*Political Uses Of The Official History Of Kashmir*

*By Mohamad Junaid*

02 July, 2008
*Countercurrents.org*

*T*he newly-formed Institute of Kashmir Studies has provoked a shrill debate
among academics, and also in some sections of the civil society. The debate,
despite its frequent tumble into abuses and allegations, is only a sign of
how the story of Kashmir can no longer be a monologue, but must contend with
a democratisation of its recitation. There are many stories of Kashmir now,
all vying for validity, but none commanding authority. The history of
Kashmir is no longer something which can be imposed from above: its
democratisation will ensure that it will always remain in the making, and
never find its conclusion. It is being created as it is spoken about.

The postmodern re-evaluation of the nature of history has managed to put the
old correspondence theory under a cloud. The earlier emphasis that the past
is "out there" for us to discover and reconstruct, unmediated by language,
does not hold substance, since it is widely agreed that language is a
contaminated medium, facts/evidences are pre-fabricated, and our
understanding of the past stands upon layers and layers of narratives; all
of which, instead of leading us toward any "basic truth," actually drive us
farther away. Kashmir's history, like Kashmir itself, is getting written,
written-over, and rewritten. It is not that new irrefutable evidence is
emerging, but the realisation has dawned that the version of history, which
till now we thought was "the history," is just a story; and, it is possible
to have alternative stories.

This present process of history-creation, however, is not taking place in a
neutral, fair space. As happens always, the votaries of the official story
are afforded a moral high-ground by the state: their version of history is
seen to further ostensibly benign values of the state; they do further
values, but not always the benign one. Any mark of dissent is branded as
malignant and fit case for erasure. Take, for instance, R. K. Bhat's
vitriolic response to M. Ashraf's comments (both published in this
newspaper) on the institute's vision statement. It would be pointless to
decry Bhat, who clearly betrays an ill-intent in trying to noisily silence
Ashraf by calling him "rabidly communal," "bigoted," and a supporter of
ethnic-cleansing of Kashmiri Pandits rather than engaging in a scholarly
manner with some of the pertinent issues that Ashraf raises. Bhat's spat is
like a bubble coming out of the gelatinous potage of old hegemony. He is
shocked to see someone showing a dare to challenge his history; perhaps this
is what has evoked a venomous outburst from him instead of stirring him to
be circumspect about his own position. Bhat's statement of the "fact of
history" that Kashmir got its name from "Kashyap Muni," repeated ad nausea
by others too, will not find the natural acceptance of the yesteryears
anymore: from history it has been dethroned and returned to its vague mythic
status. It becomes important now to add "it is believed," or, more
importantly, "a religious community believes," before we proclaim that
Kashmir took its name from a drummed-up sage called Kashyap Muni. Yet Bhat
will not delimit his truth-claim. His potage has been solidifying for many
years instead of becoming more fluid like the society around him. The
arrogant certainty with which he deludes himself is twice removed from
present debates about the discipline of history: he not only refuses to
accept what he remembers as the history of Kashmir as just another
narrative, but on top of that he privileges improbable myths as history. In
places with moderately decent academic freedom Bhat would be laughed at, but
in Kashmir we have to listen to him.

