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‘Counting The Dead’— Kashmir’s Heart-Wrenching Video Captures The Slaughter Of Pandits Through A Local Muslim’s Voice

A bunch of young boys are joyfully playing cricket, when they are suddenly asked, “Do you know who these houses belong to” — indicating toward some ravaged houses of Wandhama village, near Ganderbal in Jammu and Kashmir. The boy promptly answers, ‘Bhatta’ — which means Kashmiri Pandits.

It becomes clear immediately that the children born here are aware of the horror that took place on January 25, 1998 night, which sent shock waves across the world.

In a short film by Naveen Pandita called Counting the Dead, a few Muslim neighbors of the slain Pandit families tell the horrors of the night in their own words and do not shy away from sharing the agony.

“The Pandits were nice, helpful. They used to invite us to their weddings,” the children continue, “They never fought with each other. Never.”

They later tell the cameraperson, that they know about the Pandits through their parents. The first house is of Jagannath and Niranjan — two brothers who were lucky enough to escape because they had left the village before the tragedy struck. “God saved them,” says the elderly Muslim man in the video.

Next, he points toward another house and talks at length about a man who stayed back with his wife and brother. However, when he tries to recollect his name, he fumbles and smiles nervously. “Now I can’t recollect names. It’s been almost 30 years.”

“Sudarshan”—he suddenly remembers his name, “We called him Sodhe Bhatt.”

Then one by one, he takes us through the houses and narrates the incidents, throwing light on how things unfolded that night.

Then when he shows the house where most of the killings took place, “it’s a hard moment where our hearts get filled with emotions that are hard to spell out. It is the home of Kashinath and Shyamlal. Kashinath was entertaining a few guests from Jammu that night everyone was killed. Little children are like angels,” the man says when he talks about the children who were among those killed. When asked about how many killings took place in the house, he starts counting.

In the village, as many as 23 of the 24 Pandits were killed on that fateful night.

While many years have passed since that incident, Pandits continue to live in the hope to return to their village one day. Recently, the incident was portrayed in Vivek Agnihotri’s Kashmir Files, starring Anupam Kher, Pallavi Joshi, Mithun Chakraborty among others.

As the witness continues to share his memories from that night in this video, we could sense from the look in his eyes that this was a memory he couldn’t wipe from his mind, no matter how much he wanted to. The people in this village are left with no choice but to live amidst these homes haunted by the dread and poignancy of their past inhabitants.

Naveen Pandita, who created the short film keeps visiting his village every once in a while in the past 10-12 years to keep the memories of his lost home back in the village intact. He never forgets to carry his camera, though. While this short film did manage to capture the essence of the message he was trying to show through these interviews, he says nothing tells the truth more perfectly than the pictures of these haunted homes.




Kashmir Files
Bollywood movie, ‘The Kashmir Files’

He also admits that not many people are ready to be vocal about the incident, despite being aware of the facts. “Even some of my friends who have gone through this, refuse to talk about it openly,” says Pandita. “My idea is to share the message through my lens. I don’t want anything in return. If the truth reaches the people, who are unaware of this whole episode, I’ve done my job.”

In The Dead Of Night

In the wee hours of the night before India’s Republic Day, in the year 1998, unidentified gunmen barged into the houses of four Kashmiri Pandit families and shot dead 23 of the 24 members in what came to be known as the Wandhama massacre.

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