A Kashmiri man rows his boat in the waters of Dal Lake on a cold winter evening in Srinagar | Reuters/Danish Ismail
I am brought back once again to my childhood runs around the Dal, and a special moment when passing a group of local children, perhaps no more than seven to 10 years old. When the boys saw me dart past, they dropped their bicycles and sped after me, their earth-coloured pherans flapping in the wind. For several minutes, we ran together, an unlikely team, laughing at the strange incongruity of our scene, until, struggling to keep up and falling behind, eventually they stopped to catch their breath, still waving from the banks. All that time, the soldiers watched impotently from their posts, and that was when I felt sorry for them. I felt sorry for the India they represented.
“Agar firdaus bar roo-i zameen ast, Hameen asto-o hameen ast-o hameen ast” (If there is Paradise on Earth, it is here, it is here, it is here).
To every Kashmiri who is hurting right now, wherever you are in the world, whether inside or outside the valley, no matter what caste or creed, let us remember the verse we’ve carried since birth. Kashmir has always been more than just land. Kashmir is the soul of the valley passed down from our ancestors and entrusted to us as custodians that we carry in our hearts, a soul purified by love despite all adversity, and one so desperately needed in our sad world today.
Come what may, that soul is truly the only Kashmir worth fighting for. So, as the shadow of tyranny advances, and all over the Earth we gather to rally, raise our voices and remain steadfast on our path for peace, let us take faith from the godly beauty that abounds and know that our run is not done. For, in the end, our mountains will prevail.
The article was earlier published as a blog on rabble.ca on August 16
Shama Naqushbandi is a British Kashmiri writer and lawyer based in Toronto, and author of The White House, winner of ‘Best Novel’, at the Brit Writers Awards
Published in Dawn, EOS, August 25th, 2019