It is important to keep in mind what Michel Foucault said: hegemonic
discourses are hand-in-glove with power, in that they reinforce it. The
discourse on Kashmir's past, too, is interminably linked to the power (read
continuation of Indian control over Kashmir). As a case in point, the
categories through which Kashmir's past and present are viewed are not, and
can never be, adequate. Categories like "syncretism" and models like the
"cultural mosaic" were constructed in the last few decades and inflicted
upon Kashmir's past. I am not arguing this to give any credence to the
opposing view point that Kashmir had either a pure Hindu or a pure Islamic
past, but to question the uses and abuses of "syncretism" as a category of
understanding. Syncretism points to the commonality of some doctrinal
elements and not simply to the commonality of everyday life practices. At
the doctrinal level, Hindus and Muslims have never shared much, apart from
certain universal values which don't amount to much in analytical
significance. Of course, the everyday life in Kashmir has been to a great
extent marked by hybridity, but that is the case with most other societies,
which precludes Kashmir's uniqueness. In his work on kinship relations of
Kashmiri Pandits of a southern Kashmiri village, T. N. Madan ignored Muslims
who constituted a huge majority of the village, as if there was rigid
segregation of the two communities. Well, if Madan couldn't detect any
syncretism in the late 1950s how is it that we have suddenly found it now?
Syncretism has a political use. Muslim syncretism suits India's 'national
integration' project: it softens the Muslimness in Muslims, and reveals a
Hindu influence on them, apparently to the formers advantage. It matters
little that the same syncretism is not asked of Hindus. The "pure" form of
Islam (whatever that means) is naturally assumed to be dangerous, but
pristine Hinduism (again a misnomer)—in the way Kashmiri Pandits value caste
purity—is seen as unproblematic. Kashmir's syncretism is also called
"Kashmiriyat," which is made out to be the dominant feature of Kashmiri
society. How is it that a fragile social interaction between 95 percent
Muslims and 3 percent Hindus is constructed as the dominant feature of
Kashmiri society? Clamouring Kashmiriyatists may erase the socio-economic
dimensions of that interaction, but to suggest that everything was hunky
dory is to live in a state of denial. For instance, the way Madan
"objectively" mentions Muslims (rarely as he does) as performing impure
rites for Hindus, as midwives, or tillers of Pandit land, or Muslims in
general being "polluting," without pausing for a moment to question why it
should have been like that, underscores this point. Similarly, the lack of
any major Kashmiri Muslim rebellion during a large chunk of the Dogra period
does not indicate that relations between the explicitly pro-Hindu rulers
(and the Pandit beneficiaries) and their systematically-impoverished Muslim
subjects were harmonious.

Given we have a consciousness to inform our understanding that the official
history is used to prop up the state's legitimacy we can unearth its basic
components. For instance, the clue to work loose the mainstream Indian
discourse on Kashmir is quite starkly presented in Bhat's article itself,
when he seeks to find the basis for Kashmir's inclusion in India in
Hinduism. Bhat spends almost 90 percent of his piece finding this Hindu
connection, while he half-heartedly devotes a small paragraph on 700 years
of Kashmir's latest history. My intention is not to suggest that times and
societies prior to Kashmiris' transition into calling themselves Muslims
cannot be a proper subject of history-writing, but the way emphasis is put
on trying to find roots of Kashmir's 'essence' in Hinduism, is at best
ridiculous. The same way, what the vision document of the Institute of
Kashmir Studies, which Bhat cites, claims—historically Kashmir has been
integral part of the cultural mosaic of India and no study of Kashmiri
thought and cultural is possible without situating it in the broader
perspective of Indian thought and culture—smacks of a brazen attempt to add
one more piece of state historians' fantasies to the official, and
politically-expedient, history of Kashmir. That "India" as a geo-national
construct, and "Hinduism" semiticized to be its religion, being 19th century
products of elite, upper caste, imagination should be taken into account
before dim-wits are tasked to come up with such half-baked statements.
For other Kashmiri historians who have been contesting arguments such as
that of Bhat's for decades now, they too must display caution while claiming
to know "facts." The real contest is not about whose facts are right, but
about who displays a critical capacity to expose the inbuilt power equations
within certain forms of historical narrative. A postmodern consciousness
expects us to keep in mind the relativity of our own historical
interpretation, and awareness that after all it is just another story.
Otherwise, we commit the mistake of seeing the past through our present
lenses, like a Bhat or a Madan does, who see Kashmir's past as a history of
persecution of Kashmiri Pandits. In Kashmir, though, one needs to
acknowledge that the state propagates the official history (which is what
the Institute of Kashmir Studies envisions to do), and those people that
contest it are either muzzled or marginalized. Kashmir's nonconformist
historians are accountable to the most marginalised, yet politically alert,
Kashmiris, who have often been bruised by state-sponsored histories; this is
what democratisation of history-writing means. People no longer take "facts"
without a pinch of salt. Many historians need to catch up with that habit.
If that is done, then people like Bhat would need a lot more than an armoury
of abusive polemic, and the Indian state much more than the military muscle,
to stifle budding challenges to the hegemonic discourse on Kashmir's past
and present.

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