Recounting horrors of terror-induced exodus of Kashmiri Hindus
· As the Kashmiri Pandits observe January 19 as the exodus day, theirs is a story that needs to be retold and conveyed to know how the so-called -movement for “Azadi (freedom)” was camouflaged for carrying out religious persecution
🔗: https://t.co/11SZrMtmjC
@OfficeOfLGJandK Hasn't Govt failed till now to pinpoint the kingpins behind the #Genocide/#जातिसंहार of Kashmiri Pandits,the earliest inhabitants of the Valley, forced 2 live a life of #refugees in their own country? Who is responsible & who will answer hon'ble @manojsinha_ Ji ?
Recounting horrors of terror-induced exodus of Kashmiri Hindus
· As the Kashmiri Pandits observe January 19 as the exodus day, theirs is a story that needs to be retold and conveyed to know how the so-called -movement for “Azadi (freedom)” was camouflaged for carrying out religious persecution
🔗: https://t.co/11SZrMtmjC
I went to the CET exam centre. The authorities noticed my Janehu [sacred Hindu thread] and ordered me to remove it, warning me that if I didn’t I wouldn’t be allowed to take the exam. I had to remove it, along with seven others. - Student in Karnataka.
Hindus in Hindu Rashtra.
VIDEO | Bhaderwah, J&K: Thousands of devotees trekked a treacherous terrain to reach ancient hill top Subar Nag temple to participate in the age-old rituals of Nag Baisakhi which symbolises the the arrival of spring season after prolonged harsh winters in Bhaderwah valley.
Located at a height of 12,000 feet above sea level, this 1600 year old temple made from local black granite remains closed for 5 months during winters and on eve of Nag Baisakhi which is celebrated a day before the actual Baisakhi festival, the doors (Kapat) of the ancient place of worship are opened for the devotees.
(Full video available on PTI Videos- https://t.co/9uKz9ypjA9)
Voice That Will Never Fade!
A heartfelt tribute to Smt. Asha Bhosle ji, one of India’s most iconic and versatile voices.
Her extraordinary musical journey enriched our cultural legacy and touched millions across the world. Condolences to her family, admirers, and music lovers.
He is Additional CEO, Shri Mata Vaishnodevi Shrine, Katra Sachin Kumar Vaishya but when Pandit ji asked him to remove shoes before performing Pooja before opening ceremony of Board’s souvenir shop he felt a little bit uncomfortable and clearly said “that’s why he does not come for performing rituals”.
A person who can’t respect Hindu traditions must not head our religious organisation.
No doubt so many Muslims got seats Vaishno Devi Medical college
@satoverma Fyi, printed 'Koshur' (#Kashmiri) translation of DQ ( 5 Chapters) by these two eminent #KashmiriPandit scholars (NS&JD) has recently hit the market on 8 March 2026).
@Indrauta_@satoverma@catastrochic Ratan Nath Dhar (pen name 'Sarshar') had translated the classic 17th Century #Spanish novel '#DonQuixote in #Urdu titled: 'Khudai Faujdar'. Published in Lucknow(1894), this translation was the first to reach Keller in America though Gujrati version had appeared earlier in #India.
Expecting a respite from the #pollution in the National capital.....❓
Nearly 37% ( 4200 tonnes) of solid waste (generated daily) in #Delhi gets accumulated every day at landfill sites. ❓ @htTweets@gupta_rekha@MoHFW_INDIA
Today, we solemnly remember one of the most brutal and cowardly acts of terrorism carried out at the behest of our rogue neighbour, Pakistan, on this day in 2003. Twenty-four innocent Kashmiri Pandits—men, women, elders, and children—were mercilessly lined up and gunned down in Nadimarg.
This deep wound in our collective conscience can never truly heal. We owe our heartfelt श्रद्धांजलि (Shraddhanjali) to these martyrs whose only fault was their identity.
It is the moral responsibility of the civil society of our nation to stand up, speak out, and come to the aid of the voiceless Kashmiri Pandit community, whose pain and struggle continue even today.
With folded hands and a heavy heart, I offer my humble Naman to the martyrs of
@Nadimarg. Their sacrifice will never be forgotten.
𝗡𝗮𝗱𝗶𝗺𝗮𝗿𝗴 2003: 𝗔 𝗡𝗶𝗴𝗵𝘁 𝗼𝗳 𝗧𝗲𝗿𝗿𝗼𝗿 𝗪𝗲 𝗠𝘂𝘀𝘁 𝗡𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗿 𝗙𝗼𝗿𝗴𝗲𝘁
On 23 March 2003, the quiet village of Nadimarg witnessed one of the most barbaric acts of terrorism in modern Indian history — the 2003 Nadimarg massacre. Yet, like many tragedies of Kashmir, it slowly faded from national memory.
That night, heavily armed terrorists belonging to Lashkar-e-Taiba entered the village disguised in fake army uniforms. Moving with calculated precision, they knocked on doors of the remaining Kashmiri Pandit families — a small group of about 50 people who had refused to leave their homeland even after the mass exodus of the 1990s.
What followed was not just murder — it was cold-blooded execution.
The terrorists dragged innocent civilians out of their homes in the dead of night, lined them up, and opened fire at point-blank range. In minutes, 24 lives were extinguished — including 11 men, 11 women, and two small children, one as young as two years old.
There was no provocation, no warning — only hate-driven brutality.
This massacre was not an isolated incident. It was part of a larger pattern of targeted killings aimed at terrorising minorities and erasing their presence from the Valley. The #KashmiriPandits who stayed back in Nadimarg believed they could coexist peacefully. That illusion was shattered forever that night.
Even more disturbing is what followed — silence, delayed justice, and fading outrage. For years, justice remained elusive. The case saw little closure, and only decades later did efforts emerge to reopen investigations.
Today, Nadimarg stands not just as a place, but as a reminder — of how terrorism does not just kill people, it kills memory, trust, and coexistence.
We must ask ourselves:
Why do some tragedies dominate headlines while others disappear into oblivion?
Why are the victims of Nadimarg not remembered with the same intensity? @BattaKashmiri
For a nation that aspires to stand united against terror, selective memory is dangerous.
Remembering #NadimargMasssacre is not about politics — it is about justice, truth, and national conscience. It is about ensuring that such horrors are neither repeated nor forgotten.
Because when we forget, we fail the victims.
And when we fail the victims, we embolden terror.
#NeverForget2003 #23March
#JusticeForPandits @ajaykraina
#ShaheedDiwas #StopTerrorism
#KashmirTruth @BabaKPS2390@AstroCounselKK@ravikarkara
On March 23, 2003, in South Kashmir’s Nadimarg village, 24 Kashmiri Pandits were lined up and shot at point-blank range in the Nadimarg massacre. Among them were 11 men, 11 women, and two children.
Eyewitness accounts recall that after the massacre, the terrorist Zia Mustafa heard a baby crying and ordered it to be silenced the 24th victim. A helpless infant, whose only “crime” was being alive in its mother’s arms. That cry still echoes in memory.
This is not just a tragedy it is a wound that remains.
We will not forgive.
We will not forget.
Each life lost is a reminder of the brutality inflicted, and a day like this stands as a black day in history.
#NadimargMassacre