Prøve GULL - Gratis

Kashmir Rings Familiar Notes In Northeast

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

|

May 03, 2025

It doesn't help when others' reading of a conflict is forced on the locals. The quieter voices for peace must be heard as much as the hawkish ones for revenge

- PRADIP PHANJOUBAM

The massacre of innocents at Pahalgam in Kashmir shocked the nation and the world. It was one of those moments when civilisation and its values seemed completely eclipsed by a dark, atavistic madness in humans, which great literature such as Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and William Golding's Lord of the Flies provided terrifying glimpses of.

It was indeed an Apocalypse Now moment. What, however, is equally frightening and surprising is that it took just five radical murderers to overturn a nation's composure so completely and expose what now seems no less than a primordial faultline running deep in the heart of India, along a religious line. In Kashmir, this faultline seems even deeper—for here, the trouble is more than about religion, but also sub-nationalistic aspirations among a section of Kashmiris for secession from India.

The surge of retributive anger along with a swell of patriotic fervour in India following the carnage can only be the oxymoronic phrasal adjective "terrible beauty" that poet W.B. Yeats used to describe the mix of fear and admiration he felt while silently watching ordinary people transform to become possessed by an awesome energy almost overnight in the wake of a similar surge of Irish nationalism around the Easter of 1916.

This visible current mass psychology in India as a response to a single terror attack has another story to tell. No spark can cause an inferno if there was to be nothing to catch fire in the first place. Hence, the normalcy that had supposedly been restored in this beleaguered state now seems a veneer just enough to camouflage a deeply entrenched scar in the minds of ordinary Indians, needing only a spark to bring back old distrust, resurrecting the spectre of the old emotional wall which can cause the further isolation of Kashmir.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The New Indian Express Mangaluru

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

KERALA RISES IN REFORMS BUT GROUND REALITY LAGS

K ERALA'S achievement in improving the investment climate is laudable, considering it was long seen as business-unfriendly.

time to read

1 mins

November 17, 2025

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

SGPC mulls ban on lone woman for Pak jathas after pilgrim goes missing

FILE PHOTO

time to read

1 mins

November 17, 2025

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

Delhi airport traffic in Apr-Oct falls 3.5% due to upgrade, airspace closure

GMR Airports Limited reported a 3.5% year-on-year decline in passenger traffic at its flagship Indira Gandhi International Airport (DEL) for the first seven months of the current fiscal due to year runway upgrade and airspace closure, according to a mandatory filing with the stock exchanges.

time to read

1 min

November 17, 2025

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

Bengal guv warns of legal action against TMC MP

WEST Bengal Governor C V Ananda Bose on Sunday threatened to take legal action against veteran Trinamool Congress (TMC) MP Kalyan Banerjee over his “invective” remarks leading to a confrontation.

time to read

1 mins

November 17, 2025

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

‘Indians have to risk losing to be successful’

DURING his heydays in the 1980s, USA’s Freddie Spencer was at the pinnacle of Grand Prix motorcycle racing.

time to read

1 min

November 17, 2025

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

WHAT TO MAKE OF BUFFETT'S 'THANK YOU' LETTER

MONEY MATTERS

time to read

2 mins

November 17, 2025

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

Zelenskyy spearheads bid to revive Russia prisoner swaps

UKRAINE is working to resume prisoner exchanges with Russia that could bring home 1,200 Ukrainian prisoners, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Sunday, a day after his national security chief announced progress in negotiations.

time to read

1 min

November 17, 2025

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

'The answer is us': Indigenous groups protest

HERE in Brazil, marchers revelled in their right to be heard, their voices rising in a city chosen precisely to focus the world's attention on the Amazon and its defenders.

time to read

2 mins

November 17, 2025

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

FOR GAMBHIR AND CO, IT’S PITCH DARK AT HOME

EVEN before the presentation ceremony was over, the ground staff at the Eden Gardens, as if to carry out a meta joke, watered the square.

time to read

1 mins

November 17, 2025

The New Indian Express Mangaluru

Kremlin says Kyiv briefed on summit terms

A top Kremlin aide on Sunday said that the conclusions of the Alaska summit between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his US counterpart Donald Trump were communicated to Kiev, adding that Moscow is maintaining contacts with Washington on the issue.

time to read

1 min

November 17, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size