
Breaking fast, breaking barriers: How Anantnag’s iftar drives are uniting communities
Suhail Dar
Under the fading light of Anantnag’s evening sky, the call to Maghrib prayer echoes through the air. At Jamia Masjid Anantnag, a diverse gathering—shopkeepers, students, laborers, and travelers—sits side by side, awaiting the moment to break their fast. Among them are Gujjar and Bakarwal men, their sun-worn faces reflecting both exhaustion and devotion. Here, there are no distinctions of wealth or status, only the shared hunger of the day and the shared relief of the first sip of water.
"Ek hi saf mein khade ho gaye Mehmood o Ayaz,
Na koi banda raha na koi banda nawaz." (In the same row stood Mehmood and Ayaz, No servant remained, nor any master.)
The words of Allama Iqbal find life in this moment. In the sacred space of the mosque, and across the town’s hospitals wher...
