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Amid dwindling readership of Kashmiri literature, Ganderbal youth publishes a Kashmiri novel

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A Kashmiri youth from Ganderbal’s Dodurhama, who’s also pursuing a master’s degree in Kashmiri literature, recently rose to the limelight after his novel ‘Khaban Khayalan Manz’ got published last month. We talked to him about the dwindling readership of Kashmiri literature.

The youth Asif Tariq Bhat, who’s a student at the Central University of Kashmir told The Kashmiriyat that he began writing the novel in October 2021. It was months later towards the end of May 2022 that the novel was published.

Kashmiri writers, authors, poets, and other artists have gained global recognition and hold worldwide records in their composition of literature. The age of the literature in the valley can be traced back to the texts of Sanskrit and to the mystic medieval pio-neering poets like Lal Ded.

Kashmiri language is as old as English and since medieval times, the language has had many writers with passionate readers but the readership started declining with the changing times. However, today, the language rarely sees any guidance for its people. The majority of the parents prefer that their children speak in Urdu or some other language.

The language hardly finds any guidance on the internet as well. There are only a few social media platforms where the language has a presence and is taught in one way or the other.

The literature in the valley started its bulk in the native language ‘Kashmiri’ with the divine poetry of Lal Ded which is remembered as Vaakh. This was followed by the period of Sufism or the eternal era of Alamdar-e-Kashmir (‘Flag Bearer of Kashmir’), whose work highlighted the religious themes and calls for peace. Sufism gave birth to what the world remembers as Lyricism which left its mark with the Nightingale of Kashmir, Habba Khatoon. Khatoon’s legacy lives on with one of her unmatched notable works Loal.

Kashmiri literature stepped into the world of Romanticism with Rasool Mir’s initial ghazals in the Kashmiri language. Literature continued with the continuing production of masterpieces from notable writers like Mahjoor, Lal Aragami, Dina Nath Nadim and Mir Ghulam Rasool Nazki to name a few.

And, from 1940s onwards began the modern age of literature in the valley. This included novels, trans-lations, poetry and books on valley’s conflict.

The literature did start and continue in Kashmir’s native language but with time, the language started getting less attention and the readership eventually decreased.

With time, the valley saw unprecedented changes, as writing in Kashmiri shifted to English, the read-ership pattern changed. Although much of the work still exists in Kashmiri but how literature is now recognized globally is the work done by some fa-mous Kashmiri writers whose expertise lies in the English language.

Curfewed Nights by Basharat Peer is one of the most well-read books of this time. Mirza Waheed’s The Collaborator, Feroz Rather’s debut fiction novel, The Night of Broken Glass and Farah Bashir’s Rumours of Spring are some books that have made a mark among the readers. While these books and the writers are getting recognition, there’s hardly any recognition of writers writing in Kashmiri language.

Language losing its readers There are many claims as to why the language lost its readers with one of the prominent being the lack of bulk of litera-ture in the respective language. The present genera-tion witnesses a huge bulk of literature in English Language. The literature is preserved but not prac-tised in its language.

—Courtesy: The Kashmiriyat

 

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