Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
India

'We Keep Waiting': Cop's Wife's Moving Post On Jammu and Kashmir

IANS, 03 Sep, 2018 11:32 PM
    In the wake of terrorists targeting the family members of Jammu and Kashmir police personnel, the wife of a policeman from the valley has penned down a moving post about the sacrifices made by the men in uniform in the line of duty.
     
     
    Arifa Tausif has written how most wives of policemen raise their children on their own like a single parent and have no one to support them with their husbands being away on duty.
     
     
    "For the wives of policemen, the adolescent fancy of 'being together' through thick and thin turns out to be a distant dream. We halt for lunch. We keep waiting to dine together."
     
     
    "We keep planning to attend family functions or funerals-God forbid!-together. We keep scheduling an outing. But that hardly ever happens. It's not about solo parenting only. We're the biggest liars!" Ms Tausif wrote in an article that appeared on a local news website here.
     
     
    She mentions how the wives keep lying to their children assuring them that their father would be home on the coming weekend or the festival.
     
     
     
    "We keep lying to our children that 'dad is coming this Saturday'. We lie that dad is attending the parent-teacher meet this time. We lie that we're going on a picnic this weekend. We keep lying that dad is going to join us this Eid, or that marriage. We keep lying to their old ailing parents that he is expected this or that day. We lie to our own selves," she wrote.
     
     
    Sleeping alone is not the most stressful, but waking up in the middle of the night, uncomfortable, restless and suffocated is, Ms Tausif said, adding that there is no one around to comfort.
     
     
    "We wait and wait, and only wait. Let it be today, tomorrow or a day after, but the plan hardly ever subsides. Even if it does, a police officer only marks his physical appearance at home. Mentally (and telephonically) he is attending to his duties without fail," she wrote.
     
     
    Ms Tausif maintained that while all this makes their lives more stressful, the current scenario had turned the wives of policemen hypertensive as they were always in a state of insecurity.
     
     
    "The risks and dangers are increasing day by day. Every single casualty of a policeman elsewhere makes our life additionally insecure and worrisome. Plus, the varying political ideology of the society makes it hard to explain to the people that doing a job in the police department never means disloyalty to one's people. It's not always a matter of choice," she added.
     
     
    Ms Tausif highlighted how the youth in Kashmir have trained to be something else but have ended in police department due to lack of job opportunities.
     
     
    "It's only the state of affairs of our state that veterinarians are now working as DySps, while a degree in physical education makes you an administrator and a degree in politics lands you in business. And specialisation in business administration makes you a government contractor," she said.
     
     
    "But those with expertise, in a layman's discussion, prove you to be as outlaws," she added.
     
     
    She also wrote about feeling stressful about being blamed for action taken by the security forces against protesting locals.
     
     
    "So the stress increases even when you are out of your home, because in case of any unfortunate event (a pellet injury to someone for instance), people do make us somehow feel responsible for the same," she said.
     
     
    "And then, when anything untoward happens to the policemen, there is hardly anyone to even sympathise with us," she wrote.
     
     
    Arifa concluded her piece by praying "my children understand all this at the earliest. I wish my state comes out of these dark clouds and we see the dawn of a peaceful and prosperous Kashmir". 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Four Days After Girl Jumps Out Of Train Fearing Molestation, Culprit Arrested

    Four Days After Girl Jumps Out Of Train Fearing Molestation, Culprit Arrested
    "We scanned CCTV footage of the incident and identified the accused. A manhunt was then launched to nab him," Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) Samadhan Pawar of the Government Railway Police said.

    Four Days After Girl Jumps Out Of Train Fearing Molestation, Culprit Arrested

    India Crosses USA, Becomes World's Second Largest Smartphone Market

    India Crosses USA, Becomes World's Second Largest Smartphone Market
    The landmark figure was reached in the third quarter of 2017, according to a report prepared by the Singapore-based technology market analyst Canalys.

    India Crosses USA, Becomes World's Second Largest Smartphone Market

    After Delhi Woman Shot Dead In Car, Husband Confesses He Did It: Police

    After Delhi Woman Shot Dead In Car, Husband Confesses He Did It: Police
    Priya Mehra was shot while returning home from Guru Bangla Sahib Gurdwara. Police Claims That Pankaj Mehra Has Confessed. He Allegedly Was Secretly Married To Another Woman Who He Wanted To Be With

    After Delhi Woman Shot Dead In Car, Husband Confesses He Did It: Police

    Not Your Father's Cab': Man Forcibly Sits In Taxi, Woman Calls Cops

    Not Your Father's Cab': Man Forcibly Sits In Taxi, Woman Calls Cops
    A journalist has complained to police that a man who claimed to be a cop entered her cab forcibly and abused her in south Mumbai

    Not Your Father's Cab': Man Forcibly Sits In Taxi, Woman Calls Cops

    Journalist KJ Singh Murder Case Cracked, Man From UP Arrested

    Journalist KJ Singh Murder Case Cracked, Man From UP Arrested
    The accused, Gaurav Kumar, had an argument with Mr Singh, who then slapped him. Enraged, the youth brutally killed the senior journalist with a kitchen knife and then strangulated his mother who was a witness to the crime, they said.

    Journalist KJ Singh Murder Case Cracked, Man From UP Arrested

    Father's Name Not Necessary For Admission Of Rape Survivor's Child In Madhya Pradesh Schools

    Father's Name Not Necessary For Admission Of Rape Survivor's Child In Madhya Pradesh Schools
    Following a recommendation of the Madhya Pradesh Human Rights Commission (MPHRC), the School Education Department has written to district collectors, asking them to convey this directive to the schools in their jurisdiction.

    Father's Name Not Necessary For Admission Of Rape Survivor's Child In Madhya Pradesh Schools