On a crisp June afternoon, a train pulled out of Katra and began its journey northward—winding through tunnels and valleys, past rivers and ridges; until it reached Srinagar. It wasn’t just any train. It was the Vande Bharat Express. And with its arrival, Kashmir quietly stepped into a new chapter of connectivity, one that promises certainty in a Valley long defined by unpredictability.
For decades, the Valley’s link to the rest of India has been fragile. Flights were frequently cancelled, roads blocked by snow or landslides and travel plans hinged on weather forecasts and highway advisories. But now, with the completion of the Udhampur-Srinagar-Baramulla rail link, northern railways have stitched together a corridor that once seemed like a distant dream.
Launched on June 6 by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Vande Bharat Express is the first semi-high-speed train to run between Katra and Srinagar. Its sleek white coaches, known for speed and comfort, have already begun to reshape how people move across the mountains. Students, patients, pilgrims, and traders now have a reliable, cost-effective alternative to air travel. In a place where mobility has long been a privilege, the train offers something rare: consistency.
This week, the train began a brief two-minute halt at Reasi station, a decision taken on an experimental basis after persistent demand from locals and political representatives. Reasi, perched near the world’s tallest railway bridge over the Chenab and India’s first cable-stayed rail bridge at Anji, is more than a stop; it’s a symbol. By pausing here, even briefly, the train acknowledges the aspirations of a district often overlooked.
Railways have already proven their worth in times of disruption. When heavy rains lashed Jammu and Kashmir in August and road connectivity collapsed, Northern Railways quietly introduced a special train between Katra and Banihal to ensure uninterrupted travel. No fanfare, no headlines—just service. That’s the kind of infrastructure the region needs: robust, responsive and rooted in public need.
Now, the vision stretches further. Northern Railways is working to address operational and security challenges to enable direct train services between Kashmir and the rest of India. If realized, it would mean boarding a train in Srinagar and arriving in Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, or even Kanyakumari—without switching modes, without stepping into an airport. Katra-Srinagar Vande Bharat Express, already hailed as a historic milestone, could soon be the precursor to a pan-India rail connection that redefines accessibility.
Vande Bharat doesn’t just connect stations. It connects stories. It carries the weight of decades of longing, the hope of economic revival and the quiet thrill of uninterrupted journeys. In a region where movement has often been dictated by forces beyond control, this train offers something profound: belonging.
As it hums past orchards and rivers, tunnels and bridges, the Vande Bharat is more than a marvel of engineering. It’s a signal of arrival. Kashmir is no longer waiting at the platform. It’s moving forward—on track, and on its own terms.
