“Hero Stone” in Arin
A recently discovered “Hero Stone” in Arin, Bandipore. Images generously shared by Yaseen Tuman. Hero stones used to be put up at the spot where a great warrior died. For a detailed study of these stones found all over the valley, do check: Sati Stones of Kashmir
Yiyem Nate Hai Maaras Paan
Bharti Raina sings kalaam of Rahim Saeb Sopori. She learnt this song as a kid from her music teacher Indira Kachroo, who used to live near Regina Cinema, Baramulla. She had last sung it in 9th standard while on an all Girl’s guide camp to Harwan. That was a long time ago.
Biloreen saaq,
Biloreen saaq, seemeen tan, samman seena, sareen nasreen,
Jabbeen chuy aayeena aayeen ajab taaza jilaa, Jaa’noo
Crystal Legs
Body Mercury
Jasmine Bosom
Daffodil Butt
Forehead,
a wondrous
polished
mirror,
my love
Those Stones of Burzahom
The is the last piece of 2nd set of my Kashmir travelogue. 3rd set to start soon.
First dig. Burzahom 1935 |
Many a discoveries in Kashmir were purely accidental. Among the many is the discovery of Burzahom.
In 1932, Helmut de Terra arrived in Kashmir valley on a geological study tour. On a clear spring day, he undertook an excursion on the river Jhelum. Travelling along the river bank, at one place, he noticed a strange object emerging from the river bank. On close inspection he realized it was a stone knife made of volcanic rock and fashioned like old Paleolithic Levallois blades. It was the first such discovery in the valley, in fact, first sign of Stone Age man ever found in the Himalayan region.
De Terra was to return to Kashmir many times looking for more signs. In 1935 , De Terra with T. T. Paterson as part of Yale-Cambridge University Expedition, finally arrived on the curious stone mounds atop Yanderhom Karewa about 10 Kms north-east of Srinagar, just above the marshy flood-plain of the river Jhelum. To the discoverers it was obvious that the stones were menhirs. In subsequent did, stone axes, pestles and bone tool were found.
The flood plain is now where people live. While the stones still stand, next to a cricket field.
Road to Burzahom |
The burial pits discovered in 1960s |
Burial pit. Burzahom. 1962 . From 1960 to 1971 extensive digging was carried out by T.N. Khazanchi to discover the cultural remains of a civilization. |
The people who live around the area believe the pits to be dwellings of Jinns and consider the place to be haunted. Some people come and tie threads on the steel mesh, making wishes. |
-0-
Arni Rang Gom
I tell her a nightmare about loss. She sings me an old song about a man who went missing. I stitch a little dream. In our songs, we are home.
Video link
Living in another city, miles away, my wife singing me Arnimaal.
-0-
Here are the lyrics and translation from T.N. Raina
Ode to Mandul
Brian Brake. 1950s |
I have always been a man susceptible to stupidity. In my house, tales are told of my stupidity. One time, during a wedding someone sent me to buy 25 kilos of paneer, I came back with 25 kilos of Dahi. At moments like these, someone would usually quick, “tchay ne’nay mandul chatith, tchay tari nee fikri! Someone would cut off your ass and you wouldn’t notice.” It is a nice Kashmiri way of saying, ” You so dumb!” I never understood why Dodhwol, or anyone, would be interested in cutting off someone’s ass. However, I understood one thing clearly over the years: if there’s one thing Kashimiris value more than their brain, it is their ass. Mandul, the ass, is intrinsic part of conversations in Kashmiri. You can’t talk to a Kashmiri without him pointing to the ass. You could be discussing black holes seriously using arguments from Stephen Hawking, and someone would respond with, “Tchay chay ni Mandlitch paaye! You don’t know ass!” End of discussion.
Why is Mandul so central to Kashmiri conversations? Why is Mandul center of Kashmiri lingual anatomy? Mandlu is even a Kashmiri surname! And it is seldom erotically used while speaking. Even though we have a 9th century Kashmiri poetess named Vikatanitamba, (vikaTa=horrible, nitamba=buttock) who wrote erotica.
The Mandul is mentioned in old Kashmiri sayings like:
However, in general language Mandul is used more freely.
