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Home Opinion Editorial

Urdu: A Language, Not Political Bait

From Editor's Desk by From Editor's Desk
April 30, 2026
in Editorial
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Harnessing Kashmir’s Trout Economy
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“J&K politicians are weaponizing Urdu as a smokescreen, using identity-based theatrics to mask governance failures. This calculated distraction shifts the focus toward linguistic grievances while issues of grave concern like unemployment and systemic neglect, remain unaddressed.”

The latest political theatrics around Urdu reveal a troubling pattern that the people of Jammu and Kashmir have seen many times before: whenever a party begins losing public relevance, it returns to emotional and identity-based issues in an attempt to reclaim attention. Instead of offering solutions to unemployment, governance failures, public services, or youth frustration, the language issue is once again being transformed into a political stage performance.  What is being projected as a defense of Urdu appears less about genuine concern and more about using sentiment as a convenient weapon against opponents. Urdu is not merely a language to be used during protests and abandoned afterward. It carries deep historical, literary, and administrative significance in Jammu and Kashmir.  It has long served as a bridge language in official records, communication, and cultural expression. Preserving its place in public life is an important matter, but it requires thoughtful policy, educational planning, and institutional commitment. It cannot be protected through slogans alone, nor through selective outrage whenever it suits a party’s political calendar. Those now shouting the loudest had ample opportunity when they were in positions of authority to secure Urdu’s future in a meaningful and lasting manner. They could have modernized Urdu teaching in schools, created scholarships for language studies, ensured digitization of Urdu records, introduced translation mechanisms in government offices, strengthened recruitment pipelines for Urdu-qualified candidates, and built technology platforms that made the language more accessible to younger generations. Instead, such serious measures were rarely treated as urgent priorities. That is what makes the present outrage appear hollow. If Urdu was always such a sacred concern, why was there no sustained movement for institutional reform when power was in hand? Why did the urgency emerge only after losing authority? Why does every rediscovered concern coincide so neatly with moments of political weakness? These are questions many ordinary citizens are asking. There is also a deeper problem with this style of politics. Every administrative draft, policy proposal, or recruitment rule is immediately portrayed as an existential threat to identity. Rather than participating in democratic consultation through reasoned objections, expert recommendations, or legal review, the issue is dramatized to provoke anger and polarization. This may create headlines for a day, but it rarely produces durable results. The public today is more politically conscious than ever before.

“Urdu shouldn’t be used as a political pawn to score points or stir up an unwanted controversy, doing so only cheapens a deeply rooted cultural legacy. Rather than relying on public stunts and empty slogans, the focus needs to shift toward real, practical support for the language. This means fixing the hiring process for teachers, creating solid legal protections for its use, and linking language studies to actual jobs. True governance and the survival of the language depend on these honest, policy-driven changes rather than just performing for the cameras.”

People understand the difference between genuine advocacy and opportunistic agitation. They know that language preservation requires schools that teach well, offices that function efficiently, archives that are maintained, and employment systems that reward real skills. They also know that street protests alone do not build institutions. Equally important is the attempt to shift all blame onto present rivals while escaping scrutiny over past compromises and governance failures. Those who once made alliances of convenience, remained silent during controversial decisions, or failed to deliver structural reforms cannot suddenly claim moral monopoly over culture and identity. Political memory in Jammu and Kashmir is stronger than some leaders assume. This selective politics also risks damaging the very cause it claims to defend. When Urdu is repeatedly used as a partisan slogan, it reduces a shared cultural heritage into a campaign instrument. Language should unite communities, inspire scholarship, and preserve collective memory. It should not be turned into a seasonal protest banner. The people of Jammu and Kashmir deserve a mature debate on this matter. If there are flaws in recruitment rules, let them be corrected transparently. If Urdu needs stronger protection, let concrete measures be proposed. If youth need opportunities linked to language skills, let programs be launched. That is how serious politics works. What the region does not need is another cycle of outrage manufactured for cameras. The public is looking for credibility, not choreography; governance, not grandstanding. Urdu deserves respect, policy support, and long-term vision. It deserves far better than being used as a convenient tool whenever one party needs to revive fading political fortunes.

From Editor's Desk

From Editor's Desk

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The publication of “Kashmir Horizon” as an English daily was started with a modest attempt on May 19, 2008.It has been a Himalayan attempt for “The Kashmir Horizon” to survive the challenges posed to journalism in the violence fraught place like Jammu & Kashmir.

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