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Home OPINION

36 Januaries Later — Let’s Make a Resolve for This One!

Dr Sanjay Parva by Dr Sanjay Parva
January 1, 2025
in OPINION
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1989: Dawn of the Apocalypse

The “year of awakening” – or was it a nightmare? As January rolled in, whispers of discontent began to roar. Guns and grenades replaced pastoral poetry, and we entered the Age of Enlightened Militancy. Happy New Year!

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1990: Exodus and Enigma

January brought curfews, crackdowns, and an exodus of Kashmiri Pandits. A cultural massacre masked as “revolution.” We won freedom from our pluralistic identity – achievement unlocked!

1991: Curtains on Civility

By this January, we’d mastered stone-pelting as an art form. The Valley had a new tradition: marking the New Year with shutdown calls, military raids, and endless funerals.

1992: Heaven in Hell

The year began with a bang, quite literally. More encounters, less encounters with reality. Tourist brochures quietly omitted the “Welcome to Paradise” slogan.

1993: Sopore Burns

January warmed our souls, but only with the flames of Sopore’s tragedy. Civilians were collateral damage, the marketplace became a pyre, and our conscience melted into ash.

1994: Hope? What’s That?

The world entered the Internet age, but in Kashmir, we entered yet another era of despair. A New Year’s resolution? Survive the month.

1995: Kidnapping the Headlines

Journalists became targets in the New Year. Let’s ring in January by holding hostages and demanding airtime. Achievement: global attention for all the wrong reasons.

1996: Puppet Show Begins

The New Year blessed us with an assembly election. And by election, we mean stage-managed coronations. Democracy, thy name is theatrics.

1997: Who Needs Electricity?

In January, we inaugurated our unofficial blackout season. Firewood made a comeback. We also successfully exported a generation of brain-drain geniuses to Delhi and beyond.

1998: Fear is the New Normal

January saw security bunkers mushrooming like daisies. Meanwhile, the term “crossfire” replaced “collateral damage” in our daily vocabulary. Achievement: linguistic innovation.

1999: Peaks of Despair

Kargil War loomed over us. While the rest of the world celebrated the end of the millennium, we perfected the art of despair management. Happy Y2K, not.

2000: Millennial Mourning

The millennium began with massacres in villages like Chittisinghpora. We resolved to uphold our record of tragedy – and we didn’t disappoint.

2001: Watching Towers Fall

January’s snow painted the Valley white while Kashmiris realized they weren’t the only ones with tragic headlines. The world turned its eyes to 9/11; we were sidelined.

2002: Bullet Ballots

January meant “elections.” We sang the anthem of democracy – under the shadow of the gun. That year, “voter turnout” was as dubious as the promises made.

2003: Welcome to the Table

India and Pakistan talked peace. Again. The snow melted, the talks froze, and the common Kashmiri learned that dialogue is as fragile as a Kashmiri kangri.

2004: Ceasefire Crackdown

A New Year, a new hope. A ceasefire held, but January’s chill reminded us that promises are as reliable as Kashmir’s power supply.

2005: Post-Quake Solidarity

January felt warmer with post-earthquake solidarity… until corruption froze the funds. A new achievement: disaster capitalism.

2006–2010: Bleak Continuity

Each January brought fresh cycles of shutdowns, curfews, and resolutions to be miserable. The highlight? Our ability to endure.

2011: Facebook Uprising

January introduced social media warriors, trending hashtags, and armchair activism. Guns were passé – keyboards became the new arsenal.

2012: Afzal Guru Fallout

January reminded us of unresolved tragedies. Debates on Afzal Guru’s execution continued to dominate discussions, achieving nothing but polarization.

2013–2015: When Silence Screams

The winters became quieter, not because peace reigned, but because exhaustion took over. Sarcasm failed us; only the snow spoke.

2016: The Wani Effect

January was the calm before Burhan Wani’s storm. We spent the year recovering from pellets, blinded by rhetoric – and literal projectiles.

2017: Digital Lockdowns

January gifted us Internet bans. We entered the modern Stone Age, proving Kashmir’s innovation in blending ancient and contemporary misery.

