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30 Years and 1,000 Pages Lost by a Kashmiri Poet in an Encounter

Ghulam, a 52-year-old poet, saw his ancestral home reduced to ashes and rubble. 

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Bohot aaj tak lut gaye hain bade ghar. Abhi bawafa gardane kat rahi hain.” (Many have lost their homes and their lives to the conflict and I am only one of many of the victims). This is what Ghulam Muhammad Bhat scribbles on a pillar, which once was a part of his house.

In a recent tussle between militants and Indian troops in Sringar’s Khanmoh area, Ghulam’s house was razed to the ground.

We heard gunshots. Minutes later, three men who were being chased by the police and army, entered into my house. They told me to leave with my family and personal belongings, and sat down to offer Namaz. The firing began around three in the afternoon and lasted till two in the morning. 

The next morning, Ghulam, a 52-year-old poet, saw his ancestral home reduced to ashes and rubble. Underneath the broken bricks, also lay buried over 1,000 pages of his unpublished poetry. He had been saving them for publishing once he had enough money.

I only have two regrets — my poetry and the men who died in the house. I will never forget their young, innocent faces. 
Ghulam, a 52-year-old poet, saw his ancestral home reduced to ashes and rubble. 
In the Khanmoh encounter, Ghulam lost his ancestral home. 
(Photo: Syed Shahriyar)
Ghulam, a 52-year-old poet, saw his ancestral home reduced to ashes and rubble. 
Bhat published two volumes of poems in 1985 — “Pain of Loss” and “Voice of Abu Zar” under the pen name Madhosh Balhami.
(Photo: Syed Shahriyar)
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Bhat published two volumes of poems in 1985 — “Pain of Loss” and “Voice of Abu Zar” under the pen name Madhosh Balhami.

I don’t lament the loss of my house. I feel grief over the loss of the young life in my house. Many have lost their homes and their lives to the conflict. I tell myself I am not the only victim. There are many more in this war-torn valley.
Ghulam, a 52-year-old poet, saw his ancestral home reduced to ashes and rubble. 
Ghulam laments the loss of his poetry and collection of books. He also thinks about the militants who were killed in his house. 
(Photo: Syed Shahriyar)
Ghulam, a 52-year-old poet, saw his ancestral home reduced to ashes and rubble. 
Ghulam looks at his house that he lost in the Khanmoh encounter. In the tussle between the militants and the Indian troops, he lost his ancestral home. 
(Photo: Syed Shahriyar)
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With a sense of sorrow and tears in his eyes, he points to the first floor of the roofless building where he had a library of books. There is nothing now; only broken walls and scattered bricks. He reflects on how his house turned into a graveyard for the three men who spent their last moments in his house.

Ghulam, a 52-year-old poet, saw his ancestral home reduced to ashes and rubble. 
Ghulam’s neighbour looks over from the remains of his house. 
(Photo: Syed Shahriyar)
Ghulam, a 52-year-old poet, saw his ancestral home reduced to ashes and rubble. 
Ghulam looks for his poetry in the rubble after the Khanmoh encounter. He has lost over 1,000 pages of his unpublished poetry. 
(Photo: Syed Shahriyar)

Video Editor: Rahul Sanpui
Producer: Vatsala Singh

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Topics:   Srinagar   Jammu and Kashmir 

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