Monday, June 15, 2026
ADVT 
India

Woman Student-Editor Stirs Kashmir's Young Creative Minds

IANS, 17 Jun, 2016 01:49 PM
    In search of space for political dissent in the trouble-torn Kashmir Valley, 23-year-old Saba Nazki and a bunch of youths have started a tabloid -- "Mizraab" -- exclusively for students to give vent to their creative expressions in the form of stories and illustrations.
     
    When Nazki flew back in 2014 after completing her graduation from Delhi University in English honours, she said there was "no space" in the Valley for intellectual creativity as existed in the national capital where art, theatre and writing used to be her daily fare.
     
    The first issue of the 16-page fortnightly "Mizraab", funded by local newspaper "Kashmir Observer", is a collection of students' writings, illustrations and poetry.
     
    "Kashmir not only has beautiful landscapes but is also rich in terms of art and literature. And it is so unfortunate that we do not have any space for expression. Kashmir is poetic. Students here need polishing and a platform for expression. Thus, Mizraab," Nazki, who never intended to be a journalist, told IANS.
     
    Titled appropriately, "Mizraab", a Persian-origin Urdu name for fiddle-stick or the plectrum with which musical instruments like the sitar or rabaab are played, is a platform to stir the hidden creative minds of the valley.
     
    "Mizraab for me is to instigate art and channelise intellectual space. In Kashmir, even student politics is mostly banned. We need to create our own space," said Nazki, the founding editor.
     
    Pursuing her masters in English literature from Kashmir University, Nazki has involved fellow students, invoking in them the sense of writing.
     
    The first edition published earlier this month is a mix of Kashmir's art, culture, history and linguistic treasure. For example a column, "With Love, To Aga Shahid Ali", remembers the life and works of the renowned Kashmiri-American poet.
     
    It also has illustrations by students of music and fine arts. There is a column called "Til-waer", which literally means an oil-dispenser, but is a phrase in Kashmir used for a woman who wanders from door-to-door.
     
    "Tilwaer" will be a collection of words and brain-picking idioms and phrases no longer used in spoken Kashmiri. The idea is to recollect "with a tinge of sarcasm, humour and wit" the lost linguistic treasure of Kashmir.
     
    "Dancing in Wilderness -- of longings, divinity and catharisis" creates a link between Kashmir's ancient women poets like Lalla Ded and Habba Khatoon and their present-day counterparts like Naseem Shafai -- the first Kashmiri woman to win the Sahitya Akademi Award in 2011.
     
    However, Nazki said the tabloid is not only about art, literature and culture.
     
    "Art and culture is only the prism. I intend to showcase Kashmir's life in various ways," she said, adding that the tabloid uses art as a metaphor. "It includes satire and showcases conflict as well."
     
    She said she got 2,500 copies printed for the first edition. All of them were distributed to students free of cost. But from the next edition, each copy will be priced at Rs 5.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Nearly 1,000 Chinese soldiers enter India

    Nearly 1,000 Chinese soldiers enter India
    Nearly 1,000 Chinese soldiers Thursday intruded into India in Ladakh's Chumur sector, on a day Chinese President Xi Jinping is on an official visit here.....

    Nearly 1,000 Chinese soldiers enter India

    India gives historic Dakota aircraft to Bangladesh

    India gives historic Dakota aircraft to Bangladesh
    The India Air Force Thursday handed over a Dakota aircraft from the IAF museum to the Bangladesh Air Force, following a request from Bangladesh for...

    India gives historic Dakota aircraft to Bangladesh

    Badal looks to attract investment to Punjab

    Badal looks to attract investment to Punjab
    Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal is all set to meet top industrialists in Chennai and Hyderabad to highlight investment opportunities in Punjab....

    Badal looks to attract investment to Punjab

    Red carpet welcome, Gujarati culture and cuisine await Xi

    Red carpet welcome, Gujarati culture and cuisine await Xi
    Chinese President Xi Jinping arrives here Wednesday afternoon on the first leg of his three-day India visit during which trade and investment are...

    Red carpet welcome, Gujarati culture and cuisine await Xi

    US-based EcoSikh raises funds for environmental action in Punjab

    US-based EcoSikh raises funds for environmental action in Punjab
    EcoSikh, a Washington-based community environmental group, is raising funds to help support environmental initiatives in India’s Punjab state, and elsewhere in the world....

    US-based EcoSikh raises funds for environmental action in Punjab

    Paradise on Earth becomes horror for its residents

    Paradise on Earth becomes horror for its residents
    As historical records confirm that the recent floods in Kashmir have been worse than the worst ever - that in 1893 - the human suffering and devastation...

    Paradise on Earth becomes horror for its residents