Hemavathy M N
When terrorists chose Pahalgam, they didn’t just pick a place, they picked a symbol.
Pahalgam, meaning “The Village of Shepherds,” has long been Kashmir’s soft corner, a peaceful alternative to the conflict-ridden headlines. In the 90s, it stayed largely untouched while the Valley burned.
In recent years, it became a symbol of return, for tourism, for hope . It is a place where couples posed by Lidder River, where yatris prayed during the Amarnath Yatra, where children ran carefree under pine trees.
For the past few years, it stood as a beacon of fragile peace, drawing thousands of tourists and restoring the local economy. And that’s exactly why they struck, because terrorists fear normalcy.
According to initial intelligence, the attack was planned weeks in advance. Militants from a shadow faction of Lashkar-e-Taiba, possibly operating under a new name, entered Pahalgam disguised as tourists, blending in with the early summer crowd. On April 22, around noon, they followed a group of families from the parking area to the Baisaran meadow, a gentle 5-km trek up the hill. And then, without warning, they opened fire.
Eyewitnesses report at least three heavily armed men, firing AK-series rifles indiscriminately into the crowd. One attacker hurled a grenade, while another snatched a phone to disrupt any live SOS calls. The assault lasted less than six minutes, but its aftermath will echo for years.
The choice of location, security experts say, was deliberate and psychological: to destroy the sense of safety in a space that symbolized recovery. It was meant to shake confidence, kill harmony, and draw attention, all with one barbaric act.
It failed! While the meadow bled, India responded with courage ; from a Navy officer shielding children, to locals helping evacuate the wounded, to forces tracking down the attackers before nightfall.
The message was clear: Pahalgam may have been targeted. But its spirit won’t be broken.