June marks the anniversary of Operation Blue Star, the Indian military action at  the Golden Temple, the holiest Sikh shrine, in 1984. Looking back, how do we describe this action, and what meaning do we attach to it? (This featured image was added online in 2024, and did not appear in the original print publication.) Photo: Wikimedia Commons / Shagil Kannur
June marks the anniversary of Operation Blue Star, the Indian military action at the Golden Temple, the holiest Sikh shrine, in 1984. Looking back, how do we describe this action, and what meaning do we attach to it? (This featured image was added online in 2024, and did not appear in the original print publication.) Photo: Wikimedia Commons / Shagil Kannur

The third Sikh ghallughara

Published on

Terror in Punjab: Narratives, knowledge and truth

by Ram Narayan Kumar

Shipra, 2008

Himal Southasian mourns the death of friend and colleague Ram Narayan Kumar on Sunday, 28 June 2009. Kumar was a dedicated human rights activist and staunch critic of the brutality of state suppression of armed conflicts in Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir, Northeast India, Nepal and other parts of the subcontinent. Kumar worked right next door at the South Asian Forum for Human Rights (SAFHR) on issues of culture and impunity in the region, where he integrated innovative research methods with firm principles of ethics and justice. A prolific writer, he authored and co-authored several books and reports, including Reduced to Ashes (2003), Critical Readings in Human Rights and Peace (2006), and more recently, Terror in Punjab (2008). He will be greatly missed as companion and champion of justice.

Loading content, please wait...
Himal Southasian
www.himalmag.com