“It
 was not a dream, my sons had come. I heard my sons outside the door. 
They were calling me.....but when I tried to open the door, my knee got 
hurt and I fell down," Saida says, while applying ointment to her knee 
that has turned blue. Then she murmurs and Shakeela, who sits besides, 
says, “No one was there outside last night.”
Shakeela
 slowly moves closer to her and in a consoling voice says, “you dreamt 
about them again because you don’t take medicines properly these days.”
But,
 Saida insists she heard her sons. Shakeela points towards a piece of 
land fenced with rusted wire at a few meters distance from their house. 
"They have been buried there...... don't you know that?" she questions 
her mother. Saida nods and replies, "My sons are resting there, how could I forget they are buried in mounds of mud."
With
 an injured knee and a crumbling gait, she walks towards the graveyard. 
"All of them were killed by army... some in encounters, and some in 
custody," she says and stops at a grave. “Here lays my elder son Bilal. 
He was born in 1965, but only after 29 years his father laid him to rest
 here. At the extreme left of Bilal's grave, a distance of few feet, is 
his younger brother Ayoub’s grave. He was killed by army too,” she says.
Between
 the graves of her two sons there is an empty space where she sits. "I 
have asked village heads not to bury anyone in between the graves of my 
two sons. I want my third son Aazad who has also been killed by army to 
be buried here. He was killed at border but police did not handover his 
dead body to me,” she says amid sobs. Aazad was seventeen year old when 
he was killed, she adds.
From
 last sixteen years Saida is in a state of disturbed bereavement - a 
mental ailment, her daughter Shakeela informs. "She is under treatment 
from past decade but medicines only help in reducing the intensity of 
her pain but  cannot cure her trauma."
Her
 doctor says she is physically fit but psychological she is depressed 
and there isn’t much possibility of recovery. “She has reached a stage 
now where she is neither ready to forget her past nor she able to accept
 the reality of her dead sons,” he says.
Saida,
 67, had three sons. At the inception of armed insurgency in Jammu and 
Kashmir, her sons Bilal and Ayoub hailing from Bandipora decided to join
 militant outfits in 1990. “For
 about four years both of them were actively involved in militancy,” 
Shakeela says.  However, in August 1994, Ayoub was killed in an 
encounter at Kursu. “There was around more than ten bullets in his 
chest. We received his bullet ridden body from Bandipora police 
station,” she says.
That
 was the beginning of Saida’s mental illness. After Ayoub’s death, she 
forced Bilal to quit the militant ranks. “But he refused and only three 
months after Ayoub’s death, army arrested and killed him at Koyal 
Muqaam,” says Shakeela.
Aazad’s
 death paralyzed Saida mentally. “My old father was shattered after he 
shouldered the coffin of my third brother. There was nobody left in our 
house to take responsibility. We were facing the wrath of conflict and 
there was no source of income. To earn a living became hard,” says 
Shakeela.
In
 1995, Saida’s husband Abdullah Bhat sensing the vacuum married Shakeela
 to Riyaz Ahmad Lone. Riyaz, a laborer, quickly filled the vacuum and 
supported the family for more than a year. “I was pregnant in 1996 and 
he also joined a militant outfit and a year later was killed in an 
encounter near LoC,” says Shakeela.
Lone’s
 death added to their agony. Saida lost the capacity to hear. "My father
 developed heart complications but to run the house he started working 
again and after five years he died of a cardiac attack,” she says.
The
 family since Abdullah’s death has been living in abject poverty. As 
Saida leaves the graveyard, she says with a sigh, “I do not know am I 
most fortunate mother or most  unfortunate mother in the world. Almighty
 bestowed me four sons including my son in law but they all got killed. I
 am waiting for the moment when I will close my eyes forever and will be
 together with my sons in heaven.”(Kashmir Dispatch)
 
