|
FACTS
& FIGURES
Area
: 222,236 sq km
Population : 9,535,000 (1998)
Religion : Islam
Annual : Rainfall 619.66 mm
Capital : Srinagar (Summer), Jammu (Winter)
Languages : Urdu, Kashmiri, Hindi, Dogri, Pahari,
Ladakhi
Literacy Rate : 26.67% (1981)
Urbanization Ratio : 23.83%
Best Time to Visit : April to June (Kashmir Valley),
October to March (Jammu Region)
INTRODUCTION
Situated in the northern part of India, Jammu &
Kashmir is the essence of everything that is Indian-its
culture, history, tradition, people, and natural splendor.
The state has a long history encompassing around 4,000
years and there are many prehistoric sites, which give
indication of human settlement in this region in those
times.
The
state was integrated as a part of India in 1948, when
the then ruler of Jammu & Kashmir agreed to join
the Indian federation and the state was given a special
status under article 370 of the Indian constitution.
GEOGRAPHICAL
INFORMATION
Location
Situated in the northernmost part of India, Jammu
and Kashmir is bordered by Pakistan, China, and Afghanistan
from West to East. From South to East, the boundary
of the state touches Punjab and Himachal. The state
extends between the latitudes 32°17¢N to 36°58N
and longitudes 37°26¢E to 80°30¢E.
Physical
Feature
The state can be divided into four major regions:
the sub-mountain and semi-mountain plain known as kandi
or dry belt; the Shivalik ranges, the high mountain
zone constituting the Kashmir Valley; Pir Panchal range
and its off-shoots including Doda, Poonch and Rajouri
districts and part of Kathua and Udhampur districts;
and the middle run of the Indus River comprising Leh
and Kargil.
Climate
Although a small state, the climate of this state
varies from one region to another. The climate of Jammu
region is tropical while it is semi-arctic in Ladakh
and temperate in Srinagar region. Accordingly, rainfall
also varies from region to region and while there is
almost no rainfall in Ladakh, Jammu receives a rainfall
of above 1,100 mm and Srinagar around 650 mm.
Flora
and Fauna
The state is rich in flora and fauna. In Jammu,
the flora ranges from the thorn bush type of the arid
plain to the temperate and alpine flora of the higher
altitudes. Of the broad-leaf trees, there are maple,
horse chestnuts, silver fir, etc. At the higher altitudes,
there are birch, rhododendron, and a large number of
herbal plants.
Kashmir
is also resplendent with many hues of wood and game.
The most magnificent of the Kashmir trees is the chinar
found throughout the valley. Mountain ranges in the
valley have dense deodar, pine and fir. Walnut, willow,
almond and cider also add to the rich flora of Kashmir.
In
the hilly regions of Doda, Udhampur, Poonch and Rajouri,
there is a large and varied fauna including leopard,
cheetah and deer, wild sheep, bear, brown musk shrew,
and muskrat. Varieties of snakes, bats, lizards and
frogs are also found in the region. The game birds in
Jammu include chakor (Alectoris graeca), snow partridge,
pheasants, and peacock.
The
dense forests of Kashmir are a delight to the sport
lovers and adventurers for whom there are ibex, snow
leopard, musk deer, wolf, red bear, black bear and leopard.
The winged game includes ducks, goose, partridge, chakor,
pheasant, wagtails, herons, water pigeons, warblers,
and doves. In the otherwise arid desert of Ladakh, some
240 species of local and migratory birds have been identified
including the black-necked crane.
The
Ladakh fauna includes yak, Himalayan ibex, Tibetan antelope,
snow leopard, wild ass, red bear and gazelle.
HISTORY
The history of Jammu & Kashmir is quite old.
Kashmir is mentioned in the epic Mahabharata. In 250
BC, Ashoka, the great Mauryan king, established the
city of Pandrethan and built many viharas and chaityas.
This says much about the strategic importance that this
region held even in that time. Some sources claim that
Buddha also visited this region, though no proof is
available to validate this theory. Kanishka, the great
Kushana king, called the Third Buddhist Council at Harwan,
near Srinagar, in the first century AD. This Council
saw the division of Buddhism in two distinct streams
called Hinayana and Mahayana.
