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Home Editorial & Opinion

Between Still Waters and Silent Stones: Srinagar’s Guide to Grace, One Shikara Ride at a Time.

Agencies by Agencies
July 7, 2025
in Editorial & Opinion
A A
دائرے توڑتے ہوئے :مسلم تخلیق کار بھارت میں کثرت پسندی کا تصور از سر نو وضع کررہے ہیں 
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Imagine Srinagar as a divine amphitheatre where the hymns from the Shankaracharya Temple rise like incense into the crisp mountain air, and the call to prayer from Hazratbal glides gently over the Dal’s surface. These sacred sounds do not clash-they converse; they don’t compete; they complete.

This is not just geography. It’s a living metaphor: two faiths, two histories, one shared horizon. The temple and the shrine are not just monuments-they are mirrors of coexistence, reflecting a Kashmir that has always been more than conflict: a Kashmir of culture, compassion, and communion.

Hence, each morning the sun here warms the spires of Shankaracharya, and the ancient Sanskrit hymns unfurl through the air like silk threads. And across the water, as dusk approaches, Hazratbal glows like a prayer made visible—its white dome blushing in the twilight. Here, the Sufi soul of Kashmir breathes…not as a doctrine, but as a gentle presence.

And, no-where is this unity more felt than on the Dal Lake itself, the heart that beats between these two souls & holds the city’s true scripture-a liquid manuscript written in ripples and reflections, not as separation, but as oneness.

Over the centuries, those who have boarded a shikara have found their love language in the waves of Dal; whether with a partner, with nature, or with parts of themselves they forgot they were searching for.

And those who haven’t? They carry the longing like a gentle ache. Because a shikara ride isn’t a tourist’s excursion, it’s a rite of passage, as ‘The Shikarawala’, with weather-worn hands and an ageless gaze, becomes your guide through this floating world. He doesn’t ask where you’re from, who you pray to, or what your beliefs are. He simply rows…and in each stroke, he offers a lesson:

  • He rows… past houseboats that rock not only bodies but hearts;
  • He rows…past boats selling vegetables, flowers, and the fragrance of simplicity;
  • He rows…past floating shops that wrap you in stories as soft as the pashmina they sell
  • And past India’s only floating post office, where love still travels on water and paper

Hence, Dal is not just a lake… it is wisdom unrushed.
It is where the sky kneels to kiss the earth, where faith leans in, not to conquer, but to contemplate. Where the boat glides not through liquid, but through layered memory.
And ‘The Shikarawala’?
He is not rowing. He is reminding.
That true hospitality is not measured in wealth, but in warmth.
That to carry others is not duty—it is dignity.

So, as we shape the Naya Kashmir, let us row like ‘The Shikarawala’ (aka ‘The Boatman’)-
With silence that listens.
With space that includes.
With hope that floats beside us like blossoms in spring.

Remember the ancient Shankaracharya Temple: perched like a sentinel of timeless truths does not preach; it just whispers dhyana.

Verses in Hindi (reflecting Shankaracharya’s essence):
“ध्यान की गहराई में वह शांत पर्वत बोलता है,
हर पत्थर कहता है: भीतर झाँको, वहीं ईश्वर है।“
(In the depth of meditation, that quiet mountain speaks-
each stone says: look within, there dwells the divine.)

Similarly, the Hazratbal Shrine cradled besides the Dal Lake reflects the soft resilience of faith. Not rigid, but radiant. Not loud, but luminous.

Verses in Kashmiri (echoing Hazratbal’s reflection):
“Tsol chon daryavas tal, suyi yemberzal chukh.
Tsol chon du’a nav andar, suyi roohas phol chukh.”
(You are beneath the river of light, the one blooming like saffron.
You are the prayer within prayer, the fragrance in every soul.)

Which is why, Faith, then, is not just belief-it is belongingness.
And Kashmir, in its sacred plurality, teaches us:
that to truly worship is not only to fold or raise hands,
but to open hearts.

One message, for now and always:

“If you ever lose your way, visit Kashmir & look for ‘The Shikarawala’.                               He rows not to arrive,
but to remind us:
We are not meant to race across life-
we are meant to glide through it,
carrying each other along.”

 

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