
Kashmir -Behind The Vale
M.J. AKBAR
Kashmir—at the edge of India’s borders and the heart of India’s consciousness—also guards the frontiers of ideology. Why has Kashmir’s harmony disintegrated and been stained by the blood of rebellion? M.J. Akbar delves into the past for answers.
Hardback | 140 x 216mm (5.5 x 8.5") | 248 pp
ISBN 8174362509
Rs.295.00
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Kashmir lies at the edge of India’s borders and at the heart of India’s consciousness. It is not geography that is the issue; Kashmir also guards the frontiers of ideology. If there was a glow of hope in the deepening shadows of a bitter partition, then it was Kashmir, whose people consciouly rejected the false patriotism of fundamentalism and made common cause with secular India instead of theocratic Pakistan. Kashmir was, as Sheikh Abdullah said and Jawaharlal Nehru believed, a stabilising force for India. Why has that harmony disintegrated? Why has the promise been stained by the blood of rebellion?
M.J. Akbar, the celebrated author of India: The Siege Within, Nehru: The Making of India, Riot After Riot and The Shade of Swords: Jihad and the Conflict between Islam and Christianity delves deep into the past for the roots of Kashmiriyat, the identity and culture that has blossomed within the ring of mountains for thousands of years. He records Kashmir’s struggle in the century to first free itself from feudal oppression and then enter the world of modern India in 1947. Placing the mistakes and triumphs of those early, formative years in the perspective of history, the author goes on to explain how the 1980s have opened the way for Kashmir’s hitherto marginalised secessionists. Both victory and defeat have had their lessons; to forget either is to destablise the future. Kashmir and the mother country are inextricably linked. India cannot afford to be defeated in her Kashmir.
About the author
M.J. Akbar belongs to the rare breed of journalists who have made a significant impact on Indian society by their writings as columnists and authors. Founder and editor-in-chief of India’s first global newspaper, The Asian Age, a multi-edition daily, he revolutionised Indian journalism in the Seventies and Eighties by successfully establishing the weekly magazine, Sunday and the daily newspaper, The Telegraph. He took a brief detour into politics with his election to the Indian Parliament in November 1989, but returned to his first passion, writing and editing, in 1993.
The books he has published have achieved great international acclaim: Riot after Riot; Nehru: The Making of India; India: The Siege Within. The Shade of Swords: Jihad and the Conflict between Islam and Christianity was published in 2002 and a new edition with a new extended chapter on Iraq was brought out in 2003.
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