Hindu-Muslim divide reaches beyond the grave

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Nation & World | Hindu-Muslim divide reaches beyond the grave | Seattle Times Newspaper

KARACHI, Pakistan — They sat in the dark for decades, waiting on the shelves of an abandoned library, the laughter and tears that once defined their lives all but forgotten.

Dictatorships rose and fell. India and Pakistan detonated atomic bombs. All the while, the ashes were housed in Karachi's Hindu Cremation Ground, a several-acre legacy of the shrinking Hindu community in majority-Muslim Pakistan.

Finally, after years of lobbying and bureaucratic setbacks, the remains of 135 Hindus who had died as long ago as the 1950s were recently placed in clear disposable boxes (to appease wary customs officials) and allowed a final journey over a tense border to be scattered in India's Ganges River, which Hindus hold sacred.

During the three-day trip aboard Indian and Pakistani trains, an earthquake rocked both nations — a clear sign, said Hindu devotees who accompanied the remains, that the souls had awakened and were ready for the next world.

The transfer, reportedly the first on a large scale since the wrenching 1947 partition that created Pakistan out of the collapsing British rule in India, spotlights a community caught in the middle of a political and religious divide in troubled Pakistan. Hindus in Pakistan increasingly have been targeted by mobs, kidnappers and extortionists as Islamic fundamentalism and lawlessness have spread.

Caretaker Murad Buksh, 63, whose family has tended these cremation grounds for generations, looked over shelves holding urns that have accumulated in the last few months — those with red shrouds bound for India on a second trip, which could be as early as September; those in white to be scattered locally, many in Pakistan's Indus River, which is said to have "sweet waters" similar to the Ganges'.

The cremation grounds, built in the 1880s in a then-rural area to serve the Hindu population, are now hemmed in by Karachi's teeming population and ringed by 10 mosques. Hindus, who accounted for 15 percent of Pakistan's population at partition, now make up just 2 percent of its 170 million people as emigration and forced conversions take their toll.

In the lead-up to partition, many Hindus in what became Pakistan relocated to Hindu-majority India, and many Muslims in India moved to the Islamic Republic of Pakistan. But significant numbers on both sides stayed put. In a bid to reassure Hindus, Pakistan's founder, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, said their rights would be respected, a promise that many feel has since been betrayed.

Sacred Ganges ritual

Ideally, Hindus cremate their relatives' bodies and scatter them in the Ganges. Although many Pakistani Hindus chose to scatter their relatives' remains locally after partition, some families left their loved one's ashes at the cremation grounds, hoping by some miracle they'd one day reach India, and join their parents' and grandparents' ashes in the sacred waters.

Several years ago, Karachi-born Hindu priest Ramnath Mishra teamed up with New Delhi's Shri Devo Uthan Sewa Samiti, a religious civic group, to try to make that miracle happen.

Initially, they were stonewalled by officials on both sides. But then the civic group's general secretary, Vijay Sharma, got the Indian media interested, increasing the political pressure. In January, after enough time had passed since the deadly 2008 Mumbai attack that India blames on Pakistani militants, they received the go-ahead. A delegation of 12 Pakistani Hindus accompanied the remains, transported in the trains' overhead luggage racks.

"They're quite heavy," said Mishra, whose family has for 1,500 years, he says, tended a Hindu temple linked to the Karachi burial grounds, "not only physically but from the weight of their souls."

They arrived in New Delhi on Jan. 21, then waited three weeks for an auspicious date before heading with a band and hundreds of well-wishers to Haridwar, about 115 miles to the northeast, for the ceremony. There, the ashes, mixed with milk and flower petals, were scattered in the Ganges.

"I felt such elation and honor that I could help bring these souls long separated by partition to the banks of the Ganges," Sharma said. "If both sides would allow regular trips for Hindu ashes, it could help both countries respect each other's religion."

Sectarian attacks

Back in Karachi, fewer Hindus these days come to the cremation grounds, where bodies are burned in sunken ash pits, Mishra said. He explained that they are increasingly concerned about being attacked in a country where Christian and minority Muslim sects also are fearful. On some days, several hundred Hindus, including women and children, enter India from Pakistan on pilgrim visas, hoping they'll be allowed to stay.

Hindus here say the cremation grounds are coveted by Muslims. A few years ago, the city government appropriated four acres for a highway overpass, promising compensation that never came, Hindus said.

The construction destroyed boundary walls, leading to the desecration of some of the grave sites that dot the area. During a state program to help rebuild the grounds, workers and passers-by stole water tanks, smashed fences, cut electrical wires and poured ashes out of metal urns so they could sell the containers, Mishra said.

Caretaker Buksh, a Muslim, said he doesn't mind handling Hindu bodies or being on the grounds among the dead. "Collecting the wood, burning bodies — it's a job," he said.

Others are less open-minded. "I don't remember a time when Hindus and Muslims lived in peace," said Nooruddin Bharucha, a shop owner in Karachi's Mithadar neighborhood. "It's OK to do business with them. But they're blasphemers, and that's unacceptable to us."

"Because we're Hindus and a minority, they think we'll just take it," Mishra said.
 

Dovah

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^^And then they preach us on how to treat our minorities.
 

maomao

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"I don't remember a time when Hindus and Muslims lived in peace," said Nooruddin Bharucha, a shop owner in Karachi's Mithadar neighborhood. "It's OK to do business with them. But they're blasphemers, and that's unacceptable to us."
This is the exact mentality of common pakistanis, thanks to prolonged exposure to extreme Islamic teachings and complete extermination of Vedic roots from the hearts and minds of neo-converts; any statement like this against muslims in India, would have been blackout or created a storm; it depicts that this type of a mentality is regarded as ideal and acceptable with no introspection required......No doubt pakistan is shithole, where everyone kills everyone, a true failed state; all Hindus and non-muslims should sell their properties and come to India. A non-muslim can never be safe is such an Islamic environment (it's not just threatening but suffocating and below human dignity).
 

nitesh

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^^And then they preach us on how to treat our minorities.
I think Javed Akhtar sahab gave a very good reply to such idiots, when in one show he said "you haven't let minorites to live so there is no one who can question how you treat your minorities", the host was taken aback
 

Dovah

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I think Javed Akhtar sahab gave a very good reply to such idiots, when in one show he said "you haven't let minorites to live so there is no one who can question how you treat your minorities", the host was taken aback
Yeah, saw that episode, the look on the bald Pakistani journalist's face was epic!!!
Gonna watch it again on YT now!!!:becky:
 

devgupt

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many people often wonder how did hinduism survived enduring years of Islamic rule . While liberal rulers like Akbar can definitely claim some credit, the real reason is the fortitude of the ordinary hindus who kept alive its traditions, kept nurturing the flame.

PS - The intention of this post is not to flame but to salute the spirit of people(whatever their faith may be) living in a hostile environments.And yes such an environment should never develop in our land.And I hope in the subcontinent and in all Asia, in all world.
 
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