Talk:Kashmiris/Archive 3
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Dogra regime
Dilpa kaur, I am not sure why you needed to move Ian Talbot to the opening, as you say here. The Talbot and Singh book that you cite is on the Partition of India, and neither author is a specialist in Kashmir history. Moreover, Chitralekha Zutshi,[1] who does specialise in Kashmir history, has much to say about these matters in her Chapter 2. For instance, note:
In the case of the Kashmir Valley, the office holders were drawn from the ranks of the Hindu clerical caste of Kashmiri Pandits, and a few prominent Kashmiri Muslim Sayyid and Pir families.
It is important to differentiate between the ranks of the bureaucracy, and the Pandit community in general, since the greatest beneficiaries of the system were the wazir-wazarats and the tehsildars. The lower ranks of the bureaucracy, including the patwaris, kardars and shakdars, most likely did not benefit as much from the system as British representations would have one believe. It is important to differentiate between the ranks of the bureaucracy, and the Pandit community in general, since the greatest beneficiaries of the system were the wazir-wazarats and the tehsildars. The lower ranks of the bureaucracy, including the patwaris, kardars and shakdars, most likely did not benefit as much from the system as British representations would have one believe.
The simplistic picture of Muslim masses being oppressed by Hindu elites drawn by the British commentators is a mirror image of the Hindu masses oppressed by Muslim elites that they drew in the rest of India. These were "familiar colonial tropes" as Barbara Metcalf has pointed out elsewhere.[2] -- Kautilya3 (talk) 08:38, 28 December 2018 (UTC)
References
- ^ Zutshi, Chitralekha (2004), Languages of Belonging: Islam, Regional Identity, and the Making of Kashmir, C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, ISBN 978-1-85065-700-2
- ^ Metcalf, Barbara D., ed. (2009), Islam in South Asia in Practice, Princeton University Press, ISBN 1400831385
- The history of that text on this article goes back to NadirAli's referral[1] to Fowler&fowler's explanation to you.[2] Perhaps if @Fowler&fowler: has more time he can join us to re-explain to you the importance of this point, and all the other stuff about scholarly surveys etc. The Hindu elite's treatment of Kashmiri Muslims and that treatment's centrality to the Dogra Hindu state is not even a matter of scholarly dispute. As Fowler&fowler has pointed, there is a consensus on it. I am not allowed to debate this as if on a forum. Dilpa kaur (talk) 09:23, 28 December 2018 (UTC)
- @Dilpa kaur: I am afraid you haven't addressed any of the points I have raised. So let me repeat them:
- The Talbot and Singh book that you cite is on the Partition of India, and neither author is a specialist in Kashmir history.
- Chitralekha Zutshi, who does specialise in Kashmir history, has much to say about these matters in her Chapter 2.
- These were "familiar colonial tropes" as Barbara Metcalf has pointed out elsewhere.
- How do you respond to these points? -- Kautilya3 (talk) 22:42, 5 January 2019 (UTC)
- That is incorrect. Read the blurb: "this book explores...the ongoing conflict over contested sites such as Jammu and Kashmir." Refer also to the introduction, pp. 5-6. Our Kashmir expert Fowler&fowler has used Talbot & Singh's survey to write the plain fact of the Hindu elite exploiting Kashmiri Muslim peasants.[3] These scholarly surveys show the scholarly consensus. This page will follow that consensus and the Kashmir article.
- Let us see what Mridu Rai author of the award winning Hindu Rulers, Muslim Subjects has to say.
In fact such incontestable control over the Hindu religious domain allowed the Dogras to ride roughshod over the interests and rights of the vast majority of their Muslim majority subjects[1]
- What Zutshi does is add a bit more nuance to the accepted narrative (i.e. "not all Hindus"). Her work is a continuum, this is not a case of contradiction or dichotomy.
- The "colonial tropes" Metcalf refers to is a quote from Sir Henry Elliott about the construction of narratives that Muslims oppressed Hindus. We can't, per WP:SYNTHESIS, extrapolate this, to include the accepted and factual vice-versa instances of Hindu monarchies exploiting Muslims, in the same category as the colonial tropes. Dilpa kaur (talk) 11:19, 14 January 2019 (UTC)
- I am afraid you are not making any sense.
- The "ongoing conflict" in the book blurb is referring to the conflict at the time of its publication, not the 100 years of Dogra regime.
- Mridu Rai's POV is clearly advertised in the title of her book itself.
- Zutshi is not adding a "nuance". She has pointed out clearly that there was an "important Muslim element" in the ruling regime. It wasn't just "Hindu elite". What she has refrained from doing, but you are bent on doing, is to communalise what is evidently a feudal exploitation.
