#GoodNews|The Benevolent Pandit Who Helped Scores Of Kashmiri Students After The Abrogation Of Article 370

A Kashmiri migrant himself, he reached out to desperate Kashmiri students after the recent lockdown

offline
A Kashmiri migrant himself, he reached out to desperate Kashmiri students after the recent lockdown

Film and theatre actor Ashwath Bhatt was in Berlin when the lockdown of Kashmir began soon after Article 370, granting special rights to Jammu and Kashmir, was scrapped in July. After he returned to India, he came across many stories of Kashmiri Muslim students living in several parts of India, not being able to reach out to their families in Kashmir because of the communication blockade. He decided to do his bit. Bhatt spread the message from his social media accounts that he wanted to help. “They were in distress as they couldn't pay their college, rents or hostel fees. It wasn’t that they couldn’t afford, but their parents were not able to send them money as nothing in Kashmir was working,” Bhatt told RD.  

Bhatt reached out to students in several parts of the country. “From Moga in Punjab to Kolkata, Bangalore and Bhubaneswar—many got in touch with us. We provided them monetary support ranging anywhere between Rs 3,000 to Rs 10,000,” says Bhatt. A Kashmiri Pandit, Bhatt and his family left Srinagar during the early 90s fearing for their lives, along with thousands of others. But Bhatt says that he decided to  never be "bitter and look at everything from a human point of view.” 

 “I haven’t forgotten those dark days we faced. But my mother and many of our close relatives, despite our loss of property and jobs, and becoming refugees in our own country, saw ourselves as victims of circumstances that were created in Jammu and Kashmir. So, there was no room for bitterness. But when I saw the way people were commenting on Kashmir after article 370 was scrapped, I felt that there was no room for nuance. The people who were suffering because of the complete lockdown were innocent students who were caught unawares. And there weren’t many people who were sympathizing with them,” says Bhatt.

Bhatt heads the Theatre Garage Project, a trust that he founded i...

Read more!