We are the stake-holders. Come! Let’s change this system
Published on
Monday, 24 February 2014
9:14 pm
//
Interviews
In an exclusive interview chairman global youth
foundation Mr Towseef Raina talks to Mir Arif
Touseef Raina,
you sometimes lead candle light protests at Pratap Park. What is your aim?
My colleagues in the Global
Youth Foundation have been interacting with young people, mainly in north
Kashmir, for the last few years, to promote peace with justice. We discuss how
a stable society can be built so that we may have prosperity and a better life
ahead. We have seen how so many of our leaders in the past have opened shops
and tried to make money out of our sufferings. They and their children stay
safe, many of them make a lot of money, and build big bungalows, while the poor
end up dying and suffering torture and worse. And finally, it just keeps going
on. No solution is reached. One reason is that this suits these brokers of
violence and instability. They make money out of it. Also, so many of them are
on the payrolls of one country or the other. They don’t have the freedom to
take decisions. They have to do what they are told to do.
But what can
you achieve by lighting candles at Pratap Park?
You have noticed our candle
light vigils at Press Colony. But that is not all we do. And that is not the
only place we have candle-light vigils. We have done them elsewhere also, where
only poor people live and only poor people come. They get noticed at Pratap
Park because the media covers it. We do that to draw attention to certain
issues. For example, we took up the issue of Afzal Guru – while he was still
alive! For that also, we had a candle-light demonstration. At that time, our
so-called leaders were sleeping. They had been sleeping for years, not doing
anything to defend his case in the courts. You see, many young people feel that
it suits our so-called leaders, whether they are mainstream or separatist, that
poor, helpless people die.
Please understand that
candle-light demonstrations are only a small part of what we do. We interact
with young people, have discussions, try to understand the world around us, how
it is changing, what our challenges are, what opportunities we have, how we can
make our world a better, safer, more prosperous place. We want that today’s
young generation also should not be wasted.
What good did
your candle-light protest do, for example for Afzal Guru?
We could not save his life,
agreed. Unfortunately, far more powerful people did not share our idea. But at
least we have the satisfaction that we did what we could. We are nobody, but we
wrote a letter to the President of India. I asked for permission to meet him in
Tihar. I visited his family and offered help while he was still in jail. We
started a signature campaign. And this was not easy. We were threatened. I was
personally summoned, with some of my colleagues, and we were told we would be
locked up in jail. Even after that, when there was total curfew after his
execution, and there was no transport, I walked for the whole day, almost all
the way from Srinagar to Baramulla, to support his family and help them with
the chahrum, with whatever little I could. No so-called leader was there. I did
what I could. That’s all I can say.
You seem to be
headed towards a political career. Do you plan to fight elections?
I don’t like the idea
that people just jump into electoral politics to gain power and make a career
of that, and turn it into a dynastic family business. What has happened to
politics here is one of the problems we young people discuss and feel strongly
about. Politics must be about making change. For the moment, I am happy to work
on the ground. In fact, it is too early for us even to bring change. What we
are doing at this stage is to understand the issues, the world around us, and
to agitate on certain issues. Power politics should not be just about getting power and become some kind of
modern-day maharaja, with cars, bungalows, lal batti, security. Even those who
fight elections should do so in order to make the system better, to make life
better for common people, to know and understand the sufferings of common
people.
Some people may think this is
just a cover, to project yourself, so that you may get a chance to join power
politics?
If you talk about a chance to join power politics, I have had many chances. Over the past one year, leaders from four different parties have invited me to join as their youth leader – important parties, which have been in power, in government. One of those who asked me has been an MP. The president of another party telephoned me several times. Each time, I did not accept. I don’t want to talk about it, to show off. I am only telling you this because you said some people may question my intentions. Unfortunately, we have become used to people around using social work or NGOs or politics in order to gain power or money. So we don’t believe that anyone can actually be trying to do something good for common people, for poor people, for people who are helpless.
If you talk about a chance to join power politics, I have had many chances. Over the past one year, leaders from four different parties have invited me to join as their youth leader – important parties, which have been in power, in government. One of those who asked me has been an MP. The president of another party telephoned me several times. Each time, I did not accept. I don’t want to talk about it, to show off. I am only telling you this because you said some people may question my intentions. Unfortunately, we have become used to people around using social work or NGOs or politics in order to gain power or money. So we don’t believe that anyone can actually be trying to do something good for common people, for poor people, for people who are helpless.