Kalhana,
the first Indian history writer, gave a vivid account
of the history of Kashmir before the 10th century AD.
Local kingdoms ruled extensively in this region until
the 12th century AD when Muslims invaded the region.
The greatest Muslim king of early medieval age in Kashmir
was Zain-ul-Abidin, who ascended the throne in AD 1420
and ruled up to 1470. His long rule contributed extensively
to the spread of art, culture, music, and every other
sphere in the life of Kashmir people. He also created
a strong army and annexed many regions nearby Kashmir.
These were the time of golden rule in Kashmir when peace
and harmony prevailed. After the death of King Zain-ul-Abidin,
a period of destruction came calling to Kashmir and
many raiders from outside looted the state and made
the people and local rulers their captive.
In
1587, Akbar annexed Kashmir into his vast empire. Jahangir,
son of Akbar and next Mughal ruler, visited Kashmir
13 times and created two beautiful gardens on the bank
of Dal Lake, namely, the Shalimar Bagh and Nishat Bagh.
After two centuries of peace and development, Kashmir
came into the hands of the Pathans in 1752, when the
Afghan ruler Abdul Shah Abdali attacked this region
on the request of local noblemen. The Pathans established
a rule of terror here, no better than that of Aurangzeb,
the last important Mughal ruler.
In
1819, the Sikhs under Maharaja Ranjit Singh annexed
this region, but their empire remained in place only
for 27 years. From 1846 to 1957, the Dogras ruled over
this region when British defeated Ranjit Singh and handed
over the administration of this region to Maharaja Gulab
Singh. The Dogra rule also for the first time put in
reality the modern state of Jammu & Kashmir. During
Indias freedom struggle, people from this state
participated extensively under the leadership of Sheikh
Abdullah and decided to go with India in 1948 after
the country became independent.
PEOPLE
Ethnicity
Majority of the people in this region are Muslims
with concentration of Hindus mainly in Jammu region,
while Buddhists are confined to Ladakh region
Arts
and Crafts
Kashmiri shawls, the woven jewels of Kashmir, have
developed over 300 years. There are two distinct types
of shawls-the amli and the kani. Amli means embroidered,
where narrow strips of cloth woven on a small loom are
carefully joined together with almost invisible stitches.
In kani shawls the designs are woven on the loom like
twill tapestry. The most valued shawls are the pashminas
composed of treads of delicate wool from the under-belly
of the wild Tibetan goat that lives 4,000 feet above
sea level. The finest wool is shahtoosh. It is superfine,
extraordinarily light and amazingly warm. The most complex
woven shawl is the jamawar, woven like tapestry. Sometimes,
as many as 50 colors are used in a single weft.
The
origins of hand-knotted carpets can be traced back to
more than 2,000 years. In India, the hand-knotted carpet
appeared in the 15th century. In Kashmir, it attained
a high degree of perfection especially in the 16th and
17th centuries under the Mughal emperors. Wool is the
basic material, but in Kashmir silk is also commonly
used. The appearance and number of knots on the back
of the carpet indicates the quality. The Bokhara carpets
are one of the finest with about 125-500 knots in a
square inch.
For
over 2,500 years, the patterns reproduced were those
of flower arabesques and rhomboids with an occasional
animal design. The patterns have never become outmoded
even today.
Music
and Dance
As is the beauty of this state, it has a great cultural
tradition. Major performing traditions of this state
are Rouf (a dance form performed on the occasion of
Eid and Ramjan), Hafiz Nagma (based on Sufiana Qalam,
a classical music tradition of Kashmir), song of Habba
Khaton (based on the folk renderings of Kashmiri music),
Jagarna (a theatrical activity performed by the womenfolk
of house when men go out in a marriage), Surma (Dogri
songs set to dance), Bakhan (Dogri songs), and Geetru
(Dogri dance and song performance).
Fairs
and Festivals
The Hemis Festival is held in the month of July
when tourists in large numbers converge here from all
over the world to watch the famous masked dances. The
music is characteristically punctuated with sounds of
cymbals, drums and long, unwieldy trumpets. The masked
dancers move around slowly, very slowly, and the most
vital part of the dance is the masks and not so much
the actual movements of the dance. The dances end with
Good vanquishing Evil and the evil one is brought into
the protective fold of Buddhism.
