Kashmir’s North-South Runners Want Their Power Back
By
Daanish Bin Nabi
The first ever football
match played in Jammu and Kashmir was in the autumn of 1891 in Srinagar. The
team was of schoolboys of the Tyndale-Biscoe school. The players wore long
gowns called pherans, and each carried a kangri fire pot under their outfits to
keep warm.
The team consisted entirely
of upper-class Brahmin players, who had at first refused to kick the ball
because it was made from leather. It was the first time Kashmiris saw a
football or a football match.
The British missionary and
educationist Cecil Earle Tyndale-Biscoe made Kashmir’s first-ever football
match possible.
In his classic book,
‘Kashmir in Sunlight and Shade’, first published in the 1880s, Tyndale-Biscoe
writes, “It was in the autumn of 1891, when I returned from Bombay with Mrs
Tyndale-Biscoe, that amongst our luggage we brought a football, the first that
our schoolboys had seen...”
Kashmir’s first football
match was exciting, including when one player got injured. Tyndale-Biscoe
writes: “All was noise and excitement when all of a sudden the storm is
succeeded by a dead calm: the game ceases, the Brahmans, both players and
onlookers, are all sucking their fingers for all they are worth [a Kashmiri way
of showing amazement], and all eyes are turned towards one of the players who
is a picture of misery.”
“And no wonder, for this
unholy piece of leather had bounded straight into this holy one’s face, had
actually kissed his lips. He had never before in his life felt the smack of a
football and certainly never dreamed of such a catastrophe. He thought all his
front teeth were knocked out and that his nose was gone forever. He would touch
his mangled features, but he dared not. Once or twice he essayed to do so, but
his heart failed him. His face was defiled so that he could not do what he
would and would not do what he could.
“He did the next best
thing, which was to lift up his voice and weep, and this he did manfully. This
moment was a terrible one for all concerned and especially for me, for now, all
eyes were directed to the primary cause of all this misery.
“What was I to do? I was
not prepared for such a turn of events. I could shoo an unwilling school to the
playground and make unwilling feet kick, but how could I make an unholy face
holy? Fortunately, the idea of water came into my distracted mind, and I said:
‘Take the fool down to the canal at once and wash him.’ Immediately the
thoughts and the eyes of the victim’s sympathisers were diverted to the
cleansing waters and their magical effect on the outraged features of the
body.”
From that era to now,
Kashmir’s tryst with football has continued. This story is about how football
grew in Kashmir amid ups and downs.
How it Began
The Jammu and Kashmir
Football Association (JKFA) was founded in 1964 and affiliated with the Jammu
and Kashmir Sports Council in the same year. By 1965, the JKFA was a member of
the All India Football Federation (AIFF).
The first teams and clubs
to get associated with the JKFA were: Jammu and Kashmir Roads and Transport
Football Club, Food & Supplies Football Club, Jammu Kashmir Police Football
Club, Azam Sports Football Club, KMD Mohammadan Football Club, and Cosmos 11
Football Club. They operated exclusively in central Kashmir.
In north Kashmir, the
earliest football clubs recognised by JKFA were the Elite Mohammadan Football
Club, Ushkara Football Club, Wullar Sports (1968), Khushal Sports Football
Club, now renamed as Iqbal Sports Club (1969), and Friends Football Club
(1972). Two more teams operate under the Friends Football Club, the Friends Club
Green and Friends Club Red.
Football in Kashmir now has
600 associated and affiliated clubs, all owned by the JKFA.
The first official football
club in north Kashmir was in Apple town Sopore. It had Pushkar Nath
(goalkeeper), Muhammad Subhan Janwari (captain and striker), Abdul Rahim Langoo
(defence), Ghulam Nabi Bisati (defence), Muhammad Akbar Pandith (goalkeeper),
and Muhammad Yousuf Bhat (striker). In the early 1950s, they played football
without shoes.
Only in 1957, on the
insistence of Muhammad Akbar, the Physical Director at Sopore, a Srinagar
resident, was the Mohammadan Football Club formally set up. In 1963 the team
under Janwari won its first official tournament.
“In 1963, the Sherwani
Football Tournament was hosted by Sopore in north Kashmir. Mohammadan Sports
Sopore and Friends Baramulla Football Club reached the finals. Mohammadan
Sports Sopore won the match. It was the first official victory for the first
football team of north Kashmir,” says veteran footballer Ghulam Qadir Kachroo.
Making it Big
Since the focus in Kashmir
has always been central Kashmir and the Srinagar district, raw talent and the
football matches played in the north and south are rarely discussed. Yet north
Kashmir has the most football clubs. The Sopore area has 65 associated clubs,
though there were just two or three in the early 1950s and 1960s.
The Kupwara area started
its journey with only the Mohammadan Football Club. It now has 14 clubs. The
Bandipora district also started a Bandipora Sports Football Club. This district
has 40 clubs, the Handwara region has 15, Rafiabad 20, and Baramulla town alone
has 33 clubs. The Hajin area has 26 clubs, while the farthest end of Kashmir
and the border town of Uri have four clubs.