[Behiv manḍüjü karith, ti boziv. Sit on you ass and listen]
Here’s a little list of ways in which Mandul is invoked in Kashmiri language, often in our intelligent discussions about Kashmir:
mandul ne’nay chatith
You are so dumb, someone would cut off your ass and you wouldn’t even notice.
Following two are best discussion enders
Tchay chay ni Mandlitch paaye
You are trying to sound intelligent but you don’t even know your own ass
If you want to go next level, say
Mandals chui Ghiss lore
There’s shit on your ass and you can’t even see that
Or, vunyi chuy Mandul oudruy
Your ass is still wet. Yet are yet to come of age, yet talk big.
Or even,
Mandul ye chalith
Wash your ass. You stink.
These lines are usually used if someone has got
Mandlas Kijj
Itchy ass. Deployed if a person is trying to be smart ass.
Or
Mandlas Kyom
If a person is fickly and won’t sit at one place.
Or, the next level
Mandlas chi chott kyom
Tape wormy ass
Mandlas tatur
Ass inflammation
Mandul woshlun
Ass gone red like monkey
Mandul Asmanas gasun
Bending down.
Mandlas Pyeth kaduss preth
Kick on his ass
To avoid it all, you need
Mandlas aaych
Ass that has an eye. Be super smart.
-0-
Nabas Mandul Havun
In rural Kashmir, among Pandit families involved with farming, if one wanted to make rains stop, one would pick a kid and face it’s shining ass to the sky. Yes, that would make the rain stop. Indra Dev be happy. One of those Kashmiri things. They would mock the gods: “We are not afraid. My kid washes his butt with your rain!”
-0-
Paanch Azaan
video link
1:19 min. Made over two years.
I ask her if she is afraid.
She answers, “No.”
I ask her, “why?”
“I don’t know, “she replies.
A Kashmiri dust storm that blows in Rajasthan
I got married in February. Half the marriage functions were held in Jammu where my family is now based post forced eviction from Kashmir in 1990. Other half of marriage was held in Delhi where my wife’s family is based due to the same events of 1990. A Muslim friend from Srinagar who attended my marriage couldn’t help but notice on a sad note this “scattering” of a Kashmiri community. “Chakravun” is the exact word used for scatter by all Kashmiris.
“Aap logo kay saath accha nahi hua. You people had it rough, ” the Mehendiwalla hired in Jammu chirped while putting henna on hands of an aunt. As often is the case, the Mehendiwalla turned out to be a migrant worker from Rajasthan. He then proceeded to prove how well he understood the Kashmiri Pandit story.
“Nehru….Jagmohan…”
Most people present were surprised and delighted that people now know the story. Pandits always feel people are oblivious to their story. People asked him how come he knows all this.
It was the Hindi TV news channels that did the work. I was already having a tough time convincing people that what Anupam Kher is doing with Kashmiri Pandit story is wrong. It has been conveniently molded into a handy weapon for communal political ends that in no way redress the genuine issues faced by Kashmiri Pandits. So, where is this weapon getting used, how and why?
A month later, I was in Rajasthan with my wife. In Udaipur, a local shopkeeper guessed from my looks that I was a Kashmiri. He said I looked like the guy who runs the shop next to him. The next shop was of Kashmiri handicrafts and shawls. The two were good friends.
On entering Jodhpur, I could see that a lot of walls had an appeal painted on them,”Gow Mata kay hatiyaro ko phansee do. Hang the killers of Mother Cow.”
While leaving the city, I asked the driver to stop for tea. Just outside the city on way to Jaisalmer, we stopped at a local roadside tea stall. As I ordered tea, a middle-aged man sitting on a plank under a tarpaulin shed called out to me. I turned around to see it was in fact a gathering, a bunch of men with nothing else to do, just sitting and talking. I was going to be the topic. I greeted the man with a smile and walked to them. I sat down and we talked.
“Where are you from?”
Over the last many years, I have answered this question in a lot of different places all over India. Earlier on hearing Kashmir, conversation would be about “Halaat kaisey hai” and ‘Terrorism”. However, since last few years, conversations are becoming more invasive.
“ Dharam. Jaat. Gotra.”
Everything was asked.
