Kashmiryat a new cliché was added to the political lexicon of Kashmir in early nineties of the past century. This word that sounds alien to etymology of Kashmir language found some ready takers in the government and made it a part of Kashmir’s political discourse. Some made it look as sub-nationalism
Professor Wakhlu’s immensely interesting novel is the odyssey of love, intense and passionate. Thus the book is a SONG OF LOVE. The book narrates in full, rich and lucid style the love of Sultan Yusuf Shah Chak of Kashmir for a village belle, Habba Khatoon, whose original name was Zoon. Born of an ordinary peasant family at the village Chandhara in Kashmir
This book highlights the struggle for freedom from the oppressive Dogra raj in Jammu and Kashmir. The accession of Jammu and Kashmir to India has been under consideration ever since Independence and has been discussed at numerous political or academic forums and in books on Kashmir or Partition,
Living a sedate and peaceful life in a far flung outpost in the inner Himalayas, the Kashmiris were catapulted into the nineteenth century British India as a fallout from the Anglo-Russian rivalry. The change-over in 1846 from Sikh to Dogra rule under the suzerainty of the British,
The reader will find a general description of Kashmir and Kashmiris, embodying the result of the latest research on the subject. To epitomize the history of Kashmir from the earliest times to the advent of Islam, the propagation and influence is discussed. The indigenous Mohammadan rulers
The Word of Lalla is so far the best book about the poetry and philosophy of Lal Dyad; besides giving beautiful poetic equivalents of Lal Dyad’s cryptic verses, it contains a detailed and comprehensive account of the intellectual background of the great poetess.
This volume (I) presents profiles, archival data and achievements of some 100 eminent people, scholars, poets, writers, politicians, doctors, media luminaries, educationists, playwrights, journalists, social workers etc