Sign with an image of Ayatollah Khomeini in the Nun Kun Village of India-administered Ladakh from 2014. (This featured image was added online in 2024, and did not appear in the original print publication.)
Sign with an image of Ayatollah Khomeini in the Nun Kun Village of India-administered Ladakh from 2014. (This featured image was added online in 2024, and did not appear in the original print publication.)IMAGO / NurPhoto

Ladakhi balti

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The world differentiates between the two populations of the Ladakh region of India´s extreme north – one Muslim, the other Buddhist — in interesting ways. Outsiders, be they from New Delhi or New York, tend to regard Leh as a place populated by pleasant people with a Buddhistic culture worth preserving; the Shias of Kargil, on the other hand, are regarded and treated as backward, conservative, ignorant, and even evil.

Indeed, Ladakh´s Buddhists have been quite successful in drawing attention to themselves as a small minority precariously positioned on the borders of India. Meanwhile, the Muslim population of Kargil has long escaped attention even though their living conditions are worse.

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