DIARY OF SILENCES
In preparation to revoking Article 370 and Article 35-A of the Indian constitution, which guaranteed Indian-occupied Jammu and Kashmir a special status, the Indian government snapped all communication links of the disputed territory, including mobile coverage, internet and landlines, with the outside world. Kashmiris who were outside Kashmir could no longer be in touch with their families back home. Kashmiri poet Omair Bhat, currently based in Delhi, has kept a diary from day one of the siege of his homeland. In the following diary entries, covering the first two weeks, the young poet reflects on being separated from home, being without any news and on his anger about the brazen military occupation by India.
Kashmir was put under indefinite curfew on August 5, after Article 370 was scrapped. By whatever fictitious thread Kashmir had been tied to the union of India, it was cut loose. At midnight on August 5, mobile networks were snapped. We will remember this as the first night of Kristallnacht [Also called the Night of Broken Glass, November 9–10, 1938, when German Nazis began pogroms against Jewish people]. It has already been 14 days. No phone calls can be made to home. There is a total communication blackout.
DAY 1
Yesterday, at around 11 pm, while saying goodbye to my parents and my grandfather (I remembered Allah) I wasn’t sure, like the rest of my friends in Delhi, when and how I would speak to them again. We spoke for a while. I was mainly asked to take precautions against any hostile gathering I might confront. I promised I’d stay low and quiet. I would stay in my apartment. I would eat well. I would not worry (how could I not?). I would remain in contact with my brother (‘Promise to take care of each other?’ Yes!). Were we speaking for the last time? No. No. We’d speak again. We would. Enough money to outlast the war? Buy groceries, milk, essentials? Perhaps. We’ve a big heart. See. We’re still laughing. Then, they expressed a stifled wish: ‘If we have to die, if it’s written in our fate, come home, let’s die together.’ It broke me. I couldn’t sleep throughout the night. I haven’t slept in the day. The sad thought that I will probably speak to them again after so many months of brutal violence keeps me wide awake. The struggle against each passing second fills me with despair (I remember Allah). While hope, the skylight in the attic, reassures me of the reunion with my elaborate family in this life (after we have won the war), faith, noor that pours in through the skylight, reassures of a reunion in the hereafter. Inshallah.
DAY 2
A heavy heart, it refuses reassurance. It howls at the impossibility of salvage from the pandemonium we have been thrown in. We’re anxious. There’s no news from the besieged country. At dawn, after staying awake the entire night, I stand before Allah in supplication, sobbing inconsolably. I ask for the safety of my people. I ask for patience. I ask for freedom. Assi khoon dyut na? Didn’t we give our blood? Teli kyazi eei ne? Then, why won’t freedom come?
The wrinkled roof of the sky — so dark at daybreak that if you observe in contemplation you’ll see your death in the shadow scurrying past the balcony of your apartment — in this split second, it stares right into my face. As it begins to rain, a while later, I seek answers from Allah. Why did You not place a wall in the way to stop fascists from invading my country?
Time slows down. I choke on my tears. My incantation (it will stay on my lips until I die, in my home, fighting fascists): Allahumma la sahla illa ma j’altahu sahla, wa Anta taj’al ulhazn idha Shi’ta sahla. [Oh Allah, there is no ease except in that which You have made easy, and You make the difficulty, if You wish, easy.] It is a routine. I sit on the window pondering over the ways we will have to fight this war (on our own). In a call, my friend tells me someone just came from Kashmir. India has stationed its armies on our doorsteps at home. Our cities and villages have been turned into garrisons. No movement is allowed. We are witnessing one of the strictest and most brutal curfews in three decades. Allah is watching. What if?
I understand his fears. I ask him to tell the fascists, you’ll only buy lands in Kashmir on our dead bodies. We’ll not give you an inch of land until we’re alive. Allah is watching. ‘Nasrun min Allah wa fathun qareeb.’ [Help from Allah and victory is near.]
DAY 3