Hey if you've ever read a 10th grade NCERT english textbook and six of crows hmu I got something to say

seen from France
seen from T1

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Australia
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Georgia
seen from Iraq

seen from Malaysia
seen from Macao SAR China
seen from Italy

seen from T1
seen from Australia
seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Panama

seen from Malaysia
Hey if you've ever read a 10th grade NCERT english textbook and six of crows hmu I got something to say
“It was horrible of Louis Mountbatten (another example of how British colonialism is the cause of today’s ethnopolitical conflicts!) to advise Hari Singh, the last Maharaja of Kashmir to accede to India. At that time, states were advise to join either India and Pakistan with regard to their population’s preference and Kashmir’s population is predominantly Muslim and didn’t want to join India (most probably prefer independence, not joining either). Hari Singh chose independence but Mountbatten talked him out of it. So now we have this political quagmire of Kashmir in South Asia and Kashmir people are suffering massive human rights violations under the ruling Hindu extremist government when their special status was revoked. I feel for the Kashmir people who are still suffering for their old ruler’s lack of consideration and British colonial legacy.” - Submitted by Anonymous
In November 1947, thousands of Muslims were killed in Jammu by paramilitaries led by the army of Dogra ruler Hari Singh.
Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir - The family of Israr Ahmad Khan lived through the massacre of Jammu in what was then part of the princely state of Kashmir. He recalls that many of his relatives were killed during the violence that followed months after British rule over Indian sub-continent ended.
"My father was young then and other immediate family members were in Kashmir at that time. But many of my relatives were brutally killed," the 63-year-old told Al Jazeera.
"To be honest that was a mad period. There was no humanity shown at that time," Khan, who retired as senior police officer, said at his home in Jammu.
In November 1947, thousands of Muslims were massacred in Jammu region by mobs and paramilitaries led by the army of Dogra ruler Hari Singh.
The exact number of casualties in the killings that continued for two months is not known but estimates range from 20,000 to 237,000 and nearly half million forced into displacement across the border into the newly created nation of Pakistan and its administered part of Kashmir.
Khan said many of his relatives had escaped to Pakistan, where they continue to live. "The incident divided families. There were a lot of Muslims in Jammu but now you won't find many," he said.
The killings triggered a series of events, including a war between two newly independent nations of India and Pakistan, which gave birth to Kashmir dispute.
The killings took place when millions of Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs were crossing the border from the one side to the other, as part of British-designed plan to partition the subcontinent into India and Pakistan.
"The immediate impact (of partition) was in Jammu. The Muslim subjects from different parts of Jammu province were forcibly displaced by the Dogra Army in a programme of expulsion and murder carried out over three weeks between October-November 1947," Idrees Kanth, a fellow at International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam, who researched the 1940s history of Kashmir, told Al Jazeera.
In mid-October, the Dogra Army troops began expelling Muslim villagers from Jammu province. The refugees were sent on foot toward West Punjab (later to form part of Pakistan), where most were accommodated in refugee camps in the districts of Sialkot, Jhelum, Gujrat and Rawalpindi.
On November 5, Kanth said, the Dogra Army soldiers began another organised evacuation of the Muslims but "instead of taking them to Sialkot, as they had been promised, the trucks drove them to forest hills of Rajouri districts of Jammu, where they were executed".
Kanth added that there may have been a systematic attempt by the dying Dogra regime to ensure that records of the incident are destroyed and made it a lesser known massacre of the partition.
"I guess as happens with certain events, they got lost to history and resurface at a later time and in that sense they sort of rewrite our memory of the past. I would say the particular incident was sort of lost on us to a great extent until the post 1990s when the event was resurrected as yet another example of Dogra regime's communal politics," Kanth said.
'Demographic changes'
The historians say that the killings carried out by the Hindu ruler's army and Sikh army was a "state sponsored genocide" to bring out demographic changes in Jammu - a region which had an overwhelming population of Muslims.
"The massacre of more than two lakh (two hundred thousands) Muslims was state-sponsored and state supported. The forces from Patiala Punjab were called in, RSS (a right-wing Hindu organisation) was brought to communalise the whole scenario and kill Muslims," said PG Rasool, the author of a book The Historical Reality of Kashmir Dispute.
The Muslims, who constituted more than 60 percent of the population of Jammu region, were reduced to a minority after the killings and displacement.
