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Exiled Kashmiris: Story of Pain and Agony

Exiled Kashmiris: Story of Pain and Agony

  PUNCHLINE Deaths in Exile By Z.G. Muhammad   In our agonized contemporary history there are many an untold ‘crippling stories of sorrow.’   Like many other struggling nations, we also have had our share of stories of exiles in 1819, 1846, 1947, 1965, and 1990 and after. Most of them will be never told.  Sadly, the stories of pain and suffering of those exiled so far have not been themes of our poetry or subjects for our writers. … Read entire article »

Filed under: Editor's Take, Kashmir-Talk

Jana Gund- Legendary Woman Rebel of Kashmir

Jana Gund- Legendary Woman Rebel of Kashmir

Nostalgia Women in Resistance By ZGM Sue Monk Kidd, American novelist, and memoirist have said it and said it rightly, “Stories have to be told or they die, and when they die, we can’t remember who we are or why we’re here.”  The stories that came to us from our forefathers through oral tradition made our generation conscious about the primacy of our identity and sense of belonging to our land- gave us “a feeling and recognition” … Read entire article »

Filed under: Editor's Take, Kashmir-Talk

Kashmir Is Nuclear flashpoint Banning Social Media Is No Answer

Kashmir Is Nuclear flashpoint Banning Social Media Is No Answer

Punchline  Word of Mouth: Language of Resistance   By Z.G. Muhammad   For the past ninety-three years, the political struggle of people of Jammu and Kashmir has evolved its own grammar. The grammar had enabled the people of the state to defend their narrative even when the “dominant discourse” had its sway in the state. Or when in 1947, Jawaharlal Nehru had succeeded in carrying out “political PSYOPs” on our leaders and made them do what he wanted. Nevertheless, … Read entire article »

Filed under: Editor's Take, Kashmir-Talk

Prof. Hameedah Nayeem Looks at Significance of the Story of Downtown Boy

Prof. Hameedah Nayeem Looks at Significance of the Story of Downtown Boy

    What is in a Title? Significance of the title Story of Downtown Boy— and the Issues thereof Prof. Hameedah Nayeem Last week when two books were released in the university’s Ibni Khaldoon Hall, It set me thinking about the significance of the title of G M Zahid ‘s (Z.G. Muhammad’s) book- Srinagar, the City of Culture and Resistance: Story of Downtown Boy as a pointer to understand its genre. On the one hand, it is about Srinagar, the … Read entire article »

Filed under: Featured, Kashmir-Talk

Silent Mothers With Million Word Woeful Stories

Silent Mothers With Million Word Woeful Stories

PUNCHLINE Our Sombre Sunday Z.G. Muhammad   It was a sunny April Sunday, just, following the historic Sunday, when 2.3 million people of three districts of Kashmir, Srinagar, Ganderbal, and Badgam had registered their protest against the perpetuation of the uncertainty about future of the State through ballot- by boycotting the by-elections for the Srinagar parliamentary constituency. Nonetheless, despite the apple trees in full blossoms and vast tracts of mustards fields splashed with gold dust, the April Sunday was … Read entire article »

Filed under: Editor's Take, Featured, Kashmir-Talk, Perspectives, Point of view

Washington’s New Offer And New Delhi’s Response

Washington’s New Offer And New Delhi’s Response

PUNCHLINE Kashmir: Truman to Trump By Z. G. Muhammad A few days earlier to Nehru’s death in May 1964  he had shown an inclination towards departing from his straitjacket ‘Procrastination Policy and Diplomacy’  about the Kashmir Dispute by sending Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah as his envoy on an exploratory mission to Islamabad for meeting the President of Pakistan.  Perhaps, at this stage after the 1962 India-China War, which had made Nehru bid adieu to his “nonaligned policy” he … Read entire article »

Filed under: Editor's Take, Featured, Kashmir-Talk, Point of view

Nehru-Communist Dubious Role In Kashmir- Response to Andrew Whitehead

Nehru-Communist Dubious Role In Kashmir- Response to Andrew Whitehead

        Punchline Beyond the “Cut and Paste” Story Z.G. Muhammad   Everybody has a right to his ideas. Nonetheless, as Nietzsche says, “We often refuse to accept an idea merely because the tone of voice in which it has been expressed is unsympathetic to us.”  A few day back, Andrew Whitehead, a former BBC journalist who reported from Srinagar in the nineties now turned historian had been invited to deliver a talk, Kashmir 1947-1953 by Kashmir University.  He … Read entire article »

Filed under: Editor's Take, Featured, Kashmir-Talk