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Destruction and Injustice
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Destruction and Injustice
The Tribulations Of
Kashmiri Pandits
The
Spirit Of Kashmiri Pandits
Historical
Outline From The Ancient Times
Through The Beginning Of Muslim Era
Maharaj
Kaul
The
American writer William Faulkner wrote,” The past is never dead. It is not
even past.”
Our
past is a powerful element of our consciousness, besides the history it provides
of events that we must know to understand the world we live in and learn from.
Beyond the factual mosaic of events that history attempts to be, it is the
irrigator of our consciousness, whose fertility we very much depend upon for the
richness of our present and future. We are living carriers of our personal and
historical past. If we only learnt from history keenly the world we live in
today would have been a more peaceful place.
Ancient
histories of different parts of the world are
wrapped in a lot of fog, particularly those in
India
, where history gathering art and
craft was not considered a significant intellectual activity in the distant
past. However
Kashmir
has been an exception, where good records of the times were kept, though some
of them got lost.
For
much of the Kashmir ancient history we depend on Nilmatpurana, the oldest extant
book on
Kashmir, and Pandit Kalhana’s
Rajatarangini. Nilmatpruana was written between 6th and 8th centuries
and Rajatarangini around 1149. Later work is very significant because it is the
first history written in
India
and also because of the way it is written. Kalhana approached history in a
scientific and democratic way, giving the kings and the common men the same
importance while assessing the causes and significance of the events of a period
under consideration. He saw the transitoriness in the material and the political
power. Here was a historian with a spiritual vision of human existence. He was
a Kashmiri Brahman and wrote Rajatarangini in Sanskrit verse. His book is one of
the most widely used references of the ancient Indian history. After his death
his work was carried on by other historians, till almost the start of the Mughal
era in
Kashmir.
Nilmatpurana
records (in the 6th to 8th cent. period) that Kashmiris
were a religious people, upholding the sacredness of the land, and leading
generally a happy life. Unlike some of the other parts of
India
, women enjoyed considerable freedom and were looked upon with respect and
honor.
The
name
Kashmir
is found in unbroken form in ancient Hindu texts like Nilmatpurana, Ashtadhyayi,
Mahabarta, the Puranas, and the Braht Samhitta
over a period stretching to 2,300 years. Legend has it that King Gonanda
The First of Kashmir and his son Damodra lost their lives fighting in
Kureva-Pandava war of Mahabarta.
From
the earliest historical times
Kashmir
was ruled by Hindu kings. This lasted till 1339, when Sultan Shams’d Din,
popularly known as Shah Mir, an émigré from Swat (which is in the present day
Pakistan
),laid the foundation of the Muslim era.The earliest known rulers of
Kashmir
were Gonandiyas, a Hindu dynasty which ruled for about 3,049 years. Some
records were kept during this era but unfortunately they were lost. Kalhana’s
history is only accurate from around Karkota Dynasty onwards, before that he is
supposed to have used his imagination. Following this long stretch of Hindu era
was Buddhist era brought on by King Ashoka (273 – 232 B.C.)
King
Ashoka founded the Kashmir capital Srinagri, about three miles from the present
city of
Srinagar
, during the time when his kingdom covered
Kashmir. The city developed rapidly and
became prosperous and important. He constructed a large number of temples in
Kashmir. After King Ashoka’s brutally Pyrrhic victory in Kalinga, Orrisa, in 261
B.C., he turned Buddhist and made
Kashmir
the northern center for the development and diffusion of his new religion. This
was the time Buddhism flourished in Kashmiri. It is said that Buddha himself had
thought that
Kashmir
’s environment was suitable for the meditative practices of Buddhisim.
But
with history’s unexpected turns Buddhism receded from
Kashmir
for about 200 years when Ashoka’s son Jaluka, separating from his father’s
kingdom, founded an independent state, which practiced Hinduism.
It was in King Kanishka’s empire that Buddhism was brought back to
Kashmir
and it flourished then much more than its significant success the first time
around. During this time an international Buddhist council, called the 4th
Council, was organized just outside the present day
Srinagar
, in a place called Kundalvan, which is perhaps the present-day Harwan. This
council, which lasted six months, was attended by some 500 Buddhist and Hindu
scholars from different countries, under the chairmanship of a Kashmiri Brahman
named Vasumitra. One of the momentous results of this council was the
development of Mahayana Buddhism. The council was a watershed event in the
diffusion of Buddhism outside
India, like to Central Asia,
Tibet,
China,
Korea, and
Japan
. Renowned Buddhist missionaries Kumarrajiva, Yasa, Vimalaksha, Sangabuti,
Gautamasangha, and others started from
Kashmir. Also spread abroad in the process were the stories of Mahabarta and Ramayana.
So it was from
Kashmir
that Indian culture and Sanskrit literature traveled to some of the parts of
the world.
One
of the bright stars in the pantheon of kings was Lalataditya (699 – 736). Here
was an ambitious conqueror of lands, an astute administrator and statesman, and
a prolific builder. In his thirty-seven years of rule he expanded Kashmir’s
control over
Tibet, Badakhan,
Punjab, and Kanuj. He created several towns, viharas, stupas, and temples, the
foremost of which is the grand sun-temple Martand, built over Mattan village in
Kashmir. Martand’s architecture and its
location are greatly admired.
Hiuen
Tsiang, the reknowned Chinese monk, came to
Kashmir
in the seventh century via Varamullah, present-day Baramulla, and stayed for
two years. He found Kashmiri scholars of high intellectual caliber.
For
some two thousand years
Kashmir
was the prime source of Sanskrit learning and literature. It was a center for
scholarly exchanges. Some of the significant scholars and poets of Sanskrit were
Kashmiris: Kalhan, Bilhan, Acharya Bhamba, Udbhata, Acharya Kutanka, Mammata,
Anand Vardhana, Vamana, Rudrata, Kshemendra, Abhinav Gupta, Rojanak Shitianth,
and others.
One
of the most significant contributions that Kashmiri Hindus have made not only to
the resplendent oeuvre of Indian philosophy but to the world philosophy has been
the development of Kashmir Shaivism. Shaivism is a system of thought which
prescribes the attainment of moksha ( the absolute freedom) in Shiva.
Although Kashmir Shaivism and Advaita Vedanta both teach nondualism, the
nondualism of the former is quite different from the latter’s. In
Kashmir Shaivism this universe is real and true but Advaita Vedanta
considers it to be the other way. In
Kashmir
Shaivism Lord Shiva is connected with the real world through the expansion of
his shakti and the universe is a reflection through him, as if in a
mirror. Shiva and shakti are the same. Lord Shiva has three energies:
Para, the supreme energy, Parapara, the medium or cognitive energy, and Apara, his
inferior or objective energy. A human being lives in the inferior state of
Shiva’s energy and Kashmir Shaivism teaches how to attain Shiva’s supreme
energy.
We
learn from the ancient Kashmiri history that fires were once lit somewhere in
time in Kashmiri psyche for learning, for the pursuit of the truth of life, and
for the devotion to God, which we know are still smoldering. We learn that a
Kashmiri was always a lost soul in
the clamorous world around him and he needed tranquility of the surroundings and
a feeling of brotherhood with the fellow human beings to survive. The
relationship between Kashmir and
India
had been like that between two brothers, separate but belonging to the same
family – a situation which has been further reinforced through the time
stretching to the present.
Attached
to this presentation is a chronology in the ancient Kashmiri history.
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