Archive for January, 2007

2007 RopeWalk Summer Retreat

Posted in Uncategorized on January 31, 2007 by ronsamul

Mark your calendars! This year’s retreat is June 10-16. For more information, visit http://www.ropewalk .org

2007 RopeWalk Summer Faculty

Poetry

Marianne Boruch has published five books of poetry, most recently Poems: New and Selected (Oberlin College Press, 2004). Her essay collection, In the Blue Pharmacy: Essays on Poetry and Other Transformations was published by Trinity University Press in 2005. Her poems and essays have appeared in numerous periodicals, including The New Yorker, The Southern Review, TriQuarterly, Kenyon Review, American Poetry Review, Crazyhorse, and The Yale Review. Her poems and prose have been included in collections such as Poets of the New Century (Godine, 2000), and American Alphabets (Oberlin, 2006). Marianne was a Guggenheim Fellow for the 2005-2006 year and has won prizes including the Pushcart (2001), the Terence De Pres Award (1994), a 2005 residency at the MacDowell Colony, and Poetry Fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1984 and 1999. She teaches at Purdue University where she received an Excellence in Teaching Award in 1995, 2004, and 2005, and in the Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers.

Michael Waters has published eight books of poetry, including Darling Vulgarity (BOA Editions, 2006) and Parthenopi: New and Selected Poems (BOA Editions, 2001). He has edited/co-edited several volumes, including Contemporary American Poetry (Houghton Mifflin, 2006). The recipient of a Fellowship in Creative Writing from the National Endowment for the Arts, several Individual Artist Awards from the Maryland State Arts Council, and three Pushcart Prizes, he has published poems in numerous journals, including Poetry, The Yale Review, The American Poetry Review, Rolling Stone, The Kenyon Review, The Southern Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Georgia Review, The North American Review, and Ploughshares. In 2004, he chaired the Poetry Panel for The National Book Award. Michael Waters joined the faculty of Salisbury University in 1978. In spring 2007, he will be Fulbright Lecturer at University Al. I. Cuza in Iasi , Romania . He has taught for several summer programs, including the West Virginia Writers’ Workshop, the Prague Summer Program, and the New England College MFA Program, and has been the recipient of residency fellowships from Yaddo, The MacDowell Colony, The Anderson Center for Interdisciplinary Studies, The Tyrone Guthrie Centre ( Ireland ), and The St. James Cavalier Centre ( Malta ).

Creative Nonfiction

Kevin McIlvoy has published three novels and the recent collection The Complete History of New Mexico: Stories (Graywolf Press, 2005). His short stories have appeared in The Southern Review, Ploughshares, TriQuarterly, the Missouri Review, Chelsea , and other literary magazines. Kevin is on the English faculty at New Mexico State University , where he teaches advanced creative writing workshops and other courses. He has won numerous teaching awards, including the New Mexico Council of Teachers of English Excellence Award, and New Mexico State University Donald C. Roush Award for Teaching Excellence, and the Burlington Northern Foundation Faculty Achievement Award. Kevin is also the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fiction Fellowship. This is his second visit to RopeWalk.

Fiction
Jennifer S. Davis, native of Alabama , is the author of Her Kind of Want, winner of the Iowa Award for Short Fiction. Her stories have been published in such magazines as The Paris Review, The Georgia Review, Grand Street , The Oxford American and in the anthology of original short fiction by women, This Is Not Chick Lit. Her second collection of short stories, Our Former Lives in Art, will be published by Random House in July, 2007. Currently, she is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Colorado at Denver.

Guest Artist
Bich Minh Nguyen (first name pronounced “Bit”) was born in Saigon and grew up in Grand Rapids , Michigan . She received her MFA from the University of Michigan and is currently and Assistant Professor of English and Creative Writing at Purdue University . Winner of the 2005 PEN/Jerard Award in nonfiction, she is the author of a forthcoming memoir, Short Girls. With her husband Porter Shreve she is coeditor of 30/30: Thirty American Stories from the Last Thirty Years; I & Eye: Contemporary Creative Nonfiction; and The Contemporary American Short Story: A Longman Anthology. Her work has also appeared in Gourmet magazine, Dream Me Home Safely: Writers on Growing Up in America ; Tales Out of School: Contemporary Writers on their Student Years; and Watermark: Vietnamese American Poetry and Verse.