- The text that was there before your edit wasn't any complimentary to the Dogra regime. But your edit is aimed at hanging the "Hindu elite" to the exclusion of everything else. The text of the article itself shows that the Sikh regime and the Afghan regime that preceded it were also brutal to the Kashmiri peasants. "From the frying pan to the fire", is the title of a book by a Kashmiri, to describe the transition from the Afghan rule to the Sikh rule. And as for the Dogra rule, Ravinderjit Kaur frankly admits:
Gulab Singh did not interfere with the traditional social and economic organization of the State, and almost perfected the political institution of personal rule he had inherited from his predecessors, the Sikhs. In the Kashmir province, Gulab Singh faced many problems of pacification and administration. There was no effective administrative organization in the province which had been ravaged by hundreds of years of misrule and oppression.[2]
- As for the colonial tropes, let me give you the statistics provided by Ian Copland. In Kashmir he says, Muslims were 70% of the population, they held only 22% of the gazetted appointments and 25% places in the army. In comparison, in Bhopal, he says the Muslims comprised a "small fraction" of the population (let us say 15%), but they had 90% of the gazetted appointments, all the top jobs in the police force, and all but one cabinet post. So, things were equally bad you might think. But for the colonial government, Bhopal was a
well-managed [state] in which there was no preferential treatment 'of one community at the expense of the other'.
[3] Kashmir, on the other hand, was hell on earth.
- As for the colonial tropes, let me give you the statistics provided by Ian Copland. In Kashmir he says, Muslims were 70% of the population, they held only 22% of the gazetted appointments and 25% places in the army. In comparison, in Bhopal, he says the Muslims comprised a "small fraction" of the population (let us say 15%), but they had 90% of the gazetted appointments, all the top jobs in the police force, and all but one cabinet post. So, things were equally bad you might think. But for the colonial government, Bhopal was a
- So your edit is not exhibiting any more scholarly consensus that the version that was there earlier. But it is distorting it. -- Kautilya3 (talk) 00:52, 15 January 2019 (UTC)
- I am afraid you are not making any sense.
- @Dilpa kaur: I am afraid you haven't addressed any of the points I have raised. So let me repeat them:
- It remains a scholarly survey; with pre-partition context.
- Compare the cites received by Ravinderjit Kaur[4] with Rai[5] or Zutshi.[6] Clearly, Kaur's a nobody in Kashmir studies. Rai, however, is the standard now in Kashmiri historiography.[7]
- Copland's "statistics" can't be extrapolated to support one's personal opinions, especially those with no basis in accepted scholarship. It would contravene WP:SYNTH to do so. The same Ian Copland says about Dogra rule
As one probes deeper, however, it becomes clear that Muslims were the prime sufferers.[4]
When a former Foreign Minister of Kashmir, Sir Albion Banerjea, declared that Kashmiri Muslims were treated like "dumb driven cattle," he was not exaggerating.[5]
- We must stick to what the scholars explicitly say and not derive our own conclusions with personal "between the lines" research.
- And as far as the scholarly consensus goes, the Talbot & Singh source is it. Dilpa kaur (talk) 10:42, 15 January 2019 (UTC)
- Again, you are deflecting from the point of this discussion. I never denied that the Kashmiri Muslims were the prime sufferers, and that fact was already adequately represented in the previous content. The "Hindu elite" was mentioned at an appropriate place, along with Zutshi's explanation of the subtleties. So, you are talking about non-issues. You modified that content in order to promote the "Hindu elite" to the lead sentence, and you claimed that you were doing it as per Ian Talbot. But the Talbot book (which was coauthored, by the way) does not fit the bill, because your supporting sentence is mentioned in passing in the midst of a discussion about the partition, with no elaboration and no citations. WP:CONTEXTMATTERS. -- Kautilya3 (talk) 19:42, 16 January 2019 (UTC)
References
- ^ Mridu Rai (2004). Hindu Rulers, Muslim Subjects: Islam, Rights, and the History of Kashmir. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-85065-661-6.
- ^ Kaur, Political Awakening in Kashmir 1996, p. 3.
- ^ Copland, State, Community and Neighbourhood 2005, p. 61.
- ^ Copland, Ian (1981). "Islam and Political Mobilization in Kashmir, 1931-34". Pacific Affairs. 54 (2): 234. doi:10.2307/2757363. ISSN 0030-851X.
- ^ Copland, Ian (1981). "Islam and Political Mobilization in Kashmir, 1931-34". Pacific Affairs. 54 (2): 235. doi:10.2307/2757363. ISSN 0030-851X.
