B L Razdan
The genius of the renowned Kashmiri saint poet Pandit Krishna Joo Razdan
flourished in the valley of Kashmir towards the close of 19th and the
beginning of the 20th century. Besides being a saint of very high order
Krishna Joo Razdan was regarded as the “poet of kashmiri poets” of the
native Kashmiri language apparently because of his divine devotional
poetry that had come to engulf the literary circles in almost all the
regional languages of India.
The merit of Krishna Joo Razdan’s poetry was recognised by none other
than the renowned and the famous Dr. Sir George A. Grierson, who had a
substantial collection of his Kashmiri poems translated into Sanskrit
way back in 1914 – 1925 and published under the aegis of the Asiatic
Society, Calcutta, so that this treasure of rich Kashmiri poetry was not
lost to the posterity merely because of the limited reach of the
Kashmiri language.
The noted U S poet and writers Emily Warn once asked a difficult
question like “Does the social function of poetry vary so wildly that we
cannot generalize about it?” And then she herself hazarded an answer.
“Poetry binds solitudes. It enacts a central human paradox: we exist as
singular selves, yet can only know them through our relations. A poem
creates a presence that is so physically, emotionally, and
intellectually charged that we encounter ourselves in our response to
it. The encounter, which occurs in language, preserves and enlarges our
solitude and points out our connections.” According to Matthew Arnold
poetry is a record of the emotions and sentiments of people at some
particular point of time.
Thus viewed, even as the advent of 20th century saw Krishna Joo Razdan
emerge as one of the great writers of devotional poetry, he did not
confine himself to devotional themes alone. He also tried his hand at
writing on other subjects and themes. No wonder that some critics have
said that Krishna Joo Razdan was the first devotional poet to highlight
the spirit of patriotism in the beginning of 20th century. This created a
basis for poets like Azad and Mahjoor for strengthening the trend of
patriotic poetry in Kashmiri.
Krishan Joo Razdan was the first Kashmiri poet who was proud of his
mother tongue Kashmiri and lauded and hailed it as Mother Goddess’ own
language. Wrote he in one of his poems:
I assert with confidence that Mother Godess loves Kashmiri language the
best of all. For a person reading and speaking this language a gibbet
changes into a mounting saddle. Those who read and hear Kashmiri
language are absolved of all troubles By Mohter Goddess in her infinite
beautitude Besides purging them of all their sorrows she sends bounties
galore Treating as her own offspring she showers on them her abundant
love I have composed a lyric pregnant with divine love and enlightenment
I have abbreviated a tale adjudged too long by all My convictions
should be avaialable to sages and savants They alone can appreciate all
my thoughtful surmons
(Translated from Kashmiri by Prof. K. L. Moza)
As is clear from this famous poem, Razdan Sahib is proud of Kashmiri
language which is the principal medium of his poetic expression. He
regards it dearest to the Mother Goddess. He is convinced that salvation
for Kashmiris is attainable only by singing praises of the Mother
Goddess in Kashmiri language’. Krishna Joo enriched Kashmiri language
with similes and metaphors culled from his charming rural ambience,
making it a desirable medium for poetic expression. Loving deeply his
mother tongue Kashmiri Razdan Sahib enriched the language by making it
the principal medium of his poetry in spite of being a profound scholar
of Persian and Sanskrit languages.
As is true about every great poet, the tone of some of Razdan Sahib’s
lyrics is prophetic. Horrified by the progressively dwindlindling
numbers of his community he painfully anticipates its diaspora. This
prophetic vision of the immortal bard in the early decades of the
twentieth century came very true towards the end of the very same
century.
In spite of having suffered at the hands of foreign invaders, Krishna
Joo Razdan, as a true Hindu, was secular to the core. Razdan Sahib’s
devotional poetry illustrates the tremendous inclusiveness of Hindu
faith. He calls shivratri shab-e-qadr and shab-e-meraj which are both
fundamentally exclusive Islamic concepts. At the same time he was proud
of his own sanatan dharam faith and went about proclaiming the same by
applying a huge tilak of chandan and saffron on his forehead. As
preached in the holy Geeta, Far from breeding any rancour, Krishnajoo
had attained eternal peace by turning his mind away from worldly
pleasures and adoring the divine in his heart. This gave him freedom
from want, worries, anxieties and fear. He sincerely believed in the
oneness of the universe and in the brotherhood of mankind. “Let us all
unite”, he exhorts, “and go in for self-introspection. Let us stand
united and strive for peace”. Again, like Lalla, he seems to believe
that it is “we who existed in the past and we who shall exist in the
future.”
Krishna Joo Razdan lived far ahead of his times. He was genuinely
concerned about the condition of women and led by example in restoring
their rights and dignity. He would suggest to one and all that they
receive their daughters with broad smiles whenever they would visit
their parents and make their stay as comfortable as possible. Never
should anyone be seen with a frown on his face while dealing with one’s
daughter. He lived up to these prescriptions himself. It is recounted
that his sister broke an earthen pitcher while carrying water to her
in-laws’ house. The mother-in-law saw this. Quickly came she and picked
up the mouth of the broken vessel and after dangling it before her, put
in around her neck. Krishna Joo was cut to the quick on learning about
this incident. He hired men to carry dozens of earthenware resembling
the broken pitcher and sent these to the mother-in-law, thereby not only
avenging the insult to his sister but also making public the support
she enjoyed among her kinsmen. Later, when the same sister was widowed
with two children, he recalled them all to his village and constructed a
separate house for her and her children and gave them landed estate
that ensured their survival with dignity. Incidentally, one of these two
children, on growing up, was later known as Swami Gobind Koul, a
well-known saint of Kashmir in his own right.
Full of empathy and generous to a fault Krishna Joo Razdan ensured that
the tillers at his estate were provided a fair share of the crops so
that they could live comfortably and with dignity. He was also concerned
about the plight of craftsmen and other professional workers like the
potter, the jester, the blacksmith, the wrestler, the cook, the
gardener, etc. Like Shakespeare’s stage, he regarded the world as a
“Bhanda Jeshan” or a folk play and has manifestly written so in one of
his famous poems. In his poems, Razdan also highlighted the plight of
his fellow Kashmiri Pandits, who had acquired an exalted social status
but were reduced to penury during the Afghan rule.
A contemporary of Razdan Sahib recalled that on one occasion, while
attending a marriage feast he overheard another guest shout that some of
the dishes served were not up to the mark and that one of these smelt
like burnt. Krishna Joo at once called the person serving the dish and
publicly asked him for another serving remarking aloud that the dish
tasted so nice that he could not help asking for another helping. This
silenced in tracks the murmur that had just been given rise to among the
gathering by the unpleasant remark of the other invitee and saved
embarrassment to the host.
Krishna Joo believed in Swdharma and like a true Vedantist held the view
that all religions were true and the path shown by each different faith
was a different path that ultimately led to Him, the one and only God.
There was, therefore, no need for conversion, or re-conversion for that
matter.
(The author is formerly of the Indian Revenue Service, retired as Director General of Income Tax (Investigation), Chandigarh).
Sunday, February 21, 2021
Social concerns of Krishna Joo Razdan
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