[ADINSERTER AMP] [ADINSERTER AMP]

KASHMIR MUST NOT FORGET ITS RISHIS

Today’s Topic of Discussion: KASHMIR MUST NOT FORGET ITS RISHIS

 

KASHMIR MUST NOT FORGET ITS RISHIS
KASHMIR MUST NOT FORGET ITS RISHIS

 

KASHMIR MUST NOT FORGET ITS RISHIS

The fifteenth-century chronicler of Rajatarangini, Jonaraja, has T recorded an interesting dialogue between Sultan Shihabuddin (1354-73) of Kashmir and his Minister Udaysn. The Minister had suggested to the King to melt a grand brass image of Buddha and use the metal for minting coins.

The infuriated Sultan remarked: The past generations have set up images to obtain fame and even merit, and you propose to demolish them. Some have obtained renown by setting up images of gods, others by worshipping them, some by duly maintaining them and some by demolishing them. How great is the enormity of such a deed! The words were the Sultan’s, but it was the soul of Kashmir that was speaking through him.

It is a soul steeped in the ethos and morality of the rishi movement The Kashmiris, regardless of their religious affiliation, revere Lalleshwari (Lall Ded), the wandering Shaivaite mystic woman, and Nund Rishi (Sheikh Nuruddin), the Muslim saint. This guru and disciple duo belonging to the fourteenth century, deeply affected, rather inflected. the Kashmiri psyche.

 

KASHMIR MUST NOT FORGET ITS RISHIS
KASHMIR MUST NOT FORGET ITS RISHIS

 

Their sayings in simple Kashmiri are short sweet inspiring and laden with moral and spiritual insights and are described as ‘pearls of Kashmiri literature’ Two small couplets can help us understand their lifelong mission and the humanism they instilled in the Kashmiri mind.

Lall Ded:

Shiva abades in all that is, everywhere
Then discriminate not between a Hindu and a Muslim.

Nund Rishi:

We belong to the same parents
Then why this difference
Let Hindus and Muslims worship God alone
We came to this world like partners
We should share our joys and sorrows together.

This is the glorious heritage of Kashmir, a heritage rooted in the concept of fellowship of adherents of various religious traditions. It is true that the history of Kashmir mentions about the excesses of Suha Bhatt, an overzealous neo-Muslim Minister of Sultan Sikandar, but same accounts show that Rishi Nuruddin boldly stood against ‘forced conversions and orthodoxy Till date the name of Rishi Nuruddin commands respect and inspires Kashmiris, whereas Suha Bhatt has been relegated to the dustbin of history.

 

KASHMIR MUST NOT FORGET ITS RISHIS
KASHMIR MUST NOT FORGET ITS RISHIS

 

The recent blooper by the Jammu and Kashmir Government in the Amarnath shrine case, when viewed in the perspective of history, clearly shows the contrast between the inanities of government and the sanity of public mind. The Muslim family of Buta Malik has been guarding the shrine of Amarnath since 1850, and looking after the devout pilgrims, but the state government, charged with the responsibility of looking after the welfare of all visitors, and not just the pilgrims, shamefully abdicated its duty in face of the threat from divisive forces.

The issue at stake is not some facilities for the pilgrims or lack of it. In fact, the mindset of the pilgrims is such that they equate physical discomfort with religious merit. But the crucial question is whether governments will base their decisions on merit or vacillate whenever faced with communal threats.

 

google news logo
follow us on our Google news

 

The eclectic and syncretic teachings of the Kashmiri rishis had produced a tremendous social, moral and spiritual movement and fashioned a distinct Kashmiri way of life, that was almost totally free from any communal hatred or violence. It was not just because of physical beauty, but also because of the peaceful Kashmiri way of life that Kashinir gained the reputation of being paradise on earth.

The last two decades of violence and terrorism have caused a temporary setback to the centuries-old Kashmiri values of peace, harmony and goodwill, but there is every reason to believe that the ever-living influence of the Rishis will again assert itself to reclaim the paradise that Kashmir has lost.

See more:

Leave a Comment