2018–2019: Pre-Abrogation Jitters

Each January buzzed with rumors: will Article 370 survive? Spoiler alert: no. Achievement? A complete redefinition of “statehood.”

2020: The Year of Communication

January delivered the revolutionary gift of 2G. The world had 5G by then. We celebrated mediocrity like a New Year’s miracle.

2021–2023: From Hope to Hopelessness

Each New Year seemed like a carbon copy: fancy promises from Delhi, while Kashmir remained stuck in time. Achievements? None. Losses? Countless.

2024: Still Counting

This January, what’s new? We’ve mastered the art of surviving hopelessness. Perhaps that’s the achievement we’ve always been chasing.

January 2025: A Hopeful Forecast

January 2025 shouldn’t just be about frozen streets and frozen aspirations; it should be about thawing hearts and rebuilding dreams. Imagine a New Year where we begin to grow into a vibrant society, teeming with tons of happiness and hope, where our young minds engage with books brimming with ideas to give something to our Motherland than only be mute spectators to being taken for a ride. Let this January bring meaningful conversations among all of us. May the snow falling on Kashmir reflect purity and peace, rather than being a silent witness to more despair. After all, even the coldest winters deserve the warmth of hope. We are the hope. Here are 10 soul-stirring goals for a Vibrant Kashmir in 2025:

  1. Rekindling the Spirit of Pluralism
    Revive Kashmir’s age-old ethos of harmony, where every community – irrespective of religion, caste, or background – feels at home. Let temples, mosques, gurdwaras, and churches once again echo with coexistence and compassion, reminding us of our shared humanity. Let the hymns emanating from all works as prayers for everyone.
  2. Empowering Education as the Great Equalizer
    Build world-class schools and colleges in every corner of the Valley. Introduce curriculum that fosters critical thinking, global awareness, and, most importantly, empathy. Let no child grow up thinking ignorance is their destiny.
  3. Cultivating Economic Independence
    Transform Kashmir into a hub for entrepreneurship by encouraging startups in agriculture, handicrafts, and tourism. Let young Kashmiris become job creators, not job seekers, using the Valley’s unique strengths to power a thriving economy. Our youth are our light.
  4. Healing Through Art and Culture
    Establish annual festivals celebrating Kashmir’s rich cultural heritage – poetry, music, dance, and crafts. Let the Valley’s art become a global bridge, showcasing our resilience and beauty through creative expression.
  5. Harnessing Nature for Prosperity
    Implement sustainable agriculture, water conservation, and renewable energy projects. Let Kashmir’s pristine environment become the backbone of an eco-friendly economy while preserving its natural splendor for future generations.
  6. Uniting Through Sports
    Build infrastructure for cricket, football, winter sports, and more. Imagine a Kashmiri athlete winning Olympic gold, becoming a symbol of hope for the Valley. Sports can bridge divides and inspire unity like nothing else.
  7. Creating Safe Spaces for Women
    Empower women through education, entrepreneurship, and leadership opportunities. Establish safe and inclusive spaces for them to grow, thrive, and lead a new narrative for Kashmir’s progress.
  8. Bridging Generations with Wisdom and Innovation
    Encourage intergenerational dialogue where elders share their wisdom, and youth contribute their energy and ideas. Let technology meet tradition, creating solutions grounded in our roots but aimed at the future.
  9. Restoring Faith in Governance
    Make governance transparent, accountable, and people-centric. Let public services run efficiently and fairly, proving that leadership is not about power but about service to the people.
  10. Becoming a Beacon of Peace
    Lead the way in conflict resolution and dialogue by turning Kashmir into a global example of peace-building. Imagine the Valley as a space where countries learn how to resolve their differences, guided by the courage and conviction of its people. Long live our Motherland. 

An author, a communications strategist, Dr Sanjay Parva was a debut contestant from 28-Beerwah 2024 Assembly Constituency

 

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Dr Sanjay Parva

Dr Sanjay Parva

Dr Sanjay Parva, a debut contestant from 28-Beerwah 2024 Assembly Constituency, just released his eighth book “The Lost Muslim”. bindasparva@gmail.com

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