Writecorner Press Announces Three Major Events

Posted in Uncategorized on January 31, 2007 by ronsamul

1) $1,100 E.M. Koeppel 2006 Short Fiction Award – Award for Unpublished Fiction in Any Style, Any Theme

Awards: First place – $1,100. Editors’ Choices – $100 each. Maximum Length – 3,000 words. Stories must be unpublished. Winning story and Editors’ Choices will be published on the literary website www.writecorner. com . After publication, writer retains all rights. Any number of unpublished stories may be entered by any writer. $15 fee for one story, $10 for each additional story. No e-mail entries. Send submissions to Writecorner Press , PO Box 140310, Gainesville, FL 32614. Postmark Deadline – April 30, 2007.

2) $500 Writecorner Press Poetry Prize First Place; Editors’ Choices, $100 each

Poetry Guidelines: NEW annual award for the best unpublished poems under 40 lines. Any style, any theme. Postmark deadline: Feb. 28, 2007. No e-mail entries. Send 2 copies of each poem with author’s name, address, phone, e-mail on only 1 copy. Fee: $5 first poem, $3 each additional poem.

3) The P.L. Titus $500 Scholarship

The winning short fiction author will receive the P.L. Titus $500 Scholarship -in addition to the $1,100 E.M. Koeppel Award – if the winning writer is someone of any age attending a college, a school, or a university when the story is submitted (proof of attendance at the time of submission will be required). Winner may use the scholarship money for any purpose.

Writecorner Press Editors: Mary Sue Koeppel, longtime editor of Kalliope, and Robert B. Gentry, award winning writer

For complete guidelines and more information visit our literary site: www.writecorner. com

Miranda Book Review : Red Guard Fantasies and Other Stories

Posted in Uncategorized on January 26, 2007 by ronsamul

Publisher’s Choice

Red Guard Fantasies and Other Stories

By Shouhua Qi. Paperback. 264pp.

ISBN 1-59265-068-6. $18.95.

With the end of the Cultural Revolution, China is a rapidly changing place where traditions and values are constantly in flux. In these fourteen short stories, Shouhua Qi who brought us When the Purple Mountain Burns, we see the dynamics of living in such a volatile and changing society. There is a striking balance of humor, satire, fear, and shock in these stories that give the shape of an entire nation to the surface. A few highlights in this collection were stories that mixed an odd sense of place with striking emotions. The Evidence is story about a young hairdresser is wrongfully accused of prostitution and when she fails to prove herself innocent, the dark consequences are frightening. Shouhua Qi has mastered the craft of revealing his characters to us with empathy and depth beyond their motives. As readers, we can imagine his characters populating any corner of the emerging state of China. In The Test or The Little Rice Wine Pot concerns a young couple expecting a new child. When a girl is born to them, they decide to abandon the baby near a hospital under an old willow tree. There decision changes their lives forever. While this story considers the fear and uncertainty of giving birth to a girl in China, all of these tales submerge into truth and a sense of humanity that thrives, fights, and drives the vast spirit of the Chinese people. Available Spring 2007.

Winter Issue

Posted in Uncategorized on January 26, 2007 by ronsamul

A special thanks to everyone for making the Winter Issue one of our best issues. We have some great writing, articles, and visual art. The magazine has gone through some changes, and some good statistics to share.

We have done away with the login to make viewing the content easier for you. So far for the month, numbers have been surging. We’ve had 700 visits and more than 3500 page views. Our readership is primarily based in the United States, but we have readers as far as Mongolia and Shanghai – China. We are proud to be bring some great writing in the hopes that inspires our readers to read, write, and contribute to the world of artistic expression.

Enjoy the winter issue. Soon we will have a ISSN number.

We begin preliminary work on the anthology in February.
Keep in touch — RON

Kashmir Terrorism: Origin and Growth

Posted in Uncategorized on January 3, 2007 by ronsamul

by: Dr. S.K. Raina

Broadly speaking, when justice and right are denied to a person over a longer period of time, the person is left with two options: bear the situation patiently, or the reaction is anguish, and that reaction, in the process culminates into terrorism. Besides other things, spreading of communal hatred, religious frenzy, separatist tendency etc. are the tools which terrorists generally use. Guns too are used to achieve the so-called specified mission. Fanaticism, extremism, radicalism, separatism, militancy, activism etc. are its other names or manifestations. This is one side of the picture of terrorism. (Terrorists fighting for a genuine cause i.e. liberating themselves, their society/country from the oppressor/ perpetrator). Another side of the picture is disgusting and questionable. Over the years terrorism has emerged as a systematic use or threatened use of violence to intimidate a population, community or government and thereby effect political, religious or ideological change just to achieve personal gains. Modern terrorism has resorted to other option of intimidation, i.e. influence the mass media, in an effort to amplify and broadcast feelings of intense fear and anger among the people. Needless to mention here that acts of terror are carried out by people who are indoctrinated to the extent of following a strategy of dying to kill. They are the ones who have become pawns in the hands of their masters who direct their paths, sitting in the comforts of far off places with all the facilities available to them. Masters have their vested political interests while as pawns seemingly have nothing to gain except suffer for a cause about which they themselves don’t know or know very little.

