The Tibetan Muslims who made Kashmir home
By: Andrew Whitehead, BBC News
A small community of Tibetan Muslims have returned to Srinagar |
On his latest visit to Srinagar, the capital of Indian-administered Kashmir, Andrew Whitehead came across a little-known community which has returned home after centuries away.
Sometimes
when you think you know a place, you come across a fresh aspect of it, which
reminds you how little you know.
I've
been visiting Kashmir fairly regularly for more than twenty years. I have been
to Hari Parbat fort, the magnificent Mughal-era monument which dominates the
Srinagar skyline. But I had never before come across the small, quiet,
community that nestles in its shadow.
Two
thousand or more Tibetans have made their home in Srinagar. These are Tibetan
Muslims. A few Muslim families remain in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa; some live
in border hill towns; but most of them have now settled in Indian Kashmir.
Because
they are, or were, Kashmiris.
Yet,
their story says so much about the old trading links which once gave Kashmir
its wealth - about the way those links have been thrown out of joint by the
rise of rival nation states - and about the complex issues of identity which
ricochet across the Himalayas.
By
chance, I heard mention of what locals call the "Tibet-ian colony",
close to the almond gardens and just within Srinagar's old city walls. I knew I
was on the right track when I found a food stall selling Tibetan-style
dumplings. In a back street I came across groups of women gossiping - old men
ambling along to the mosque - all distinctively Tibetan in appearance.
Around
the corner stood the centrepiece of the community - the modern, imposing,
Tibetan Public School.
Nasir Qazi, a successful young
businessman, showed me around. He's the head of the Tibetan Muslim Youth
Federation, which oversees what is clearly a well-run school that reaches well
beyond the community it was established to serve. "I feel proud," Mr
Qazi told me, "that this school is something we have offered to our
Kashmiri brothers and sisters."
In the corridors, photos of the Dalai
Lama's visit are on prominent display. Tibetan Muslims don't regard the Dalai
Lama as their religious leader. "But we do honour and respect him,"
Mr Qazi said, "and he loves us a lot."
The community traces its origin to
merchants who travelled along the old silk routes. They were Muslim traders
from Kashmir and the adjoining area of Ladakh. Four hundred or so years ago,
the then Dalai Lama granted them land in the Tibetan capital.
Over time, they married Tibetan
women, mastered the Tibetan language and took up Tibetan cuisine. They became a
distinct community in Lhasa, with their own mosque: prosperous, well-regarded
and noted practitioners of Tibetan music.
In Tibet, they were called "Khache," which means Kashmiris |
'Khache'
But they were never seen in Tibet as
Tibetans. They were called "Khache" - meaning Kashmiris. It is a term
that came to be a catch-all for Tibet's Muslims, wherever they hailed from.
After a failed uprising against
Chinese Communist rule, the Dalai Lama and thousands of his Buddhist devotees
fled across the Himalayas in 1959. Then, Tibet's Muslim community also felt
restive.
They were seen by some Tibetans as
collaborators with the new Chinese rulers. After a lot of diplomatic
push-and-pull, in which the Indian government took an interest, Muslims were
allowed to leave Tibet. Most exercised that option.
Once on Indian soil, these Muslims
were regarded not as stateless refugees, but as returning Indians. For once
being a "Khache" gave the community status. They were from Kashmir,
they told the Indian authorities, and they were adamant about going back to
their homeland.
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Today, most of them work in Srinagar,
but not as traders - the old routes are now sealed by impermeable modern
borders. Instead, they work in much less remunerative jobs, embroidering burqas
and adding the finishing touches to T-shirts sold to tourists.
Mr Qazi told me that a few decades
back, when tensions between India and China eased briefly, his mother had at
last been able to make a return visit to Lhasa. Mr Qazi has cousins there, but
he's never been able to meet them, or even set foot in the place that gives him
his identity.
"We
belong to this soil, Kashmir's soil," Mr Qazi insisted. Yet the
community's status is ambiguous. In Indian-administered Kashmir, only those who
can demonstrate that their forebears are from the state can own land and have
full rights. That's tricky for the Tibetans - their Kashmiri lineage is too
distant for this purpose.
In
a region where not belonging, or being seen as outsiders, can be perilous, the
community keeps a low profile. They seem content in Kashmir. But they are bound
to reflect on a painful paradox.
In
Tibet, they are Kashmiris. In Kashmir, they are Tibetans. There's nowhere where
they are simply themselves.
Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-42165908?SThisFB
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