Panel to Focus on Everyday Life in the World's Most Militarized Zone
On Friday, February 8, 2013, Syracuse University's South Asia Center
will host an afternoon focusing on Indian-Occupied Kashmir, the
location of one of the world's most long running conflicts as part
of the on-going series of events organized under the aegis of the
Northeast Scholars of South Asia (NESSA), a group of faculty
members at nearby colleges and universities.
Indian-Occupied Kashmir has been a contested site between
the Indian government and those who want independent Kashmir for
over 50 years. Armed conflict, the imposition of curfews, and the
constant presence of an estimated half a million Indian military
and paramilitary forces has resulted in the insinuation of violence
into Kashmiri people's everyday lives.
The South Asia Center will explore the implications of this
militarization from the perspective of average Kashmiris living in
this militarized zone.
Our keynote speaker is an expert on the
situation in Indian-occupied Kashmir, Haley Duschinski, Associate
Professor of Anthropology at Ohio University. Her research has
focused both on violence within Kashmir itself and the ways in
which militarization has far reaching impacts on the lives of
Kashmiris living outside of Kashmir.
Following her talk, we will screen In Shopian, a short
documentary by former SU graduate student and independent
filmmaker, Chris Giamo (SU MA '11) and Kelsey Kobik (SU BA
'10). Filmed in 2010, In Shopian focuses on the double murder
of two Kashmiri women amidst the social unrest in the capital
Srinagar. It features rare on-site interviews with separatist
leaders Syed Ali Geelani, Yasin Malik, and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, as
well as street battles between local youths and security forces.
The film provides a contextualized example of the plight of
ordinary Kashmiris, and an aesthetic portrait of present-day
Kashmir as a war-torn paradise.
The event will culminate in a roundtable discussion that will
include Duschinski, Giamo and Kobik as well as Wajahat Ahmad, a
graduate student in the Department of Anthropology. Ahmad has lived
and worked in Kashmir; he plans to focus on Indian-occupied Kashmir
for his dissertation research. The discussion will be moderated by
Christopher Lee, (PhD '02) and Associate Professor at
Canisius College. In presenting this event, we hope to begin a
dialogue about the issue through the experiences of common people
who live their lives within this highly militarized space with the
hopes that it might foster a just and lasting peace in
Kashmir. We hope that it will be of interest to scholars of South
Asia as well as those who want to learn more.
The event will
begin at 2:30 pm on February 8 in 060 Eggers. A reception will
follow the discussion in 204 Maxwell. The event is free and open to
the public.