試す 金 - 無料
The Great Lie of Meritocracy
Kashmir Observer
|AUGUST 5, 2025 ISSUE
From bureaucracies to ballot boxes, power in Kashmir increasingly passes from father to son, leaving little room for first-generation strivers.
A few weeks ago, a countryside boy from a government school told me he wanted to “learn how to speak English like the rich boys in Srinagar.”
His teacher had praised his science marks, but he wasn’t sure if that meant anything.
“They still get better jobs,” he said, pointing toward the hilltop private school with gleaming buses and a tall iron gate.
He wasn’t wrong. In today’s Kashmir, the game is increasingly fixed.
We often talk about success as something earned. “Work hard,” they say, “and you'll rise.”
Yet rising is no longer about hard work. It's about where you were born, who your parents know, which school you went to, and whether your surname opens doors.
The myth of meritocracy survives only because it hides in plain sight, dressed in the language of aspiration.
Elite families, those who control land, businesses, politics, and culture, are consolidating than merely surviving.
The sons of Kashmiri landlords are now legislators. Their daughters head private schools. And their cousins run the bureaucracy.
These families have moved from orchards to offices without ever losing power. Generation after generation, they inherit institutions, not just assets. They shape syllabi, policies, hiring, even aesthetics.
Beyond ambition, this is aristocracy.
In the 1990s, Kashmiri families lived side by side. A new child, a new cow, or a wedding was a shared joy. People borrowed sugar from each other’s kitchens. A meal of mutton was sent across fences without ceremony. There was pride, but not pretence.
Today, that landscape has shifted. Concrete walls have gone up, separating houses and hearts. You don’t knock anymore, you call first. If you’re not on the guest list, you’re not welcome.
The symbols of social life have changed. False ceilings, ornamental gates, and imported tiles are essentially about ranking than taste.
このストーリーは、Kashmir Observer の AUGUST 5, 2025 ISSUE 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Kashmir Observer からのその他のストーリー
Kashmir Observer
Authorities Start Mosque Mapping Drive In Kashmir
Imams, Madrassa Teachers Asked To Share Financial & Personal Details
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
WD May Bring Snow From Jan 16
Observer News Service
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Blinkit Drops 10-minute Delivery Claim After Labour Min Intervenes
Swiggy, Zepto May Follow Suit
2 mins
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Mirwaiz Visits Bhushan Bazaz’s Residence, Offers Condolences
Mirwaiz Umar Farooq on Monday visited the residence of the late Kashmiri Pandit intellectual Bhushan Bazaz in New Delhi and offered condolences to the bereaved family.
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
KU Begins Workshop on Grassland Invasion Management
The Department of Botany, University of Kashmir (KU), on Tuesday began a two-day workshop titled \"Managing Invasions for Grassland Restoration and Resilience\" under the RUSA 2.0 project in collaboration with ICAR -Indian Grassland & Research Fodder Institute, Regional Research Station Srinagar, at the Main Campus.
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
'Digital Propaganda Campaign'
CIK Executes Proclamation Against 3 'Absconders'
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Valley's Long Volley
Why thinking long term matters more than ever in Kashmir.
1 mins
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
SC Seeks Justification for Shabir Shah Detention
The Supreme Court on Tuesday pulled up the NIA for not properly presenting its case in a terror funding matter involving Kashmiri separatist leader Shabir Ahmed Shah, asking the agency to justify his detention for more than six years.
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
MARCOS, SDRF Maintain Intensive Day-3 Search in Gandbal Boat Tragedy
Srinagar: The search operation by Marine Commandos (MARCOS) and the State Disaster Response Force (SDRF) continued for the third consecutive day on Tuesday in the Jhelum river at Gandbal, Srinagar, to trace the remains of Showkat Ahmad Sheikh, one of the victims of the 2024 Gandbal boat tragedy.
1 min
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Kashmir Observer
Kashmir Losing Paddy Lands to Rapid Orchard Expansion
The vast stretches of Kashmir's fertile paddy land, once the backbone of the Valley's food system, are steadily giving way to high-density apple orchards, residential colonies and commercial structures.
2 mins
JANUARY 14, 2026 ISSUE
Listen
Translate
Change font size