Tell us more
about yourself. How long have you been interested in these issues?
I grew up in Old Town
Baramulla. Then, my parents shifted to Sangri Colony and later to Bemina. I
have gone to school in Baramulla Public School and later in Srinagar. I just
completed third year Mass Comm. at Baramulla Degree College.
Ever since I was a little boy, I felt strongly about issues and about what was right and wrong. I was not willing to accept blindly what someone said. I wanted to understand for myself.
Ever since I was a little boy, I felt strongly about issues and about what was right and wrong. I was not willing to accept blindly what someone said. I wanted to understand for myself.
What inspired
you to take up this kind of leadership role?
I see it as a change-maker’s
role. Even from a young age, I would talk about issues. And I found that my
friends and some relatives and classmates would listen. I would explain my
ideas and would argue to convince people who did not agree. I was willing to
discuss with an open mind, to understand their point of view and put forward
mine – on a one-to-one basis, not speeches or in public. Even just at home,
with my brothers. I found that many people would finally agree with me, even if
they had been strongly opposed in the beginning.
Somehow, people around started calling me a leader, to believe in me. I was just trying to help poor people, stand up for what was right. It was my nature. I would never hurt anyone. In fact, I would try to protect the weak, the sick, the poor. I would be happy taking care of those who were not well or were challenged. My parents sometimes get angry with me because, if someone is in hospital, I spend so much time, sometimes many nights, taking care of them.
Somehow, people around started calling me a leader, to believe in me. I was just trying to help poor people, stand up for what was right. It was my nature. I would never hurt anyone. In fact, I would try to protect the weak, the sick, the poor. I would be happy taking care of those who were not well or were challenged. My parents sometimes get angry with me because, if someone is in hospital, I spend so much time, sometimes many nights, taking care of them.
Isn’t this quite strange for someone
so young?
I always say that age is only in the mind. And I have a
positive mind. I feel that only the youth can bring change. We have a stake.
The future is ours. And we are 60 per cent of the population. Also, the world
is changing very fast. With internet and other communication channels, our
world is very different from our parents’ world. Look at how much impact youth
have made in places like Egypt, and in totally new, unexpected ways.
What kind of future do you want for Kashmir?
I think we need to concentrate
on the small things first, before we can look for the big things. Our society
is going to the dogs. Drugs, corruption, oppression, those who are in power or
in positions are making fools of people for their own advantage. These things
are finishing our society from inside.
The other thing that we
concentrate on in the Global Youth Foundation is justice. We take up human
rights at the grassroots level, not just speeches and articles and conferences.
We go to police stations and to the DC’s office and we help those who are being
unjustly treated. We try to help the poor who have no support.
We also work to help the sick
and the needy, and we focus on child rights and women’s rights and minorities’
rights.
I want to see a secular, liberal Kashmir, where everyone has their rights and can also take responsibility for making society better. I want a stable, prosperous, happy Kashmir without bloodshed and humiliation and torture. We want our Pandit brothers to feel safe here, and be a real part of our society. In fact, we want harmony and good relations between all the different communities in the state. There is too much hatred in the world, too little understanding.
We want a Kashmir where the government and all officers and other employees work with honesty and dedication for the welfare of the people, including the poorest, the least powerful.
I want to see a secular, liberal Kashmir, where everyone has their rights and can also take responsibility for making society better. I want a stable, prosperous, happy Kashmir without bloodshed and humiliation and torture. We want our Pandit brothers to feel safe here, and be a real part of our society. In fact, we want harmony and good relations between all the different communities in the state. There is too much hatred in the world, too little understanding.
We want a Kashmir where the government and all officers and other employees work with honesty and dedication for the welfare of the people, including the poorest, the least powerful.
Could you tell
us a little more about Global Youth Foundation?
It is an NGO, registered as a
voluntary trust. Some of my friends started it a few years ago. I was elected
the chairman. It has gradually become much more active since the past three
years. We don’t try to make a big name for ourselves. We concentrate on working
at the grassroots and in remote areas. We have had a very good response in
these areas.
What is your
message for the youth?
We are the stake-holders.
Come! Let’s change this system
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