It is difficult to obliterate the memory of Kashmiri Pandits who fell victim to violence. Although their blood has dried, their screams, cries and lost laughter continue to resonate in the hearts and minds of those who lived to tell their story.
The accounts of those who survived or, were born after are just as haunting as the stories of the deceased. It is a collective nightmare that can never be forgotten.
A Long Dream of Home: The Persecution, Exile and Exodus of Kashmiri Panditsserves as a chilling reminder of the migration of Kashmiri Pandits. Through 29 memoirs, it recounts three generations of angst and displacement in Kashmir a beautiful valley who had lived there for over 5,000 years
An author does not need to balance two sides of a story to chronicle human pain. He or she just needs to tell the truth with clarity and compassion instead of politicising the brutal past. This is exactly what the young Kashmiri writers did in this novel. The past is viewed in a humane manner.
The 1948 riots and the 1950 land reforms drove many pandits out of the valley. Most of them were sent packing due to the rise of militancy. However, January 19, 1990 was the most chilling, most vicious nights of them all when friends and neighbours turned against each other. There was disarray. People fled to Jammu. Those left behind suffered an unimaginable pain.
The book is divided into four parts. The first part concentrates on those born and brought up in Kashmir while the second sheds light on the people who were displaced. The third section explores the lives of those brought up in migrant camps. The last part examines the inner world of those who still dream to return to a place they once called home.
It is important to understand that some of the accounts narrated in the book brought dark clouds of uncertainty to the lives of these pandits, even though they may appear to be outcomes of fairly trivial matters.
Each memoir has been written in simple English. But there is a thread of intensity in each narrative that can provoke tears as the pages merge into chapters and the stories of defeat and survival unfold.
The book does not provoke bias. There is neither a semblance of fault-finding nor hate. The preface recounts the history perfectly while the memoirs reveal truths that have never been heard of.
At the end of the book, readers realise that while the Pandits may have lost their home, their dream of returning is still alive.
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