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१९ शनिबार, पौष २०८२20th November 2025, 6:33:20 pm

Kashmir: A Promise the World Chose to Forget

१८ शुक्रबार , पौष २०८२११ घण्टा अगाडि

Kashmir: A Promise the World Chose to Forget

January 2, 2026-----

It was on January 5, 1949, seventy-seven years ago when the world promised the people of Kashmir that their future would be decided by their own voices. It was a solemn pledge — written into UN resolutions, affirmed by world leaders, and declared before the international community. Yet after more than seven decades, that promise remains unfulfilled, echoing in the silence of broken commitments.

Kashmir is not simply a territorial dispute. It is a story of a people who were told they mattered — and then abandoned. They were assured that their destiny would be shaped through a free and impartial plebiscite. Instead, they live under one of the heaviest military deployments on earth. Their lives unfold between checkpoints and curfews, their dreams held hostage by politics far beyond their control.

History records the promises clearly. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru declared that Kashmir’s fate would be decided by its people. Mahatma Gandhi once reminded India that true sovereignty resides with the people, not with rulers. Speaking in Delhi on July 29, 1947, he declared, “The real sovereign of the State are the people. The ruler is a servant of the people. If he is not so, then he is not the ruler… In Kashmir too, the power belongs to the public. Let them do as they want.”

Sir Benegal Rama Rau, Indian diplomat at the United Nations affirmed that ‘Kashmiris were not mere chattels to be disposed of according to a rigid formula’ but human beings entitled to choose their path in accordance with their own desires. Another Indian delegate to the United Nations Sir Gopalswamy Ayyanger made it abundantly clear that “When the Indian Independence Act came into force, Jammu and Kashmir, like other states, became free to decide whether it would accede to the one or the other of the two dominions, or remain independent.”

When it became clear to India that Kashmiris might not choose the “right” answer, the promise began to fade. Negotiations stalled. Diplomatic commitments dissolved. The plebiscite — once a beacon of democratic hope — disappeared into speeches rather than action. Kashmir was absorbed on paper, but never in conscience.

For ordinary Kashmiris, this betrayal did not arrive in headlines — it arrived in daily life. In the sound of a door knocked down at night. In the tear-streaked face of a mother waiting outside a prison gate. In the quiet resignation of a child who has grown up knowing nothing but fear and uncertainty. Human rights reports describe statistics. Kashmiris live the pain behind them.

Despite decades of repression, their resistance has largely been one of dignity — rooted not in vengeance, but in longing for a promise the world once made. Their demand is simple and profoundly human: let us speak for ourselves.

The world often says Kashmir is “complicated.” But some truths are not complicated. When a promise is made to a people — and broken again and again — injustice becomes their daily companion. No society can be asked to surrender its identity, its voice, or its hope.

If we refuse to remember Kashmir’s promise, then we must also accept responsibility for its suffering.

The United Nations must not remain a passive witness to a pledge it once guaranteed. The conditions must be restored for a free and impartial vote. Political prisoners, like Muhammad Yasin Malik, Shabir Ahmed Shah, Masarat Aalam and others, must be released so that dialogue has meaning rather than symbolism. Regional leaders must choose moral courage over political convenience. And the international community must rediscover its conscience. And international mediators, like President Donald J. Trump who has shown his willingness to mediate, should help facilitate an outcome grounded in justice rather than expedience.

Peace in South Asia — home to one-fifth of humanity — cannot grow from silence, force, or denial. It can only grow from justice.

For seventy-seven long years, Kashmiris have waited for the world to remember its word. Their struggle is not for power, territory, or revenge — it is for dignity, belonging, and the right to decide their own tomorrow.

Dr. Fai is also the Secretary General, World Kashmir Awareness forum.

He can be reached at: WhatsApp: 1-202-607-6435  or  gnfai2003@yahoo.com

www.kashmirawareness.org