There are over 100 clubs in
the four South Kashmir districts, all associated with the JKFA and yet seldom
mentioned in the media.
In 2022, North Kashmir
played four tournaments: the Rahim Memorial Cup at Khushal Stadium, the First
Industrial Cup at Noorgah Stadium, the Noorgah Cup at the eponymous stadium,
and the Sopore League Cup at the Subhan Stadium. Around 40 teams participated
in these tournaments.
‘Father of Football’
In north Kashmir, Janwari
is a legend for his commitment to the game. “He is the father of football in
north Kashmir. When the Mohammadan Football Club came into being in 1964, he
was its president, coach, selector, and captain, its everything; our guide and
mentor. Whatever little I achieved was because of him,” says former JKFA
selector Bashir Ahmad Basharat.
Noor Muhammad Hajam is a
former footballer and captain of the Friends Football Club, who started his
career in 1972 and joined the club in 1974. He says Janwari will remain a
legend for football lovers in north Kashmir. “Every player is a product of this
great man. After 4 PM, he would get students interested in playing at the
Sopore College Ground (now Subhan Stadium), make them play and help them understand
football,” Hajam said.
Known for sheer
determination, the late Janwari refused to accept defeat. “Fear or defeat was
never on his mind. He was bold and had tremendous willpower. He always told us
not to be afraid. He faced tremendous difficulties in life, but never did I
hear him cribbing. He was a fearless leader,” says a former footballer from
north Kashmir.
Playing Barefoot
Football in the 1950s and
1960s was mainly played without shoes, as not everyone could afford them. In
the early years, even Janwari played without shoes. “I had played with him
[Janwari] without shoes when they were a luxury. In 1972, it was all about my
passion for football, which took me to greater heights. Passion is a must for
survival in any sport,” Hajam says. “Only after 1974, when I joined Friends
Football Club, did I start playing with shoes on,” he says.
Hajam shares an interesting
story about a tournament played barefoot.
“Janwari sahab conducted a
tournament in the early 1970s in north Kashmir. I remember we played the entire
tournament without shoes. I played for a local team named Leader Sports
Football Team. We reached the semi-finals and lost to the local Gousia Sports
Team. Young Mohammadans qualified for the finals. I don’t remember who won the
cup, but it was my first experience playing a tournament without shoes.”
Former Mohammadan player,
Ghulam Qadir Kachroo, says he got his first pair of football shoes in 1973 for
Rs 13. He played in the first half for the Mohammadans even on the day of his
wedding, 13 September 1973. “I wanted to play on my day of marriage. We had a
match against Friends Baramulla Club, but our coach and captain, Janwari, did
not allow me, fearing I might get injured. I still played in the first half.
After dusk, I went to get my bride,” Kachroo says. This match was between Food
and Supplies Srinagar and the Mohammadan Football Club at the Subhan Stadium.
Sport Paradise
The Subhan Stadium, locally
known as Sopore College Ground, was named after Janwari, who is also famed for
being the first north Kashmiri—from the Mumkak Mohalla of Sopore town—who
played football with shoes on, veteran footballer Kachroo told this author.
“All players at the national
or international level got basic training at the Sopore College Ground.
However, we lack basic facilities now. Sopore College makes no contribution
towards sports facilities in Sopore. They have turned their ground into a
concrete jungle,” says veteran sportsman Bashir Ahmad Bhat.
He said the Subhan Stadium
was always a “sports paradise” in north Kashmir.
In the 1980s, the Jammu and
Kashmir Roads and Transport Football Club was on tour to Sopore for a football
match against a local team. The Transport Football Club’s captain was Majeed
Kakroo, the first player from the [erstwhile] state to lead the Indian national
football team on a tour of Bangladesh.
During the match, the
Sopore Team fought with the opponents and Kakroo was severely beaten up inside
the stadium. He was asked to apologise to the crowd watching the game, which
was abandoned soon after.
Rahim Memorial Tournament
Four tournaments were a
yearly affair for football lovers in north Kashmir in the 1960s and 1970s; the
Shah Faisal Tournament, the Iqbal Memorial Cup, the Hassan Memorial Cup and the
Rahim Memorial Cup.
While the first three
survived only for three to four years, the Rahim Memorial Cup, under the
tutelage of the Friends Football Club, survived. Founded in 1986, this cup is one
of the biggest football events in north Kashmir. It is a state-level tournament
of all teams from the Kashmir Valley and is the region’s longest-surviving
tournament. In the 2022 season, over 100 teams from across the valley
participated in the game.
“But the JKFA has not
provided a single penny to organise tournaments since its inception,” says
Rahim Memorial Cup tournament’s chief organising secretary, Bashir Ahmad
Basharat.
Leaving Football
With the onset of militancy
in the late 1980s, the game came to a grinding halt, destroying the careers of
many talented footballers in Kashmir. From 1988 to 1996, not a single match was
organised in north Kashmir. After a civilian government came into place in
1996, the Rahim Memorial Cup restarted.