“I am a Kashmiri Pandit”
On hearing the words, what followed was a discourse in which the doctor had finally found the patient about which he had read and studied a lot. The man proceeded to diagnose Kashmir and kept testing my pulse to look for a communal beat.
It was the usual report: Nehru was a dumb idiot, UN was not needed, Brahmins were always weak, Jagmohan saved the Pandits, Muslims can’t be trusted. What they did to you was wrong!
“Aap log sadak par aa gaye.”
I couldn’t help pointing out, I was traveling in a car, he was sitting by the roadside.
It was obvious he was performing to an audience that had gathered. He was the local genius who sits under the banyan tree dispensing wisdom. It was the Sangh narrative.
I wasn’t biting. I tried to reason. But, it was as if the man was on some drug.
He offered the medicine.
“Modi will get you back. Just see. We are all with you.”
I told him Modi was no good for me.
He suggested, “Go back. Answer them in same language. Kill your neighbours. Take back your homes.”
The narratives in which all Kashmiri Muslims are seen as perpetrators of ethnic cleansing is at work here.
I laughed and asked, “You mean everyone?”
“You can’t trust them.”
I must have laughed nervously for my driver now intervened as the casual banter was taking a heated turn.
“Kya Bakwaas kar rahe ho?”
My driver was a Muslim from Mount Abu. For entire length of the journey, he only played Muslim religious songs in the car. He had been listening to the sermon silently till now. The man offering the sermon was suddenly aware of the presence of a certain other.
“Tum kaha say ho bhai? Where are you from?”
Ajju Bhai, the driver was not going to play along.
“Calcutta say! Tu kya kar lega? Calcutta! What is it to you? Chalo Sir, we have a long distance to cover.”
I couldn’t leave with doing a bit of a performance of my own. All that people understand these days is acting.
The secular performance, “Log kharab nahi hotey. Halaat hotey hai. People are not bad, time is.”
Back in the car, Ajju Bhai explained, “These guys are Jokes.”
“These guys?”
“They are all low castes. Men with too much time and no work. We don’t even talk to them. And this is not a good time to discuss such matter.”
Ajju Bhai it seems was an expert on Manusmriti. His opinion on caste was another debatable topic, however, I could see the talk at the tea shop has impacted him in a different way. The way it is supposed to: cause a little burn. It was no play. He told me that the previous night there had been minor rioting in Jodhpur city. He had been up half the night keeping a vigil in the streets where Muslims live. It all started when head of a cow was reportedly found outside a temple. Soon, a crowd was stoning the Muslim shops. Few men were arrested.
Far away Kashmir was just a fuel in such local stories.
We reached Jaisalmer. I wasn’t looking for a guide. At a tea stall, a man with Sandalwood tilak on his forehead offered to show me the fabled Yellow city. From the talks he seemed like another performer. I hired him. The man selling the tea exclaimed, “Kaha say pakad liya! Where did you find him!”
“Where are you from? Dharam. Jaat. Gotra.”
When I gave him the answers, he pulled out a rudraksha necklace from around his neck and claimed to be a “first class Brahmin”.
The usual narrative started, “Nehru idiot…”
Mr. Purohit, the guide, claimed to be a VHP worker having worked for them for more than fifteen years. The delight of being part of a secret group reflected like a glint in his eyes.
“Caste has weakened Hinduism. I don’t believe in it. We believe in Sanatan Dharam.”
I asked him if he was okay with a Brahmin marrying outside the caste. He evaded the question, continued to prove Yahoods were actually Yadavs, so part of Sanatan Dharam.
There’s a small ill-maintained crafts museum just next to the lake. The guide thundered how Indians neglect history. He claimed Muslim fakirs had predicted fall of Hindu empire in Rajasthan. How foreigners will walk like bulls in its streets. I looked around and saw a foreign tourist was keenly trying to make sense of the sermon. The guide claimed the local VHP unit works closely with the intelligence unit of the state, reporting on smugglers and other threats. He believed he had some power. He believed he could put a spell on politicians and make them lose. “I will give them all cancer.”
We reached a square in the fort city, he exclaimed out aloud, “Make way! This here is an intelligence agent from Kashmir.”
