seemed normal back then; the curfews, the crackdowns, the constant sound of gunfire. Violence is the norm in Kashmir. It is only when you look back as an adult do you recognise the exceptional ways in which you were denied a dignified life.”
Much of her childhood was spent at her grandmother’s house. She still remembers the patterns carved into the wooden ceiling she would lay staring at, when the Indian army patrolled outside. Her earliest childhood memory is from a cold winter day, when she was five. “I was walking to my grandmother’s house with my father, when we heard gunshots. We began to run, diving down on the ground with our faces in the snow. My father covered my body with his and we lay there freezing, until there was a break in the firing.”
In 2002, they burnt her home to the ground. Militants had taken refuge in a neighbouring house. They exchanged gunfire for hours and once they were done, they set fire to the houses. “I returned to find rubble where my childhood home once stood. Thirteen houses were razed to the ground. That was the day I was certain there was an us and them,” she says.