Terrorism in Kashmir is almost 18 years old now and has likeness to the second side of the picture. It has a history long enough to be traced from the date when partition was forced resulting in the emergence of two nations- India and Pakistan- after the sub-continent freed itself from the colonial rule of the British Empire. It may not be out of context here to probe into the consequences in detail that gave rise to terrorism in Kashmir. But again, before that, giving a brief introduction of this widely known beautiful valley would be too apt.

Kashmir-Paradise on Earth-(Switzerland of Asia) Nature’s grand finale of beauty is a masterpiece of earth’s creation of charm and loveliness. Famous for its beauty and natural scenery throughout the world and for its high snow-clad mountains, scenic spots, beautiful valleys, rivers with ice-cold water, attractive lakes and springs and ever-green fields, dense forests and beautiful health resorts, enhance its grandeur and are a source of great attraction for tourists. It is also widely known for its different kinds of agricultural products, fruit, vegetables, saffron, herbs, and minerals, precious stones handicrafts like woollen carpets, shawls and finest kind of embroidery on clothes. During summer, one can enjoy the beauty of nature, trout fishing, big and small game hunting etc.; during winter climbing mountain peaks and sports like skating and skiing on snow slopes are commonly enjoyed. In addition to the above, Pilgrimage to famous religious shrines of the Hindus and the Muslims make Kashmir a great tourist attraction. About Kashmir Sheikh Sadie a great Persian poet is believed to have said, “If there is any heaven on earth, it is here in Kashmir, in Kashmir in Kashmir only.”

Apart from natural beauty, Jammu and Kashmir has a unique cultural blend which makes it different from the rest of the country (India).It is not only distinct in cultural forms and heritage, but in geographical, demographical, ethnical, social entities, forming a distinct spectrum of diversity. The people of Kashmir, Jammu and Ladakh, all follow diverse religion, language and culture, but continuously intermingling which symbolizes Indian Unity amidst diversity. Its different cultural forms like art and architecture, fair and festivals, rites and rituals, seers and sagas, languages and literatures, embedded in ageless period of history, speak of endless unity and diversity with unparalleled cultural cohesion and amicability. Kashmir has been a great centre of learning. A treasure of rich Sanskrit literature is to be found here. Early Indo-Aryanic civilization has originated and flourished in this land. It has also been embracing point of advent of Islam bringing its traditions of Persian civilization, tolerance, brotherhood and sacrifice.

After the British withdrew from the Indian subcontinent in 1947 and India and Pakistan emerged as two separate countries, princely states were given an option to choose the country they wanted to stay on. Obviously, the states falling geographically within had no other option but to merge with the country they were situated. Border states like Kashmir, Jodhpur etc. took time to come out with their firm decisions probably because they wanted to enjoy the status of an independent Statehood. In the case of Kashmir, where Maharaja (King) Hari Singh was the ruler, situation worsened considerably. Territorial disputes over Kashmir had already started brewing-Pakistan claiming that Kashmir should go to his side since Muslims were in majority there. Apprehending that Maharaja might opt for an accession to India, Pakistan prepared for an aggression in a bid to capture the State forcibly hoping that masses, mainly Muslims, would support its mission but that didn’t happen. Secular forces headed by the then popular mass leader Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah fondly known as Sher-i-Kashmir motivated the Kashmiri people (Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs) to rise to the occasion and stand united to counter and frustrate the evil designs of the enemy who was marching to the capital city Srinagar indulging in bloodshed and mayhem. A new slogan echoed the entire valley: “Hamlavar khabardaar, hum Kashmiri hai tayaar—Hindu Muslim Sikh Ithaad, Naya Kashmir Zindabaad—“ Beware you attackers! We Kashmiris are ready to counter you—Long live the Unity of Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs-!!— At Hazuri Bagh, Srinagar before a large crowd on October 1, 1947, Sher-i-Kashmir proclaimed :”Till the last drop of my blood, I will not believe in two-nation theory.” It was a rebuff to Mr. Jinnah-father of the nation of Pakistan- who was watching the developments so closely from his country side. Finding their designs on Kashmir not fructifying, Pakistan rulers launched an armed attack on Jammu and Kashmir to annex it. Tribes in thousands along with Pak regular troops entered the State on October 22, 1947 from several points and indulged in loot, arson, rape, bloodshed and mayhem. Bowing before the wishes of the people and seeing his own regular army being out-numbered and to push back the invaders, the Maharaja signed the Instrument of Accession in favour of India on October 26, 1947 on the prescribed terms and conditions. This was accepted by the Governor General of India, Lord Mountbatten the next day. The Instrument of Accession executed by Maharaja Hari Singh was the same which was signed by other rulers of the other princely States. Similarly, the acceptance of the Instrument of Accession by the Governor General was also identical in respect of all such instruments.