I couldn’t help but chuckle at his antics. In Kashmir, in certain circles, a Kashmiri Pandit was and is always an intelligence agent.
“Aap logo kay saath acha nahi hua”
Again, I could see who the audience of Kashmiri Pandit story was. Where the daggers were getting sharpened.
We reached top of the fort. Purohit climbed on top of a view point next to a rusty cannon and pointed out at a Haveli the owner of which in old days had molested an entire Brahmin village. He turned around and claimed there’s only one real hero in India: Nathuram Godse. He screamed it at the top of his lung.
He showed me the Jain temple inside the fort city. Proudly he pointed out the Ganesh inside the Jain temple. With a sly nudge he pointed out the stones in “Kamasutra” pose. Then insisted I visit the old Hindu temple too.
On the way down he claimed to be a Kabirpanthi. I told him I didn’t know that Kabirpanthis were also members of VHP. I left the thread, didn’t want to offend Kabir.
Outside the shop, Ajju Bhai caught up with us. Purohit’s language changed. He and Ajju Bhai got along well. I told them to drop me and my wife at the famous Bhang Shop. Ajju Bhai was a little annoyed. He only believed in Zarda. Purohit proceeded to sing a hindi paean about the benefit of Bhang. I couldn’t understand it. They laughed.
We left Jaisalmer and headed back for Udaipur via Barmer. It was late at night when we stopped again for tea. I was hungry and asked if anything could be had. He had only tea to offer. I noticed a 786 in the shop name. Ajju Bhai probably noticed it too. His language changed. He now talked with a heavy tinge of Urdu with the shop owner. As if to tell the owner that he is a Muslim too. The owner of teashop was from Gujarat. He used to work in diamond industry but due to heavy loss in business had to leave everything. He was starting over again. I could see, behind the shop he had setup a little house. His infant child was in a makeshift cradle. His wife, head and face all covered, walked out to us with a big plate of papaya.
“How much for the papaya?”
“No charge for that. You asked for food. We had nothing. Just this papaya. We offered you half.”
In house of a dispossessed man, I finally found some respite from Kashmir.
-0-
The piece was later republished on EPW, 07 May, 2016.
Republished by raiot.in
useless
Abhinavagupta was useless. He was writing at a time when a power hungry woman in 10th century Kashmir was literally devouring her own grandchildren. Did Abhinavagupta help us make any sense of it? Did his esoteric writing have any significance? Did he help make world a better place?
If he were a present day writer, he be on Facebook screaming “Intolerance” or he be joining a Censor board and offering guidelines on ‘cut-for-Indian culture’ aesthetics. His birth ceremony would have been scandalous stuff IndiaTV is made of. It would have entertained us.
How does one make sense of it? What has happened to our senses?
Abhinavagupta was not useless.
He did answer the basic questions.
What is history?
Past visualized as if it was happening in present.
Why do your write?
The best writing is one that provides equinamity. Santa-Rasa, the rasa of peace.
How do you mix the two: History should be vividly descriptive and offer the reader visions of past and future. It is a piece of literature.
The result: In 12th century, Kalhana wrote Rajatarangi in Santa-Rasa. The theories of Abhinavagupta were to influence writers for ages.
Srivara was to write:
Will there be anybody in whom the present ‘River of Kings’ would not engender disillusionment by the vicissitudes [of the] rise and fall of the rulers, witnessed [by me] with my own eyes and [so] remembered?
Centuries later it was Santa-Rasa of this work that provided literal succor to weary kings like Budshah and Akbar [and even Nehru]. Offered then visions of past and future. Paving the way for secular discourses.
-0-
In the world of ideas, he swam like a fish
In real world, he sank like a stone
Over muddy Jhelum, on the hump of a camel
Poshker Nath stood one more time
at the edge
awaiting the final push
wondering if a story would catch him in time
—
हम पंड़ित है
थोड़े बेअकल भी
थोड़े मुसलमान
हमने देखी हिजर भी
देखी कई खुदाई
चली हवा
जो जहा जैसे
पूज लिया
देखे कई मसीहा
हुऐ एक रोज़ ईसाई भी
बेबुध कहानियो मे हम यहूद
हिन्द का हिन्दू अब बस तू
तू पंड़ित है
बेअकल भी