Like
the Hemis festival, monasteries like Lamayuru, Thiksey,
Spitook, Likir and many others also have their individual
festivals. Since they follow the lunar calendar, the
actual dates of the festivals vary from one year to
another. Other than these religious celebrations, Ladakh
has also been host to a 15-day festival each year to
bring forward the many nuances of this rich and exotic
culture that is peculiar to this high part of the world.
The Jammu and Kashmir tourism department organizes the
Ladakh Festival in the month of September bringing forward
the regions folk dances, art and craft, sporting
events and rituals.
Cuisine
Think of Kashmiri cuisine and visions of deliciously
spicy meat dishes and the delicate flavor of saffron
come to mind. The Kashmiris are passionate about their
food and this is evident from the amount of time they
spend either cooking it or discussing about it. Meat
being the staple, most of the special dishes have mutton
as a major ingredient. Nahari, a special breakfast dish,
is a stew of trotters and tongue, seasoned with cassia
buds, cardamom, sandalwood powder, vetiver roots and
dried rose petals. The sheermal bread goes well with
this stew. The methi maz , on the other hand, is a superb
blend of mild-tasting entrails and strong-flavored fenugreek
leaves.
Tracing
its roots to Kashmir is the ever-popular rogan josh,
which is spiced lamb cooked in yogurt and aniseed, a
spice not very commonly used in other regional cuisines.
While tabak maz is spiced ribs fried to crispiness,
for the qorma, a lightly sour creamy dish, shoulder
of lamb and tail are cooked in milk and dried apricots,
and the yakhni uses curd as the base for its sauce.
Rista, the first gravy dish to make its appearance in
a wazwan, is a meatball of pounded lamb that is silky
in texture. After a whole range of dishes comes the
gushtaba, a giant meatball made of the same, pounded
meat, cooked in a curd based gravy.
A
semolina pudding sometimes follows the main courses
of the wazwan, but there are not too many sweet dishes
in the Kashmiri repertoire. However, a different preparation,
served to freshen the mouth after the wazwan, is the
gota-a mixture of aniseed, sugar candy, bits of supari
(optional), coarsely grated coconut and kernels of muskmelon
seeds.
Another
specialty of Kashmir is the delicately understated saffron.
It is the worlds most expensive spice because
farmers would have to harvest 70,000 of Crocus sativus
flowers to extract 210 thousand stigmas to make one
pound, which is less than a kilogram of saffron.
ECONOMY
Infrastructure
Number Of Phones : 48,955
People Per Phone : 157.3
Phone Services : DoT
Railway Track Length : 78 km
Domestic Airports : 3 (Srinagar, Jammu, Leh)
Cities Linked : Chandigarh, Delhi
Road Length : 12,252 km
National Highway Length : 648 km
Industrial Zones & Parks : 40
Export Processing Zones : 1
State-Identified Priority Sectors : Food Processing,
Fruit-Based Industries, Handicrafts, Handlooms, Hotels
and Restaurants, Sports Goods, Tourism
Industry
Handicrafts being the traditional industry, it has
been receiving top priority in the state. The handicraft
products have demand from both inside and outside the
country. Coal, gypsum, and limestone are the major minerals
produced in the state.
Agriculture
Majority of the population of the state depends
on agriculture. Paddy, wheat and maize are the major
crops. Barley, bajra and jowar are cultivated in some
parts. Gram is grown in Ladakh.
Incentives
Capital investment incentives of 30% up to Rs 30
lakh of fixed investment for new units
Capital incentive of up to Rs 60 lakh for projects with
fixed capital investment exceeding Rs 25 crore
Sales tax exemption for all raw material purchase, except
negative list items
5% rebate on interest of working capital for new units
up to Rs 10 lakh
Five-year central tax holiday for all new industrial
units
100% subsidy on purchase of new diesel generating sets
of 0.1 to 1.0 MW
Price preference up to 12.5% for registered SSI units
Subsidy of Rs 1 lakh for units with ISO 2000 certification
100% subsidy on purchase of quality testing equipment
Special incentives for sports goods units and projects
run by ex-servicemen
100% reimbursement of cost feasibility report after
start of production
No toll tax on raw material imported and goods exported
by 100% export-oriented units
TOURIST CENTRES
Srinagar,
the state capital, is the most famous tourist destination
in the state. An ancient city, there are many attractions
that can attract even the most unwilling of tourists
to this magical land. Dal Lake, Nishat Bagh, Shalimar
Bagh, and Chashme Shahi are some of the best-known tourist
spot in Srinagar.
