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Book review
1931. The year Kashmir’s majority community revolted against their maharaja and sharply expressed a Kashmiri Muslim identity. Since then the Kashmiri-speaking community living in the valley has been grappling with ideological paradigms, searching for a common future.
Weaving a complex history with the lives of two ordinary Kashmiris—one a militant-commander-turned-Hurriyat-Conference-leader, the other a rural political worker of an older generation—In Search of a Future: The Story of Kashmir not only illuminates the socio-economic, geopolitical and ideological causes of violence from 1931 to 2007 but also aspects of Kashmiri reality that are rarely discussed—the impact of land reforms and the apple trade; religion-based political mobilization in both Pakistan and India; Kashmiri caste consciousness; the tendency to put narrow self-interest above action for the common weal; and the insecurity that expresses itself as superiority. In doing so, it brings to life the strong sense of identity of this community and its frustrations; the long-standing sectarian and communal discord; and the insurgency against India, in the process exploring the dichotomy between ethnic aspiration and religious zeal, the influence of Iran’s revolution and the Afghan and global jihad.
The book reveals a wealth of startling new information about the strategies, internal workings, disputes, excesses and failures of Kashmir’s militant movement as well as the governments of India and Pakistan, their armed forces and intelligence agencies. Nearly a decade of painstaking research through interviews conducted with primary players, including prime ministers, governors, generals, militant commanders and secessionist and mainstream politicians has produced this tremendous work of contemporary history.
Filled with detail and drama, In Search of a Future is a candid and insightful portrait of the moral crisis that has created one of the world’s most knotty and dangerous flashpoints through the twentieth century.
1931. The year Kashmir’s majority community revolted against their maharaja and sharply expressed a Kashmiri Muslim identity. Since then the Kashmiri-speaking community living in the valley has been grappling with ideological paradigms, searching for a common future.
Weaving a complex history with the lives of two ordinary Kashmiris—one a militant-commander-turned-Hurriyat-Conference-leader, the other a rural political worker of an older generation—In Search of a Future: The Story of Kashmir not only illuminates the socio-economic, geopolitical and ideological causes of violence from 1931 to 2007 but also aspects of Kashmiri reality that are rarely discussed—the impact of land reforms and the apple trade; religion-based political mobilization in both Pakistan and India; Kashmiri caste consciousness; the tendency to put narrow self-interest above action for the common weal; and the insecurity that expresses itself as superiority. In doing so, it brings to life the strong sense of identity of this community and its frustrations; the long-standing sectarian and communal discord; and the insurgency against India, in the process exploring the dichotomy between ethnic aspiration and religious zeal, the influence of Iran’s revolution and the Afghan and global jihad.
The book reveals a wealth of startling new information about the strategies, internal workings, disputes, excesses and failures of Kashmir’s militant movement as well as the governments of India and Pakistan, their armed forces and intelligence agencies. Nearly a decade of painstaking research through interviews conducted with primary players, including prime ministers, governors, generals, militant commanders and secessionist and mainstream politicians has produced this tremendous work of contemporary history.
Filled with detail and drama, In Search of a Future is a candid and insightful portrait of the moral crisis that has created one of the world’s most knotty and dangerous flashpoints through the twentieth century.
Non-Fiction
Sahibs Who Loved India - By Khuswant Singh
A rare collection of essays that invites the reader to revisit a vanished era of sahibs and memsahibs. more>>
A rare collection of essays that invites the reader to revisit a vanished era of sahibs and memsahibs. more>>
In the Country of Deceit - By Shashi Deshpande
Devayani chooses to live alone in the small town of Rajnur after her parents’ death, ignoring the gently voiced disapproval of her family ...more>>
Devayani chooses to live alone in the small town of Rajnur after her parents’ death, ignoring the gently voiced disapproval of her family ...more>>
RSS, School Texts and the Murder of Mahatma Gandhi - By ADITYA MUKHERJEE
RSS, School Texts and the Murder of Mahatma Gandhi undertakes the novel experiment of juxtaposing three apparently quite different issuesmore>>
RSS, School Texts and the Murder of Mahatma Gandhi undertakes the novel experiment of juxtaposing three apparently quite different issuesmore>>
Superstar India: From Incredible to Unstoppable - By Shobhaa D
'This is a story about India. My India. It is a very personal story. You see, I'm exactly as old as India is.'more>>
'This is a story about India. My India. It is a very personal story. You see, I'm exactly as old as India is.'more>>
Splendours of Royal Mysore- The Untold Story of the Wodeyars - By Vikram Sampath
The artistic representation of history,” says Aristotle, “is a more scientific and serious pursuit than the exact writing of history.......more>>
The artistic representation of history,” says Aristotle, “is a more scientific and serious pursuit than the exact writing of history.......more>>