“We completely stopped
playing after 1988. Many talented footballers were lost and fell out of touch
and technique. By 1996, I, too, had lost touch with the game, having lost my
prime from 1989 to 1996. So we started to organise the game and not play it
ourselves,” says Hajam.
Many players lost touch,
became unfit, opted for other job opportunities or lost interest in the game
because of the raging conflict.
“The Subhan Stadium was the
main attraction, being the only stadium where football was played in north
Kashmir. The Army and Border Security Force immediately took over its ground.
They took it from us for security reasons,” says Hajam.
“After we started football
again, the lush greenery was gone. Successive governments did nothing despite
repeated requests. They cared the least about the ground,” says Friends
Football Club player Bashir Ahmad Basharat.
Making a Name
The many ups and downs in
the game of football include laurels for the conflict-ridden populace of
Kashmir. Some of the greats Kashmir produced, who represented the erstwhile
state nationally and internationally, include midfielder Muhammad Yousuf Dar,
defence/forward Abdul Majeed Kakroo, forward/midfielder Mehraj Wadoo, forward
Ishfaq Ahmad, defence, Lateef Ahmad, Zahoor Lone, Muhammad Syed, Aslam Dar,
Shafi Wani, Bashir Beig, forward Shabir Ahmad Halwai, striker Tariq Halwai,
goalkeeper Khursheed Bhat, forward Suhail Akram, and forward Qayoom Kachroo.
Internal Politics
Like any other sports board
in India, the Jammu and Kashmir Football Association has also been marred with
internal politics. The District Football Association (DFA) from north and south
Kashmir have accused the JKFA of a step-motherly approach when giving district
players opportunities to compete.
“Every member of the JKFA
belongs to Srinagar. In the teams selected for the Santosh Trophy and other
national events (under 16, 18 and 21), every player is from Srinagar. No one
from the south or north Kashmir gets selected. We have a lot of talent, but
nepotism disallows the players from showcasing themselves,” says Basharat, who
was one of JKFA’s four selectors between 1996 and 2008. He is from north
Kashmir.
“In eight years, I selected
around 25 players from north Kashmir for senior-level national tournaments
representing all age groups. Other regions of Kashmir have talent but no voice
in the JKFA [today],” he says
From 2008 to 2021, no
player from north or south Kashmir was selected for national teams. “In 2022,
one player from the Tuilbail area of north Kashmir was selected for the
under-16 Indian team. He is currently with the Indian Team in Sri Lanka. He is
a goalkeeper,” says Basharat.
Facilities Lacking
Though Kashmir has abundant
raw talent, the lack of basic facilities and exposure kills it even before players
set foot on the ground.
“JKFA got affiliated with
the All India Football Federation in 1965. In the last 60 years, Kashmir has
only one ground that has turf near the Tourist Reception Center in Srinagar. We
see no developments as far as the stadiums are concerned,” a football
enthusiast said.
He says football lovers
have the Bakshi Stadium, TRC ground, Bandipora stadium, Khushal Stadium,
Noorgah and Subhan Stadium in Sopore and another in south Kashmir’s Anantnag,
but security is a major concern and the primary reason why the national games
are played at TRC or Bakshi Stadiums.
Meanwhile, the Khushal,
Subhan and Bandipora stadiums in north Kashmir and the Anantnag stadium in
south Kashmir do not have turf. “We only have turf in TRC stadium for the last
few years. We have asked the administration repeatedly about the lack of
facilities, but sports has never been a top priority for any administration,”
says Basharat.
He says that in the last
four years, construction has begun at the indoor stadium in Sopore, but the
work is incomplete as the administration has not released the contractor’s
funds. “No one cares. The under-construction building has become a haven for drug
addicts,” Basharat says.
However, he says, it is not
the JKFA that is duty-bound to provide us facilities but the administration.
“We need land for a
stadium, which JKFA cannot afford with its limited funds. The administration
has to give us land for a good stadium. Will they even provide funds to
organise tournaments or upgrade existing facilities?” he asks.
Hajam says around 100 matches
are organised for league tournaments across the Kashmir valley every season.
“We need funds for referee
charges, player refreshments and other facilities. Roughly, we need over Rs one
lakh to cover these charges. JKFA only provides Rs 15,000 per year to every
District Football Association unit to conduct league tournaments. What can we
do with such meagre funds? We pool money from business establishments to conduct
the tournaments,” says Hajam.
‘Unable to Compete’
Former and current players
complain about bias in selection committees but acknowledge that players from
Srinagar are far better than those in north or south Kashmir.
“Srinagar-based players
have more facilities and are well trained and better equipped than us. We lack
facilities, fitness and exposure,” says a member of the Friends Club Green.
To help players compete at
the state level, a Sopore Arco Club has been formed to build a team comprising
north Kashmiri players. “This club has the best players from north Kashmir and
is the only team that at least gives the Srinagar-based teams competition. They
win us matches but cannot compete nationally because they also lack
professional training. However, they are growing, and we will see brighter days
ahead,” says the member of the Friends Club Green.
Published
by Newsclick on 23 November 2022