Tral, Indian-Administered Kashmir — In a powerful example of communal harmony and Kashmiri brotherhood, a retired Sikh farmer and social activist in Tral’s Sehmu area has voluntarily donated a portion of his private land to provide long-awaited access to a Muslim graveyard, resolving an issue that had been pending for nearly four years.
Pushvinder Singh, a respected member of the local Sikh community and a former executive in the Farmer Trade Union and Joint Coordination Committee for Civil Society (JCCC), took the humanitarian step to ensure that Muslim residents could carry their deceased with dignity to the Sheikh Mela Sehmu Barra graveyard — an area that had been left inaccessible due to a blocked passage.
“In a place where death comes suddenly, especially at night, there was no proper way to take our loved ones to the graveyard,” locals said. Singh stepped in, exchanging plots with a neighboring landowner to offer a six-foot-wide and ninety-foot-long passage. “I gave my piece of land to resolve the issue. These are my brothers,” he said.
This act has been widely praised by locals, who say Singh’s gesture not only solved a logistical problem but reaffirmed the values of compassion and coexistence deeply rooted in Kashmiri society.
“Our communities have always stood by each other,” Singh remarked. “Whether it’s ten at night or midnight, when someone passes away, the whole neighborhood—regardless of religion—gathers to help.”
He described the deep bonds between Sikh and Muslim families in the region, saying, “Our houses stand side by side. Rainwater flows from one courtyard to another. Our daughters have grown up in each other’s homes. Language, culture, and kindness—we share all of it.”
Singh also noted that land and family disputes, when they arise, are handled through dialogue and community panchayats, preserving peace without external interference. “This is the tradition of Kashmir. This is the land of Sufi saints and rishis—a place of unity, not division,” he added.
At a time when Indian-administered Kashmir is marked by political uncertainty and communal polarization, this act by a Sikh resident of Tral is a reminder that the spirit of Kashmiriyat—of shared coexistence and brotherhood—continues to live on through the people.
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