Jammu
is the winter capital of the state and next in importance
after Srinagar. Most of the tourists who come to the
Jammu region have the Mata Vaishno Devi shrine as their
destination, which is quite close by. However, the spirit
of holiness permeates through the entire city, so much
so that Jammu is also known as the City of Temples.
If Bahu Mata is the presiding deity of Jammu, the dargah
of Peer Budhan Ali Shah is the other shrine that is
believed to protect the local people. The other major
tourist attraction is the Raghunath Temple Complex,
which is the largest temple in North India devoted to
Lord Rama. The construction of this temple was begun
by Maharaja Gulab Singh in 1851 and completed by his
son Ranbir Singh six years later.
The
temple of Maha Kali (better known as Bahu or Bawey Wali
Mata), located in the Bahu Fort, is considered second
only to Mata Vaishno Devi in terms of mystical power.
The temple was built shortly after the coronation of
Maharaja Gulab Singh in 1822.
Other
temples in the city include the Gauri Kund Temple, Shudh
Mahadev Temple, Shiva Temple, Peer Khoh Cave Temple,
Ranbireshwar Temple, and the Parmandal Temple Complex.
The
most stunning site in Jammu is the Sheesh Mahal. The
Pink Hall of the palace now houses the Dogra Art Museum,
which has miniature paintings of the various hill schools.
The museum also has the handwritten Persian manuscripts
of the Shahnama and Sikandernama. The palace was once
the royal residence of the Dogra kings. Built as a group
of buildings around a courtyard, the palace has a commanding
view of river Tawi on one side and the city on the other.
The
Amar Mahal Palace Museum is a beautiful palace of red
sandstone, which stands amidst the most picturesque
environs of Jammu. It offers a beautiful view of the
Shivaliks in the north and the river Tawi in the south.
This was once the residential palace of Raja Amar Singh,
but now it has been converted into a museum. The museum
has a golden throne made of 120 kg of pure gold.
A
treat for those interested in history is the town of
Akhnoor, 32 km southwest of Jammu. Standing on the banks
of the mighty river Chenab, the town tells the tragic
tale of the lovers Sohni and Mahiwal. Along the riverbank
are the majestic ruins of the Indus Valley Civilization
that are of great historical importance.
Patnitop,
near the Vaishno Devi Temple, is fast becoming a busy
hill station and a good place to enjoy the nature in
its eternity.
Ladakh
is home to the minority Buddhist community in the state.
They have preserved their unique culture for the past
hundreds of years. Leh is the headquarters of this region.
The major points of attraction are the Leh Palace, Namgyal
Tsemo Gompa, Sankar Gompa, Shanti Stupa, and Soma Gompa.
HOW
TO REACH
By
Air: The state has three major civil airports at
Srinagar, Jammu, and Ladakh connected to Delhi and other
places in the country. Indian Airlines and its subsidiary
Alliance Air operate in the Delhi-Chandigarh-Ladakh
and Delhi-Jammu-Srinagar routes.
By
Rail: Jammu Tawi is the main railhead of Jammu &
Kashmir. It is connected to most of the important towns
and cities of the country. Moreover, the longest rail
route that stretches from Jammu Tawi to Kanyakumari
and touches almost all the main cities and towns of
the country originates from here.
By
Road: One can easily reach Jammu by the National
Highway 1A that goes from Punjab and runs through this
city, connecting it to the rest of the state, including
the capital Srinagar. The state transport corporation
runs several buses to most of the big towns and cities
in north India.
Ladakh
is connected to Srinagar and Manali by some of the most
difficult road networks in the world. The Manali-Leh
road is considered as the highest motorable road in
the world.

|