With J&K becoming legal and constitutional part of Union of India, Indian army rushed to the State to push back the invaders and vacate aggression from the territory of the State. The first batch of Indian Army troops arrived at Srinagar airport immediately after the Accession was signed. On October 30, 1947 an Emergency Government was formed in the State with Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah as its head. The Army fought sustained battle with the tribals/Kabayilies and after several sacrifices pushed them out of the Valley and other areas in the Jammu region. (Earlier Brigadier Rajendra Singh Chief of State Forces with a small number of soldiers at his disposal fought valiantly with the enemy and laid down his life in the process.)

Meanwhile, the people of Kashmir under the towering leadership of Sher-I-Kashmir were mobilised and they resisted the marching columns of the enemy. Till the arrival of India troops, it was mainly the Muslim volunteers under the command of Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah who braved death to push back invaders. While the army pushed back the invaders, there were several instances where people put up a gallant resistance and stopped the advancing invaders. The most glaring examples of people’s resistance were the martyrdom of Mohammad Maqbool Sherwani and Master Abdul Aziz both staunch followers of Sher-i-Kashmir Sheikh Abdullah. Sherwani did not oblige the invaders when they enquired from him the route to Srinagar. Instead, he put them on a wrong track gaining time for troops to reach Srinagar from New Delhi. Somehow the tribesmen came to know about his tactics and nailed him at a Baramulla crossing and asked him to raise pro-Pakistan slogans. He did raise slogans but these were different. These were pro-Hindu-Muslim unity and in favour of Sher-i-Kashmir. Enraged by this, the ruthless tribesmen emptied their guns on him. The sacrifice of Master Abdul Aziz too was exemplary. The invaders who raped the nuns and wanted other non-Muslim women to be handed over to them, Master Abdul Aziz, a tailor by profession, held the holy Quran in his hand and said that they can touch the women only after they pass over his dead body and the holy Quran. The brutal killers did not spare him either.

On January 1, 1948 India took up the issue of Pak aggression in Jammu and Kashmir to UNO under Article 35 of its Charter. The Government of India in its letter to the Security Council said, “…Such a situation now exists between India and Pakistan owing to the aid which invaders, consisting of nationals of Pakistan and tribesmen… are drawing from Pakistan for operations against Jammu and Kashmir, a State which has acceded legally to the Dominion of India and is part of India. The Government of India requests the Security Council to call upon Pakistan to put an end immediately to the giving of such assistance which is an act of aggression against India. If Pakistan does not do so, the Government of India may be compelled, in self defense, to enter into Pakistan territory to take military action against the invaders.” After long debates, cease-fire came into operation on the midnight of January 1, 1949. Eventually, India filed a complaint with the UN Security Council, which established the United Nations Commission for India and Pakistan (UNCIP). Pakistan was accused of invading the region, and was asked to withdraw its forces from Jammu & Kashmir. The UNCIP also passed a resolution stating: “The question of accession of the state of Jammu & Kashmir to India or Pakistan will be decided through the democratic method of free and impartial plebiscite”. However, this could not take place because Pakistan did not comply with the UN resolution and refused to withdraw from the State. The international community failed to play a decisive role in the matter saying that Jammu & Kashmir is a “disputed territory”. In 1949, with the intervention of the United Nations, India and Pakistan defined a ceasefire line (“Line of Control”) that divided the two countries. This has left Kashmir a divided and disturbed territory up till now.

In September 1951, free and fair elections, as per the Constitutional modalities, were held in Jammu & Kashmir, and National Conference party under the leadership of Sheikh Abdullah came into power. With the advent of the Constituent Assembly of the State of Jammu & Kashmir representing the aspirations of the people of Jammu and Kashmir, the State became an integral part of India constitutionally. After Sheikh Abdullah; Bakshi Gulam Mohamad, G.M.Sadiq, Mir Qasim,Gul Shah,Mufti Sayed and Dr.Farooq Abdullah ruled the State as Chief Ministers. Mr.Gulam Nabi Azad is the current Chief Minister of the J&K State.

