Muslim-Buddhist Clashes In Ladakh: The Politics
Behind
The 'Religious' Conflict
By Yoginder Sikand
13 February,
2006
Countercurrents.org
The alleged desecration of the
Quran in a village in Kargil recently and subsequent clashes between
groups of Muslims and Buddhists in Leh and Kargil town are an alarming
indicator of simmering tensions between the two major communities in
Ladakh. Ladakh forms almost two-thirds of the territory of Jammu and
Kashmir, although it accounts for a little less than 3% of its
population. Inter-communal relations in this strategic region, bordering
Baltistan in Pakistani-adminsitered Kashmir and Tibet, have
traditionally been harmonious, and Islamist militant groups, active in
the Kashmir Valley and backed by Pakistan, have not been able to make
any headway in Ladakh. Given this, the recent events in the region bode
ill for regional stability and inter-communal harmony, and might, if not
responded to sensitively and with alacrity, threaten to take Ladakh the
Kashmir way.
Ladakh consists of two districts-Kargil and Leh. Both
the districts have a roughly equal population of a little more than a
hundred thousand people. The majority of the population of Kargil are
Shi'a Muslims. The remainder are mainly Buddhists, in the Zanskar
valley, with a small minority of Sunni Muslims in Padum and Dras. In
Leh, the overwhelming majority of the population is Buddhist, with a
minority of Sunni, Shi'a and Nurbakshi Muslims.
The Sunnis, the largest religious minority in Leh
district, are almost entirely of mixed Kashmiri-Ladakhi background,
mostly descendants of Kashmiri Muslim traders. They were welcomed by the
Ladakhi Buddhist Rajas, who saw them as playing a valuable role in the
local economy. They were allotted their own special quarters in the
capital city and lands to construct mosques and were encouraged to
settle down by marrying local Buddhist women. The Sunni community in
Ladakh was further augmented after Ladakh became a vassal of the Mughals
in the reign of Shah Jahan in the seventeenth century. Ladakhi rulers
invited a number of Kashmiri Muslims to join their court as scribes to
conduct official correspondence in Persian with the Mughal governors of
Kashmir and also to help run the royal mint.
The Shi'as of Ladakh are almost all of Balti stock,
ethnically similar to the Buddhist Ladakhis. They trace their conversion
to the sixteenth century Mir Shamsuddin Iraqi, who is credited with
introducing Shi'a Islam in Baltistan. Many of them are descendants of
migrants from Baltistan, having settled in Ladakh when the Ladakhi
Buddhist ruler Jamyang Namgyal (1555-1610) married Gyal Khatun, daughter
of Yebgo Sher Ghazi, the Shi'a prince of Khaplu. Gyal Khatun is said to
have brought along with her a number of Baltis in her retinue.
Although the consciousness of adhering different
religious systems remained strong, Buddhists and Muslims in Ladakh
historically shared a broadly similar culture. The local Muslims spoke
Ladakhi and wore the same dress, often with minor differences. Food
habits were, to an extent, similar, except for the consumption of
alcohol and carrion, which are forbidden in Islamic law. Given the
Buddhist prohibition of killing animals, all the butchers in Ladakh were
Muslims, and many Buddhist communities specially imported Muslim
butchers from Kashmir and Baltistan to settle in their villages. At the
popular level there was, in some cases, a blurring of religious
boundaries. For instance, in several outlying areas Muslims would visit
Buddhist oracles and healers for cures, and some Buddhists would attend
the Balti mourning rituals for Imam Husain. Another revealing example in
this regard is that of the royal ceremonies on the occasion of Losar,
the Tibetan New Year. The Raja would pass through Leh at the head of a
large procession, followed by his cavalry. The Buddhist head of the
cavalry would visit the Sunni mosque in the town, offer oil for the
lamps in the mosque, and ask for the blessings of the local imam.
Intermarriage between Sunnis, Baltis and Buddhists in
Ladakh was fairly common until recently. Even today it is common to find
numerous families in the Leh district that consist of Buddhists as well
as Muslims. Such marriages occurred among both 'ordinary' people as well
as among the royalty. Thus, for instance, as mentioned above, the
seventeenth century ruler of Ladakh, Jamyang Namgyal, married Gyal
Khatun, daughter of the Shi'a ruler of Khaplu. Gyal Khatun remained a
Muslim till her death, but she was regarded by many Buddhists as an
incarnation of the White Tara, probably because her son, Singe Namgyal,
rose to become the most famous ruler of Ladakh, playing a crucial role
in the expansion of both Buddhism and the geographical boundaries of the
Ladakhi kingdom. Another Ladakhi Raja, Nima Namgyal, was married to a
Muslim princess, Zizi Khatun, who is said to have exercised a major role
in running the affairs of the kingdom. The son of the last independent
ruler of Ladakh, Thundup Namgyal, also had a Muslim queen. Likewise,
Hurchu Khan, the Shi'a ruler of a principality in Kargil, married a
Ladakhi Buddhist princess.
