Every morning, hundreds of shikaras spread themselves out on the endless Dal Lake, scooping out the weeds choking it
A place proclaimed as paradise and condemned as hell,
Kashmir is too often lost in picture perfect postcards and stark headlines. Abhijit Dutta and Sebastian Ku travel to the heart of the Valley ro re-imagine it.
My first memory of Kashmir is a rustle, the static of
distance – or maybe disbelief – crackling up the phone connection. I was
calling to book a houseboat: I pressed my ears hard into the phone, trying
desperately to hear all the images I had curated over the years, from film and
fiction, from poetry, and, of course, newspaper headlines. But the houseboat
owner was in a hurry – he had to go for his evening prayers – and soon Kashmir
became a dead ring tone.
When I arrived in Srinagar, the capital, autumn has already
begun to rouge its cheeks. All the chinars have grown up, the innocent green
they wear in summer replaced by a deep auburn red. Through the summer months,
all of Kashmir bursts with lush verdant youth, radiant with wild bloom and
glowing in the warmth of the attention it receives. Summers are when the world
descends on Kashmir, lured by promises of its paradisiacal beauty: icy peaks,
babbling brooks, blue-blue skies, rolling meadows. Every Mughal Garden in the
city, each some four hundred years old, is dusted an decked up to meet the wide
eyed tourists. They coo over the bulbous tulips, they pose next to the pansies,
they kiss behind the poplars. Kashmir in summer is a brazen beauty, desperately
hawking its coquetry, eager to make a living for as long as it can.
Not all summers are crated equal though. Last year, over 150
Kashmiris were killed in encounters with the Indian Army and the tourist season
was replaced by a state of siege. It’s a confrontation that has a long history,
an a complex one. At the heart of the master is the demand for a plebiscite
that allows the people of Jammu and Kashmir – India’s only Muslim majority
state – to determined their political identity, including, possibly, becoming
an independent nation.
It’s demand that turned Kashmir into a site of active armed
conflict for nearly two decades. Then, instead of tourists, Srinagar’s houseboats,
lakesides and monuments swarmed headlines – lapis lazuli skies and alpine
meadows pushed aside to accommodate images of curfews, crackdowns and attacks. But
there is change. It’s slow, hesitant change, much like an itchy scab beginning
to form, but it’s a change that many locals welcome; for many it is their only
source of livelihood. The issue, as intractable as ever, remains unsolved but
the resistance is now more political than violent. Be ti the number of terror
linked incidents or civilian causalities, both are significantly down from the
peak years. And news is getting out.
Earlier this year, in an encouraging move, Germany revised
its travel advisory for Kashmir, clarifying that ‘foreigners are generally not
direct targets of clashes “; Inida’s largest hotel chain, Taj, inaugurated a
new property, Vivanta, to meet the demand for luxury travel; Lalit Grand Palace, the former royal
palace turned five star hotel reports a healthy occupancy; and the ski resorts
of Gumarg and Sonamarg are back in favour with European travelers bored with the
Alps. “In the madness of India, this really is an island of peace” says Carin
Fischer, a Bavarian woman who now lives in Srinagar and runs an eco-tourism
concept called ‘Trekking for Trees’ in picturesque Budgam.
In the distance,
the marble dome and minaret of Kashmir’s most revered shrine, Hazratbal, rises
up from a clustered fishing village, reverberating still with the morning
prayers.
Sitting on the lawns of Butts Clermont Houseboats, drenched
in the warming autumn sun, I couldn’t agree more. Clermont sits on a part of
the Dal Lake that’s far away from
the madding crowds of boulevard and Dalgate,o where a thousand houseboats
jostle with each other. Herer your morning tea comes with the most alluring views
of the Zabarvan hills, veiled in cashmere-fine mist. Sunshine runs down the
slopes and jumps into the porcelain waters of the Dal for a dip, where Shikaras
huddle together in twos and threes, scooping out weeds with their heart shaped
oars. In the distance, the marble dome and minaret of kashmir’s most revered
shrine, Hazratbal, rises up from a
clustered fishing village, reverberating still with the morning prayers that
have just ended. It’s a blessed air one breathes here. No wonder the Indian
sitar maestro Ravi Shankar chose just this spot to tutor the young George
Harrison, of the Beatles, on the intricacies of ragas.
Afternoons are perfect for sitting out, on foot, or in a
tightly packed matador van that ply Srinagar’s streets, and explore the heart
of this city. Historic Lal Chowk is ‘downtown’, and sprawled around it are the
streets that belie every imagination of what Kashmir is : on M.A. Road, at the
chic Coffee Arabica, cappuccinos and shawarma platters provide the perfect accompaniment
to protracted political debates; across Polo view, Residency road bustles with
the industrious energy of shawl sellers, dry fruit vendors, cedar wood carvers
and souvenir shop owners, all willing to submit to a good bargain; around the
corner, in the back lanes, the irresistible tabak mazz (skewered meat) seethes
and sizzles on rows of smoky barbeque pits.
The azaan (call
for prayer), and not the sun, begins a new day in Kashmir
The harratbal
Mosque, holiest of holy shrines in Kashmir, rises up from a fishing village that
kisses the banks of the Dal Lake.
Through it all flows the labyrinthine Jhelum river, tis demure
waters ducking historic bridges, passing heart-achingly beautiful
brick-and-timber homes, kissing the hem of grand mosques like the 14th
Century Shah-i-Hamdan dan Dastgir Sahib. Ancient shikarawallahs row away their
days on these waters, ferrying passengers through th riverine twists and turns.
Yet, for all the charm and antiquity of Srinagar, Mughal
Emperor Jehangir’s famous words – if there is a heaven on earth, it is this it
is that it is this – ring truest when you leave the city behind. While the well
heeled outposts of Phalgam, Gulmarg
and Sonamarg remain the biggest
tourist draws, it’s the careless beauty of Khag, the poetry of Gurex, an the
danger tinged beauty of Rafiabad that gives
you first hints of just why Kashmir is such a special place.
I spend my last day driving out to Manasbal, a place that takes its name from the eponymous lake that to turn colour, all day long. Locals tell me
of days when its waters pirouette through a vivid palette, glowing orange,
grey, green, blue, and other mysterious shades.
That afternoon, the lake was a translucent green, the pine
and fir trees lining its bank eagerly drinking in their reflection. Not too far
from me, an old man was building a shikara. A couple of girls, maybe her
daughters, stood amidst the disembodied parts of the boat, its wooden frames
strewn around like jigsaw pieces. In Kashmir, the shikara, like the lakes and
the rivers, is a lifeline; it will earn them bread, it will help them fish, and
it will carry them across. Seeing it like this – broken but with the promise of
becoming whole – I allow myself to hope a little.
Perhaps, Kashmir too will build itself a new life; perhaps
it too will become whole.
Evening in Lal
Chowk. Site of declarations of indepencence, of bombings and of the best
grilled mutton in all of Kashmir.
Women making
their way home
Locals tell me of days when its waters pirouette through a vivid
palette, glowing orange, grey, green, blue, and other mysterious shades.
The sun steams through an otherwise cloudy day over the
alpathar range, above Gulmarg.
In several of kashmir’s destinations, like Gulmarg. You
will have to ditch the 4 wheel for a ride on one of these.
It’s the careless
beauty of Khag, the poetry of Gurez, and the danger tinged beauty of Rafiabad
that gives you first hints of just why Kashmir is such a special place.
Wreaths of white powdery clouds crown the hills around
Dal Lake in Naseem Bagh.
sonmarg gateway of ladakh
No comments:
Post a Comment