Though the governments ran smoothly over the years, continued instigations and arousing religious frenzy by Pakistan did not stop. The year 1965 saw a war between India and Pakistan claiming so many lives on either side. A cease-fire was established and the two countries signed an agreement at Tashkent (Uzbekistan) in 1966, pledging to end the dispute by peaceful means. Five years later, the two again went to war that resulted in the creation of Bangladesh. Another accord was signed in 1972 between the two Prime Ministers — Indira Gandhi and Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto — in Simla. After Bhutto was executed in 1979, the Kashmir issue once again flared up.

During the 1980s, massive infiltrations from Pakistan were detected in the region, and India has since then maintained a strong military presence in Jammu & Kashmir to check these movements along the cease-fire line. India says that Pakistan has been stirring up violence in its part of Kashmir by training and funding “Islamic guerrillas” that have waged a separatist war since 1989 killing tens of thousands of people. Pakistan has always denied the charge, calling it an indigenous “freedom struggle.”

In 1999, intense fighting ensued between the infiltrators and the Indian army in the Kargil area of the western part of the state, which lasted for more than two months. The battle ended with India managing to reclaim most of the area on its side that had been seized by the infiltrators.

In 2001, Pakistan-backed terrorists waged violent attacks on the Kashmir Assembly and the Indian Parliament in New Delhi. This has resulted in a war-like situation between the two countries, with Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf asking his army to be “fully prepared and capable of defeating all challenges,” and the then Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee saying, “We don’t want war but war is being thrust upon us, and we will have to face it.”

Plight of Pandits (Hindus)

The Pandits, who are the Hindu community of Kashmir and have an ancient and a proud culture, have been amongst the most afflicted victims of the Pakistani-supported campaign of terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir.. Their roots in the Kashmir Valley run very deep. They are the original inhabitants of this beautiful valley. Their number being small and peace-loving by nature, they have been the soft targets of terrorists. Virtually the entire population of 300,000 Kashmiri Pandits have been forced to leave their ancestral homes and property. Threatened with violence and intimidation by Muslim fundamentalists, they have been turned into refugees in their own country leaving behind their shops ,farms, cattle and age-old memories. .As a matter of fact, Jammu and Kashmir has become a target of Pakistan, sponsored by religion-based terrorism. The persecution by Muslim extremists of the Hindu minority and the systematic religion-based extremism of terrorist elements has resulted in the exodus of these Hindu/Pandits and other minorities from the Kashmir Valley to other parts of India. Fundamentalists and terrorists have also targeted and assassinated Muslim intellectuals and liberal Muslim leaders too, who spoke of Hindu-Muslim unity and brotherhood. Terrorist acts by Kashmiri militant groups have also taken place outside Jammu and Kashmir.

India claims most of the separatist militant groups are based in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir (also known as Azad Kashmir). Some like the All Parties Hurriyat Conference and the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front(JKLF), demand an independent Kashmir. Other groups such as Lashkar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed favour a Pakistani-Kashmir. Of the larger militant groups, the Hizbul Mujahideen, a militant organisation is based in Pakistan administered Kashmir. Sources reveal that Al-Qaeda too has a base in Pakistani Kashmir and helping to forment terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir.

India is unwilling to lose even one additional inch of his land. New Delhi is also concerned that Kashmiri autonomy would set a precedent for breakaway movements in other Indian states (e.g., Punjab or Assam). To Pakistan, Kashmir is symbolic of its national ethos and commitment to protect Muslim interests against Indian encroachment. It believes that the creation of a separate, strongly sectarian nation is incomplete without contiguous Kashmir .In brief, Kashmir is a target of externally sponsored religion-based terrorism. The aim is to divide people on the basis of sectarian affiliation and undermine/weaken the secular fabric and territorial integrity of India.

However, as and now with the passage of time, the passion of the Jehad/movement which once had the mass public support has started declining since it has turned out to be a movement run by those who are more interested in their own personal gains. Confusion within the separatist groups too has weakened the movement. The hard liners led by Jamat-e-Islami advocate total merger of Jammu and Kashmir, with Pakistan whereas the soft liners led by J.K.L.F (Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front) stands for total independence of J&K. This has given rise to a totally confusing and conflicting situation resulting in disillusionment, disarray and disinterest of the common man in Kashmir who has suffered a lot for the past 18 years and is not prepared to suffer any more.

About The Author

Dr. S.K. Raina
Writer and translator of long standing.Winner of several academic awards. Formerly Fellow at Indian Institute of Advanced Study, Rashtrapati Nivas, Shimla India.