For Zubin Mehta it was the
realization of a dream. For the German ambassador in India, Michael
Steiner, it was the fulfillment of a promise to an internationally
renowned conductor. For the Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir, Omar
Abdullah, it was a reassertion of the brute strength of the state.
Everybody seems to have had a stake in the first-ever
international musical concert in the Kashmir Valley, held September 7,
except the people of the region. The world-renowned conductor wanted to
bring a message of peace and harmony to local Kashmiris, but instead
ended up grating on the raw nerves of those who are still not reconciled
to the loss of hundreds of loved ones during the decades of conflict in
India’s northernmost state.
As in Afghanistan every Kashmiri family has a story to
tell, every individual has an experience to narrate and a pain to share.
It is this emotion that came to the fore when Mehta’s concert arrived
in the state’s summer capital city of Srinagar last week. Although the
idea behind the concert was to provide a balm to the wounds of the
people, it further underscored the chasm between the state and the
people.
“The situation in Kashmir is such that it does not make
sense to hold this kind of concert. It’s an insult to the people. In the
last few years so many people have disappeared neither the state
government nor the central government is willing to address the issue,” a
local named Mushtaq tells The Diplomat, while sipping tea at Srinagar’s Lal Chowk, a popular venue for protests.
This anger was also evident in a parallel concert
organized ten kilometers away from the Shalimar Bagh where Mehta
conducted the Bavarian State Orchestra last weekend. The graffiti and
posters covering the walls of the venue tell the narrative of the
people’s suffering at the hands of security forces and express their
collective frustration at living in a constant state of fear.
The Coalition of Civil Societies organized this parallel
concert, Haqeeqat-e-Kashmir (Reality of Kashmir), to give a sense of
what is really taking place in the state and to oppose what they call an
“elite orchestra meant for non-Kashmiris.” Students, scholars,
journalists and citizens from all walks of life came in sizable numbers
to express their “angst against the government.”
Only elites were the guests at Zubin mehta show |
“Zubin Mehta’s concert cannot hide the reality of
Kashmir. There cannot be normalcy in the state under the huge security
architecture. There cannot be peace unless you stop killing innocent
people,” Parvez Khurram, the head of the Coalition of Civil Societies,
tells The Diplomat. Khurram adds that he “blames the state
government and the central government for sending the wrong message to
the international community by organizing a musical event in the valley.
In all previous concerts there was people’s participation, but this
time people have been kept out altogether. Besides, Kashmir is a
disputed territory.”
Huzaifa, a student participating in the alternative
concert, shares the same complaint. “You have invited people from
outside, you picked and chose your guests, but ignored the very people
this concert was meant for. We feel alienated,” the young lady
complains.
Nikolaus Bachler, the General Manager of the Bavarian
State Orchestra, is also unhappy with the way the concert was conducted.
He tells The Diplomat that the “idea was to bring Zubin Mehta
to the people of Kashmir. But the German ambassador made it quite an
elite event. So it became a political issue which has nothing to do with
music. This is sad for us. We are here for the people of Kashmir, not
for the elite.” Before the start of the show Mehta also apologized for
the controversy and assured the locals that he would like to perform for
all Kashmiris next time.
Outside the Shalimar Bagh, residents were living
under a curfew-like situation. Normal mobility within a radius of three
kilometers of the venue was highly restricted. The city of Srinagar
looked deserted and overrun by security forces.
“Strike is the only option. The government has not given
us any avenue to protest on the street,” a young medico named Khalid
Mohiudin tells The Diplomat. “The reality is that in the state
today there is no scope for democratic protest. It’s a police state and
we hate that. Had the government allowed normal democratic protests on
the street we could not have asked for a general strike further
inconveniencing the people.”
The government thought that by organizing the concert it
could present the state in a positive light. It has, however, failed in
its mission. If anything, the event has further accentuated the deep
fault line that exists in the valley. It has exposed the india and its security establishment badly.
source: thediplomat.com
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