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  • Published: 4 January 2011
  • ISBN: 9781446407899
  • Imprint: Ebury Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 288
Categories:

In the Valley of Mist

Kashmir's long war: one family's extraordinary story




Does for Kashmir what The Bookseller of Kabul did for Afghanistan, now in paperback

Mohammed Dar and his three brothers were born in a boat on a lake in Kashmir, a place of exquisite beauty that was to become a war zone and nuclear flashpoint. This Himalayan valley of water, mist and mountains was once one of India's greatest tourist draws. In 1989 it exploded into insurgency. Kashmir became a rallying cry for jihadi movements all over the region and Pakistan's backing of the conflict triggered, in part, its own Islamist crisis. Mohammed Dar and his family found themselves living inside a new and foreign world of violence.

Justine Hardy has stayed with the Dar family for many years, reporting on the conflict. She tells their story of living through the destruction of their adored homeland. Through their eyes we see the rise of religious fundamentalism and intolerance, the ethnic cleansing of the Hindu population of the valley, and the recruitment of a generation to jihad. And, amid the fighting, families continue to try and educate their children, find work, and protect their physical and mental well-being, while attempting to build some kind of future beyond the annihilation of their old way of life. In The Valley of Mist is an extraordinary story of family survival, at the heart of a conflict within and beyond the Muslim world.

  • Published: 4 January 2011
  • ISBN: 9781446407899
  • Imprint: Ebury Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 288
Categories:

About the author

Justine Hardy

Justine Hardy is a journalist and documentary maker with an international reputation. She lives in Kashmir, Delhi and London, and is the author of five books, of which Scoop-Wallah and Goat: a story of Kashmir and Notting Hill were serialised on BBC Radio 4.

Praise for In the Valley of Mist

Beautifully written...by a writer who knows [Kashmir] better than any other

David Loyn, BBC Foreign Correspondent

Fascinating and informative...one of the best ever books to profile the complex, violent Kashmir crisis.

Greg Mortensen, author of Three Cups of Tea

Deserves the warmest recommendation...[Hardy] can really write...A fine introduction to what [the situation in Kashmir] is all about.

Andrew Buncombe, Asia Correspondent, Independent

Elegantly written and perceptive

Sunday Guardian

The strength of Hardy's writing is its honesty and keen observation. She tells it like it is. And sometimes it's heartbreakingly beautiful. At other times, the scene is bleak, but the writing is immediate...A book not just to read slowly, but to live slowly. Well done!

Outlookindia.com