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The Day the Trains Stopped Singing

Published on: November 5, 2025 1:38 AM

November 5, 2025 by Kamal Mustafa

There are dates that belong to calendars – and then there are dates that belong to people’s pain. November 6, 1947, is one of those days. Ask any Kashmiri, and you’ll sense it – not just in words, but in silence. Some silences are heavy enough to speak entire histories.

What really happened that November? Why does a day from seventy-eight years ago still echo like a cry that never found peace?

In the months after partition, Jammu was not merely a map coordinate. It was home – alive with mosques, markets, and families who believed that independence meant choice. With a Muslim-majority population, many saw their destiny tied to Pakistan. But destiny, as it turned out, was written in betrayal.

Under the Dogra ruler, Maharaja Hari Singh, and alongside organised militias, a plan began to unfold quietly. Muslims were told to gather, that they would be escorted safely toward Pakistan. Parents held their children close; elders whispered prayers; some packed small bundles of clothes and food. They believed they were leaving for safety. But were they?

Kashmir still breathes, and so does November 6. It lingers – part promise, part scar, part echo of a truth still denied.

The truth was darker. What awaited them on the road to Sialkot was not refuge but ruin. The caravans never arrived. They were ambushed, butchered, and erased. Men were shot; women and children were cut down; villages burned in a silence so complete that even birds seemed afraid to fly.

Was this chaos? No. It was a massacre – planned, precise, and intended to erase a people from the land they called home.

Nearly 250,000 Muslims were killed. Over half a million were forced to flee. More than a hundred Muslim villages vanished. Before 1947, Jammu’s Muslims were the majority. Afterwards, they were ghosts scattered across refugee camps and border towns.

In Sialkot, people still whisper about the trains that came from Jammu – carriages that carried silence instead of passengers. There were no cries, no farewells, just still faces and unanswered prayers. They say the survivors saw mothers stretching their arms around their children like final fortresses, fathers clutching the Qur’an to their hearts, hoping faith could do what bullets would not allow. And somewhere along those tracks, old men sat under burning skies, too weak to move, reciting verses as the world they knew turned to ash.

And yet, amid the horror, something unbreakable was born. Out of the ashes rose a conviction – that Kashmir’s soul could be wounded, but not destroyed. The words “Kashmir banay ga Pakistan” were not slogans then. They were last breaths, spoken by those who believed that their deaths had meaning, that someday, freedom would answer.

Every year, when November 6 returns, Kashmiris do not hold parades or fireworks. They sit quietly. They pray. They remember. Some stories are too sacred for noise.

Why do they still hold on to this pain? Because forgetting would be betrayal. Because silence would mean agreeing that their suffering never mattered.

For the world, Jammu’s massacre might be another tragic footnote in South Asia’s violent history. But for those who carry its memory, it is the heartbeat of identity. It is the reminder that when injustice goes unanswered, history repeats its cruelty.

Jammu’s soil still smells of smoke and prayer. Seventy-eight years on, the land murmurs names no one recorded. Those whispers cross borders, passed down to generations who never saw that November but still carry its ache. What do we do with a past that will not sleep? We remember. We write. We refuse silence. Because remembrance is not revenge – it is dignity. It is the only justice that remains when memory becomes the last witness. Kashmir still breathes, and so does November 6. It lingers – part promise, part scar, part echo of a truth still denied. Some wounds don’t heal; they speak.

The writer is a freelance columnist.

Filed Under: Op-Ed Tagged With: singing, stopped, trains

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