- I see a change in argument. Regardless, the Talbot sentence is not taken from the midst of discussion on partition. Its taken from the midst of a paragraph about...well...Kashmir (princely). Of course it is the second sentence. However, we can look into expanding by adding before it Talbot's first sentence that the state started out in 1846 as a Hindu monarchy. That is an apt description. In this way we also do not depart far from the precedent set out in Kashmir which will happen if we avoid a categorical identification of the Hindu elite.
- Given the subscription I see to Zutshi in your previous statements, well we can also cite her (and Mridu Rai, there's no doing away with the standard historical account) on the oppressive Hindu state. Her entire chapter 3 is on the Hindu state. People who are better equipped than us to understand Zutshi explain the meaning of her narrative.
Dilpa kaur (talk) 11:11, 17 January 2019 (UTC)She argues that Sikh rule in Kashmir, under which the Muslim peasantry suffered considerable hardship, naturally led to a growing stress on the Muslim aspect of the identity of the Kashmiri Muslim majority, which, in turn, functioned as a means to articulate dissent and protest. This was carried further under the Dogra regime, which increasingly relied on orthodox Brahminical Hinduism to claim sanction for itself. As Zutshi aptly puts it, the growing salience of the specifically ‘Muslim’ aspect of the identity of the Kashmiri Muslims was ‘a direct result of the overtly Hindu nature of the Dogras’ apparatus of legitimacy’ (p.13). Under the Dogras, the Kashmiri Muslims, as a whole, suffered heavy privations. Top government posts and large estates were almost entirely monopolized by Dogras, Punjabis and Kashmiri Pundits. As a consequence, Islam and Islamic consciousness served as a crucial vehicle for the Kashmiri Muslims to express protest against their marginalisation and oppression. In this sense, as Zutshi says, the emerging Kashmiri Muslim identity cannot be said to have been ‘communal’ in the narrow sense of the term.[1]
Ok, I see that you are moving on from Talbot & Singh. So I won't belabour it a lot further. But you have to keep in mind that the book is about the partition, and it naturally explains the social context in which the partition occurred. That context obviously had various frictions between Muslims and non-Muslims, which it highlights. It is not a book about the entire history of any part of the subcontinent. But this page is about the entire history of the Kashmir valley. So you cannot draw statements made in the book out of context and insert them here.
As for the "Hindu monarchy", a phrase I have used somewhere (citing Mridu Rai) is that it was an "overwhelmingly Hindu state". That seems like an apt description. It did not specifically exclude Muslims, but it continued whatever class distinctions were previously present in the Kashmiri society. In addition, it brought in the Dogra Rajput nobility from the Jammu areas, which were its home. This is not unique to Kashmir. Similar situation existed throughout all the princely states of India. The Nizam of Hyderabad, for instance, patronised Muslims coming from various parts of India and even from outside India. (His army chief at the time of partition was an Egyptian!) Coming back to Kashmir proper, the Sayyids and Pirzadas have already been mentioned. I have also worked in the last few months on various biography pages like that of Brigadier Aslam Khan and Agha Shaukat Ali, who came from Muslim nobility families patronised by the "Hindu state". Another biography page I have been trying to work on is that of Brigadier Khuda Baksh, who came from a local Gujjar Muslim family of Jammu and rose to be the army chief of the "Hindu state". But I have not run into any native Kashmiri Muslims that rose to high positions. Whether this was a result of specific policies of the "Hindu state" or a result of the "centuries of misrule and oppression" in Kashmir, I can't say. As Ayesha Jalal points out, what Kashmir needed was a "massive facelift",[2] which the Dogra rulers were incapable of producing. One might wonder whether the British Raj was capable of producing such facelifts either. Your own favourite Talbot & Singh points out that, in Bengal, the bhadralok, who comprised 5 percent of the population, monopolised all the official positions. In Punjab, the 'writer castes' made up of Khatri, Agarwal and Arora communities monopolised them.[3] Social history has to be understood in the context of the local class divisions that may have been prevalent for centuries, not in terms of an artificial Hindu–Muslim divide brought in from the outside for political reasons. Talbot & Singh are not doing that for Kashmir, whereas Zutshi is.
As encyclopedia writers, our job is not to cherry-pick whatever statements we like from various sources and insert them, but to develop a broad understanding of the whole subject and use our best judgement to represent the matters as they stand. As far as this page is concerned, the content that was there before your edit is superior to whatever you might wish to do. So, you should simply reset it. -- Kautilya3 (talk) 12:59, 17 January 2019 (UTC)
References
- ^ Yoginder Sikand (2005). "Reviewed Work: Languages of Belonging: Islam, Regional Identity and the Making of Kashmir by Chitralekha Zutshi". 5 (2): 238–239.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Jalal, Self and Sovereignty 2002, p. 354.
