Monday, November 16, 2009

Kashmir Discussion

In our International Studies (Prof. K. Schmidt) course today, at Concordia University--St. Paul, we are discussing the long-standing conflict between India and Pakistan over Kashmir.
  • India has 16 different "official languages"
  • Islamabad located near Kashmir intensifies the conflict
  • Costs of conflict: lives and economic stress
  • Military rules both sides of Kashmir
  • Potential to be a major tourist destination: famous artists
  • Politicians invoke religion: Muslim identity identified to distinguish self from Hindus
  • Military defense offered to others in order to gain control of a region
  • 1999: Pakistan nearly gained control over the region
  • China involved after '99--controlling a portion of the region
  • Nuclear superiority being pursued by Pakistan, India, and China
Solution: give Kashmir independence. Main problem: where should the borders lie?

India and Pakistan's nationalism is on the line.
  • Kashmir conflict: mainly political conflict rather than religious
  • Students don't feel same sense of prejudice as their parents
  • Islam: moderate majority of religious observers respect other religions
  • Muslim polygamy frowned upon in India
  • Sikand sees division between two countries as helpful in defining their nationalism
  • Muslim minority facing socioeconomic marginalization, target for attacks
  • India: nationalism without legs because there is too much diversity
  • Schools educate the children with national pride

1 comment:

John said...

What exactly is the conflict? Is Kashmir co-owned or co-claimed by Pakistan and India?

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