He said that when the then Indian Prime Minister of India Pandit Jawahar Lal Nehru and Kashmiri leader Sheikh Abdullah met a delegation of Muslims in Jammu, they were told about the "tragic events" but they preferred to remain silent.
"They didn't want that people in Kashmir - which had a Muslim majority from the beginning - should know about it because it could have led to demonstrations. The state from the beginning has tried to cover up it. I don't call it massacre but it was a staged genocide that is unfortunately not talked about," he said.
"They thought even if they lose Kashmir at least they should get Jammu and the only way was to have a Hindu majority."
Muhammad Ashraf Wani, a professor of History at the University of Kashmir, said that the Muslims in Jammu "do not talk about it because they fear for their survival".
"This is the worst tragedies in the history of Kashmir but unfortunately no one talks about it because the state doesn’t want anyone to remember it," Wani said.
Khurram Parvez, a noted human rights defender in Kashmir, told Al Jazeera that the perpetual conflict in Kashmir has its roots in 1947 massacre. "It is deliberately forgotten. Actually, the violence of that massacre in 1947 continues. Those who were forced to migrate to Pakistan have never been allowed to return," he said.
Five days after the Jammu killings, tribal militias from Pakistan’s North Western Frontier Province (now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa), where many of the Jammu Muslims had family ties, invaded Kashmir.
As the army of tribesmen rushed to Kashmir, the army of Dogra monarch fled to Jammu. The king Hari Singh signed the instrument of accession with New Delhi, which sent its army to fight the tribesmen.
The fighting of several weeks between tribesmen and Indian Army eventually led to first India-Pakistan war. When New Delhi and Islamabad agreed to a ceasefire in January 1948, the formerly princedom of Jammu and Kashmir was divided between the two countries.
The conflict born in 1947 has led to three wars between India and Pakistan. An estimated 70,000 people have been killed in the violence in past three decades since the armed revolt against Indian rule broke out in the region in 1989.
The Maharaja Hari Singh of Kashmir visits and inspects RAF DEtling, an ADGB (Air Defence of Great Britain) Station (1944). The ADGB was an RAF command responsible for the defence of the British Isles.
The Maharaja with Wing Commander Michael Crossley (the Station Commander), leaving the operations block after listening to a briefing of fighter pilots. Behind (left to right) are Lieutenant Colonel N. S. Rawat (ADC to the Maharaja), Wing Commander W. E. N. Crowdon (Foreign Liaison Officer), and Major Upson (India Office).
The Maharaja has an informal chat with fighter pilots who have been making daily sweeps over Normandy.
The Maharaja watches a demonstration of the controls in the cockpit of a Spitfire IX. With him is Wing Commander M. N. Crossley.
Dr. Hari Singh Gour, a towering figure in Indian education, law, and social reform, issued by the Chadhava Foundation on the occasion of his death anniversary (Punyatithi). The poster identifies him as the venerable founder of Sagar University (now Dr. Harisingh Gour University) and honors his legacy as a "great educationist and social reformer." Depicted in his formal academic regalia against the backdrop of the university's entrance, the tribute highlights his monumental contribution to higher education in India, most notably his decision to donate his entire life savings to establish the university in Madhya Pradesh in 1946. Beyond his educational pursuits, Dr. Gour was a brilliant jurist and a key member of the Constituent Assembly of India, making this tribute a reflection of his enduring impact on the nation’s intellectual and legal foundation.
An open letter to the Editor "Daily Sabah"
An open letter to the Editor “Daily Sabah”
The Editor, “Daily Sabah” [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] Dear Sir, This is in connection with the article of Mr. Fai published in your “Daily Sabah” on 7th September 2021, with a subject line “Fundamental Misconceptions about Kashmir” It is not difficult to reply on all the points of the topic. But one has to write a very lengthy reply to cover up, his all…
View On WordPress
View: Big gains ahead; it's also about equality, justice in J&K
View: Big gains ahead; it’s also about equality, justice in J&K
[ad_1]
By Major Gen (Retd) Dhruv C Katoch “There is a tide in the affairs of men, which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune.” This line from the play Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare, is oft quoted not just for its pithy turn of phrase but as an example of taking critical decisions at an opportune moment. We witnessed such a moment on August 5-6, 2019, when Parliament, in a spirit of…
View On WordPress
View: Big gains ahead; it's also about equality, justice in J&K
View: Big gains ahead; it’s also about equality, justice in J&K
By Major Gen (Retd) Dhruv C Katoch “There is a tide in the affairs of men, which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune.” This line from the play Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare, is oft quoted not just for its pithy turn of phrase but as an example of taking critical decisions at an opportune moment. We witnessed such a moment on August 5-6, 2019, when Parliament, in a spirit of near total…
View On WordPress