- ^ Talbot & Singh, The Partition of India 2009, p. 28.
- Everyone's judgement and understanding of a subject will be different. But we don't concern ourselves with that. We represent the scholarly consensus, not summarise what ‘‘we’’ think of the subject. The broader understanding and our “best judgement” you speak of is original research. The best thing to do, Fowler&Fowler explains, is to use scholarly surveys and pick out well worn textbooks and summarise them. This way we stick to the consensus.
- The top scholars of Kashmir all talk of the Hindu state Rai, Zutshi, Bose, Schofield and et al. I could draw quotations from all of them. We have scholarly surveys such as Talbot & Singh, which while about partition, also pinpoints through its categorical statements the scholarly consensus in academia about broader South Asia topics related to Partition such as Kashmir. And we also have textbook histories which speak of the Hindu elite introduced by the Hindu state in Kashmir. For example David Ludden in “India and South Asia: A Short history.”
The polarisation of the state along Hindu-Muslim lines originated in the Dogra dynasty's nineteenth century installation of a Brahman and Kashmiri Pandit ruling elite of landlords, bureaucrats and businessmen, and its institution of Hindu rituals and law codes. Public Muslim activity in the observance of prayers and festivals was imbued with an air of dissent and even outlawed.
- I see talk on this discussion of so-called “artificial Hindu-Muslim differences.” But this nationalist narrative we have in India of blaming the British for “divide and rule” is no longer accepted in mainstream scholarship.
- As for the solution, if you mean we should reset it to the Oxford encyclopedia entry written by the Kashmir expert Victoria Schofield, I am open to that. Alternatively another compromise could be to copy over here the sentence from Kashmir which Fowler &Fowler added on the Hindu elite. Dilpa kaur (talk) 13:48, 17 January 2019 (UTC)
"Template:User Proud Kashmiri" listed at Redirects for discussion
A discussion is taking place to address the redirect Template:User Proud Kashmiri. The discussion will occur at Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2020 November 23#Template:User Proud Kashmiri until a consensus is reached, and readers of this page are welcome to contribute to the discussion. Soumya-8974 (he) talk contribs subpages 18:02, 23 November 2020 (UTC)
"Kashmirian" listed at Redirects for discussion
A discussion is taking place to address the redirect Kashmirian. The discussion will occur at Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2020 December 21#Kashmirian until a consensus is reached, and readers of this page are welcome to contribute to the discussion. Soumya-8974 (he) talk contribs subpages 09:12, 21 December 2020 (UTC)
POV fork
As some of you know this article is the handiwork of User:Towns Hill who was indeffed from WP in 2017. It is chock full of POV. I'm impossibly busy these days, have been unable to clean up this page, and I really miss @Sitush: Pinging some administrators: @Bbb23, Bishonen, Vanamonde93, SpacemanSpiff, and RegentsPark: Also @Abecedare: who supervised an RFC on the phrasing in Kashmir-related pages (here and here). Please help if you can. In my view, there is nothing here that is not POV. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 21:49, 11 March 2021 (UTC)
- Can you give maybe 1 or 2 examples of a POV sentence in the article? WhoAteMyButter (📨│📝) 04:13, 14 March 2021 (UTC)
- I'm too sleepy. I Will reply tomorrow. Thanks for your post. Fowler&fowler«Talk» 04:48, 14 March 2021 (UTC)
April 2022
@Kautilya3: It is regarding this edit. Why is the mention of Dardic WP:OR? Kashmiris speak a Dardic langauge and hence are a Dardic ethno-longuistic group. - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 09:40, 30 April 2022 (UTC)
- All mentions of Kashmiri as a Dardic language are POV, but apparently unavoidable. But why are the people "Dardic"? -- Kautilya3 (talk) 11:13, 30 April 2022 (UTC)
- I think there used to be "Indo-Aryan" everywhere, which we removed. Now, "Dardic" makes its appearance. -- Kautilya3 (talk) 11:13, 30 April 2022 (UTC)
- @Kautilya3:
Why are the people "Dardic"?
- Because Kashmiris are a Dardic speaking ethno-linguistic group. If the classification of Kashmiri as a Dardic language is contentious then we can write the broader term "Indo-Aryan ethno-longuistic group". I don't see why it is problematic considering these are mostly linguistic classifications. - Fylindfotberserk (talk) 12:15, 30 April 2022 (UTC)- Classifications of languages are not classifications of people. Do these descriptions have reliable sources? Let us avoid WP:SYNTHESIS. -- Kautilya3 (talk) 12:49, 30 April 2022 (UTC)
- @Kautilya3: