Introduction
So much has
been sung of the marvellous and magnificent beauty of the physiography
of Kashmir, 'Paradise on Earth' by saints and sages, philosophers and poets,
mystics and bards, divines and emperors, historians and travelers from
far and near, that I wish I could describe one hundredth of what they have
sung. One must possess a born poets, powerful and refined sensibility,
imagination and vision together with the boldness of his pen to be able
to make attempt to sing of her charms with full-throated ease. The Valley
of Kashmir lures all irresistibly. Those who have tramped across the globe
have no hesitation in asserting that Kashmir is a land of peerless beauty
on this planet. It excels the beauty of Switzerland. Bowl shaped with lofty
mountains standing guard all around, cradled in the Himalayas, Kashmir
has everything to gratify all the senses with thrilling experiences and
to seekers of peace it gives a satisfaction that is much more solid and
enduring than a thrill.
With its salubrious
climate that infuses health and heartiness into a sick-man, its bewitching,
quite idyllic scenery, its arresting landscape, its snowcapped peaks from
which flow perennially murmuring streams rivulets and sinuous rills and
cataracts guttering, like glass, fit for angels to repose by its mists
and clouds that rise sky wards like swirling smoke of incense, its remarkably
exquisite dawns and day breaks and equally enjoyable dusky evenings, its
ancient and mysterious all encompassing woods and evergreen forests that
are home to a treasure of fauna and flora, its gorgeously colourful meadows,
its warbling birds, its tranquil and placid blue lakes, bubbling springs,
its sprawling orchards laden with tempting juicy sweet and delicious fruit,
its pleasure gardens and grottos, its breezes that kiss gently and tenderly
and a variety of other gifts of nature that beggar description, this happy
and has been the chosen land of Gods and to which nature has been lavish
in her bounty. A new comer here falls in love with it at first sight and
cannot help being swept away by a feeling of rapture and unearthly joy.
He stands and stares around in wonder. The magnetic beauty of the land
draws him closer and closer and spell bound he saunters about and deeper
the wonder grows and the more unwilling he becomes to part from it.
The germ of his attitude
and response to the surroundings is essentially the environment of unearthly
peace, tranquility, calm and security. Here peace rains imperceptibly from
heaven and settles in every nook and corner. Here peace descends from mountain
tops and cliffs, emanates from deep woods and forests, exudes from gardens
and orchards and finds retreats in every house and habitation and inhabitation.
It gives a feeling of the uplift of the spirit where by a person merges
and mingles with every thing around him and every thing becomes part of
his being. No one escapes this spiritual feeling which is not a simple
pleasure. No wonder, then, that this spirituality forms the woof and web
of more than five thousand years old culture of Kashmir. This abode of
peace and, the seat of Goddess of learning.
Shahjahan exclaimed,
"If there is paradise on the earth it is here, it is here." Pandit Brij
Narain Chakbast sang, particles of my motherland, Kashmir are known for
their hospitality. Not to speak of its lakes and cascades, even the way
side pebbles quenched my thirst whenever the need arose." It is but natural
that such physiography of Kashmir should get reflected in the character
of its ancient inhabitants who are nice, good, gentle and harmony gave
birth to myriad saints and sages who attained highest goals of life by
meditation. The mother of the three worlds and consort of Lord Shiva Parvati,
chose to take her birth in this hallowed land the Maharagniya came flying
from the deep south to make it her home Lord Shiva himself made it his
abode. It is Sharda Peetha lovable, devoid of malice and crookedness. Kashmir
has been a sangam, a meeting place of various communities and sects professing
different faiths, beliefs and creeds and all co-existing in prefect harmony
and tolerance. Practicing respect for others beliefs they had a world outlook
and knew no conflicts arise out of racial and religious differences.
The aboriginal inhabitants
of Kashmir, the Kashmiri Hindus, in common parlance known as Kashmiri Pandits (KPS) constitute a distinct class of their own are considered to be a purest
specimen of the ancient Aryan settlements on the banks of the river Saraswati
and who migrated to Kashmir Valley in wake of the changing course of the
river and eventually becoming invisible, having been dried up. The offsprings
of rishis and seers and sages and belonging to the highest order of Brahmins,
this small community of the Samswats have been and still are by and large,
sober, peace loving and docile. They are among the few ancient surviving
races whose traditions come down from the Gods. They are chataeterized
by their being highly educated and learned. Vidyadhars, with more than
95% literacy, they have produced a galaxy of brilliant sages, saints, poets
and statesmen, administrators and ambassadors, who made a lasting contribution
to the development of the Indian composite heritage and culture.
When Islam came to
Kashmir, it brought conflict as it brought wherever its followers went.
The KPs withstood and despite centuries upon centuries of humiliation,
persecution, repression and torture at the hands of foreign rulers they
survived. They passed through numerous periods of shame and indignity and
physical vicissitudes, yet century after century they have recovered their
glory by their own power of self-preservation. They have succeeded against
fierce odds in preserving their rich cultural heritage bequeathed to them
by their forebears who were man and women as great saints, free thinkers,
intellectuals and literary giants showing matchless maturity and tolerance.
Kashmin Pandit is the product of that vibrant, vigorous and unfettered,
broad, exciting and tolerant culture and civilization that has never shown
apathy and aversion to new and alien influences, thoughts and faiths whenever
they came into contact with them. And to this day he is known for his dignity
of soul, true valour, tolerance, piety, hospitality and forbearance. There
are evidences of synthesis of KP culture with ancient Greek, Roman and
pre-Islamic Persian culture. Tolerance has been and continues to be the
hallmark of KP culture, despite severe pressure to make it contrary.
Buddhism, acclaimed
the most tolerant religion/way of life known to the world, came to Kashmir
much earlier than Islam, neither in the form of political nor religious
conquest, as the later did. It only stimulated a new culture and religious
resurgence without producing a charm or conflict with the Samatna Dharma.
Thus KPs joyfully loaned the ranks of the Buddhist Church and endowed it
with new directions, opening new Vistas and leading to a new enrichment.
History bears witness
that no fewer than 700 KP Brahamin monks crossed the inaccessible mountains
and carried the message of Buddha to Tibet, China and Central Asia. As
a mature and tolerant race the KPs always upheld freedom of thought and
free inquiry and in this background forcible conversion was unknown to
KP ethos. The interpenetration and intermingling of Buddhism, Shaivism
and Vaishnavism into a reformed form of Hinduism with its fundamentals
remaining unchanged has been the sequel of the most tolerant cultural ethos
obtaining in Kashmir prior to the coming of Islam. During the Hindu rule
there was absolute harmony socio-political plane and the idea of conversion
was something unknown and non-existent in the Kashmiiri culture. Hindu
places of worship and prayer have never been misused as centers of preaching
and propagating intolerance and religious bigotry and hatred to other faiths
and creeds nor for inciting and abetting sedition nor as repositories of
arms and ammunition, nor for providing secure shelter to sinners and criminals.
The scope of their use has ever been confined to purely religious, moral
philosophical and literary pursuits. The KP ethos echoes the basic Hindu
ethos of equality and co-existence of all religions (Sarve Dharma Sambhavah),
of the entire mankind being of but one family, (Vasudaiva Kuthumbakam),
of praying for the well being of entire mankind (Sarve Bhadrani Pashyantu),
not only for a particular group or community of co-religionists. It has
always been a vehicle for transmitting the message of peace, brotherhood
and co-existence of all faiths, never contaminated religion by an immoral
union with politics. Such an unholy alliance had no place in the
scheme of things as conceptualized by the KPs right from the beginning
of their history in the hoary past. And this heritage and outlook they
posses even today. With their high profile thinking beyond banal mundane
themes they turned Kashmir into a seat of invigorating, illuminating and
emancipating intellectual occupation that attracted all in quest of higher
values and spiritual exaltation.
The entire socio-political
and religious structure of KP society in Kashmir suffered a subversion
in the beginning of thirteenth century with the appearance on the scene
of severel Muslim ambitious adventurists and upstarts from far off alien
lands. Harassed and faced with physical liquidation at the hands of their
arch rivals and enemies in their respective countries they fled from there
and found of haven of refuge and safety and security in spiritually stable
though politically unstable Kashmir. Rinchen a fugitive refugee from Ladakh,
Shah Mir forced to flee from Swat for his life and Bulbul Shah from Turkistan
were given shelter in Kashmir, abiding by the glorious heritage of extending
consideration, compassion and kindness and hospitality to those seeking
refuge, irrespective of their beliefs and faith. And in true Kashmiri Pandit
tradition they were permitted to practice their faith with full freedom
without anybody raising any objection. They found the natives peace loving
and unorthodox to fault and a country a propitious ground for their ulterior
motives; therefore, they stayed on and enjoyed the generosity and hospitality
of the Hindus rulers as well as the common people.
Before long they
started preparation for grinding their axe, and began to behave like the
proverbial Arabian camel who cunningly occupied the tent by steadily nudging
its owner out.
These refugees, feeding
fat at the hospitality of the people and building up pockets of influence
became ambitious of seizing power and grabbing the throne with a particular
design up their sleeves, transforming the entire religious and demographic
profile of Kashmir. History bears witness to the glaring fact that they
were responsible for creating and shaping condition in Kashmir, which caused
intolerable affliction, miseries, torture, persecution, cruelty and pain
to the KPs in the name of Allah. The reader experiences convulsions at
the cruelties and indignities heaped on the helpless KPs for the holly
cause of spread of Islam. This is how they repaid the munificence and benevolence
of the Hindu rulers.
Zul Qadir Khan, a
Turkish Tartar, leading his savage hordes in tens of thousands looted and
plundered and massacred the Hindus and razed the standing crops to ashes,
thus spreading death, dissolution and ruination throughout the land for
full eight months. The approach of winter, forced him to return. He took
with him 50,000 Kashmiri men and women and children as slaves to be sold
in Turkishtan. As fate would have it, the barbaric heartless Khan was caugt
in a blizzard while traversing the mountainous path 'Devsar Pass' and the
entire mass of people perished in cold snow. This place is called as 'BATA SAGAN'
(Brahamans death oven).
Jonraj a Kashmiri
historian of the time paints a harrowing picture of the havoc and horror
struck by Zul Qadir Khan in his spree of massacres that decimated the Kashmir
Hindus. The land having been marauded, mangled, thousands died of poverty
and starvation as if doom "pralaya" had overwhelmed the country. The carnage
turned rivers and brook scarlet and gory with human blood.
Rinchen thought to
be Buddhist by faith, received shelter and sustenance and safety under
the wings of Ram Chander a KP Commander-in-Chief, whom he betrayed and
got killed with a view to pounce upon the throne of Kashmir. Since he was
an alien he sought to identify himself with a set of people with a vested
interest. Bul Bul Shah, one of them trickily converted Rinchen to Islam
under the name of Sader-ud Din. And as the first Muslim ruler of Kashmir
and with his converts missionary zeal Rinchen started his campaign for
the mass conversion of KPs to Islam with all the brutal vigor and force
at his disposal. It was Bul Bul Shah who incited, aided and abetted Rinchen
to persecute and tyrannize the resistant Hindus and used all sorts of unfairways
and means like compulsion, taxation, unjust law, use of the sword and forcible
inter-marriages. Guided by him Rinchen pioneered the path for the later
Muslim rulers to depopulate, dominate, degrade and drive KPs out of their
ancestral land.
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