The historical records speak of numerous wars were
between the Ladakhi Buddhist kings and the Shi'a Muslim rulers of
various small principalities in Baltistan. At the same time, they also
mention a large number of marriages between the Shi'a and Ladakhi ruling
houses. Political alliances often cut across religious boundaries. Thus,
for instance, when Ladakh was invaded by a joint Tibetan-Mongolian army
in 1681, the Ladakhi ruler appealed to the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb for
help. In response to this request, the Mughal army, under Nawab Fidai
Khan, entered Ladakh and, along with the Ladakhis, inflicted a heavy
defeat on the invaders. In gratitude for this assistance, the Ladakhi
ruler allotted a plot of land just below his palace in Leh to the Sunni
Muslims of the town for a mosque. The mosque, which still stands, is now
the central mosque of the Sunnis of Ladakh. In other words, one cannot
speak in terms of a history of any inherent antagonism between Muslims
and Buddhists, as entire communities, in the region. Ladakh has never
known the sort of communal violence that many other parts of India have
witnessed.
While relations between the principal communities in
Ladakh have been traditionally close and conflict-free district, recent
years have witnessed a marked deterioration, owing primarily to various
political developments. This finally culminated in a social boycott by
the Buddhists of the Muslims of Leh district, declared and enforced by
the Ladakh Buddhist Association (LBA) in 1989. The boycott remained in
force till 1992, and witnessed several clashes between Buddhist and
Muslim youth, incidents of police firing in which three people lost
their lives, the burning down of several Muslim homes and even cases of
forced conversion of Muslims to Buddhism. During the boycott Buddhists
who visited their Muslim relatives or patronised Muslim shops were
penalised by LBA activists, and social relations between the two
communities were almost completely severed. Relations between the
Buddhists and Muslims in Leh improved after the lifting of the boycott,
although suspicions remained.
The boycott came as a culmination of a series of
agitations spearheaded by Buddhist groups against what they saw as
Kashmiri Muslim 'colonialism'. No sooner had Jammu and Kashmir acceded
to the Indian Union than the Buddhists of Ladakh began protesting
against the Kashmir-dominated state. The Ladakh Buddhist Association
(LBA) demanded that Ladakh should bear the same relationship with the
state of Jammu and Kashmir as that between Kashmir and India. The
outbreak of militancy in Kashmir in 1989 convinced many Buddhists that
their future was insecure in Jammu and Kashmir. This fear was
strengthened both by the Kashmiri demand for total independence or
merger with Pakistan of the entire state of Jammu and Kashmir, including
Ladakh, as well as the fact that the population growth rate in Kargil
was considerably higher than in Leh, which meant that in a few decades
the Buddhists would be in a clear minority in Ladakh. To add to this
were continued charges of neglect by the Kashmir government and
discrimination against Buddhists in fund and project allocations and
government jobs. The question of regional autonomy for Leh was now
increasingly being framed in communal terms, as a Muslim-Buddhist
conflict.
In July 1989 a scuffle between some Buddhist and Muslim
youth led to clashes in Leh town, which then spread to other parts of
Ladakh. This led the LBA to embark upon a violent struggle, once again
demanding the separate constitutional status of a Union Territory for
Ladakh. Shortly after, the LBA declared a complete economic and social
boycott of the Muslims. The boycott was initially directed at the
Kashmiri Muslims, who controlled the local administration, as well as
the Ladakhi Sunni Muslims, who dominated the economy of Leh town, and
who were seen as 'Kashmiri agents' and as opposed to the Buddhists'
demand for autonomy. The Balti Shias were later also included after they
made common cause with the Sunnis, who presented the conflict as a
communal one.
The boycott was finally lifted in 1992, after the
Government of India convinced the LBA that it would not consider its
demands if it carried on with the boycott. An agreement was then entered
into by the LBA and the Ladakh Muslim Association, which represented
both the Shi'as and the Sunnis of Leh. The Government of India, after
much procrastination, then set up the Leh Autonomous Hill Council,
providing the Leh district with considerable internal autonomy. With
this, many of the demands of the LBA were met. However, in 2000, when
the then Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister, Farooq 'Abdullah, tabled a
resolution in the state assembly calling for the restitution of the
pre-1953 status of Jammu and Kashmir as an autonomous entity within the
Indian Union, the LBA once again protested and demanded that Ladakh be
declared a Union Territory, much to the chagrin of Ladakh's Muslims. The
ongoing political tussle which underlies the communal schism is further
exacerbated by the fact that the Ladakh region, including Kargil and
Leh, has just one parliamentary seat. During elections, Buddhist and
Shi'a leaders are said to consistently pander to communal prejudices to
mobilise votes for this seat. A possible solution to this problem is, as
some people have suggested, to increase the number of parliamentary
seats to two, one each for Shi'a-majority Kargil and Buddhist-majority
Leh. Alternately, the single seat could be allocated on a rotational
basis, for one term to Leh and for the next to Kargil.
The vast majority of the Buddhists of Leh back the Union
Territory demand. However, many Muslims oppose the demand, for fear of
being dominated by the more advanced Buddhists. Further, they also do
not wish to separate from Muslim-majority Kashmir. At the same time,
most Kargilis do not support the secessionist struggle in the Valley.
Being Shias, they are decidedly pro-India and anti-Pakistan, given the
fierce attacks on Shias in Pakistan in recent years. They also realise
that their position would be precarious in an independent
Sunni-dominated Kashmir.
The underlying causes of the simmering conflict in
Ladakh are thus largely political and economic, and not religious as
such, although this is how it has been sought to be presented. The
Muslim minority in Leh district and the Buddhist minority in Kargil have
their share of legitimate grievances and so does the relatively
marginalised Kargil district vis-à-vis Leh. These need to be urgently
addressed in order to preserve inter-communal peace and to spare the
region the sort of seemingly endless devastation that has engulfed
Kashmir for the past two decades and more.