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The assault on the Entrepreneurship Development Institute (EDI) is an ugly reminder of the cost of political turmoil paid by the people of Jammu and Kashmir who are caught between two warring nations from the last 27 years.
Set up by the state government in 1997, two years after the first assembly election was held in J&K following the eruption of insurgency, the EDI was conceptualised to address the issue of unemployment and wean away youths from the romanticism of armed struggle.
The institute, however, started actual work in 2004 when it offered entrepreneurship training programs for educated youths in diverse fields and later also arranged funding through attractive state and centrally sponsored schemes.
At the EDI, the courses offered are as diverse as bee keeping, sheep farming, nail production and mushroom cultivation. According to officials, around 4,000 entrepreneurs have successfully passed out of the institute with hundreds of documented success stories.
In Batagund village of Kashmir's Handwara, M/S Farhan Poultry is a known name. Set up by Farooq Ahmad Shah, a graduate, in 2011 with the help of JKEDI, the poultry farm is an inspirational, rags-to-riches story.
Shah used to work as a daily-wage labourer with sand extractors before starting the farm.
Located near the famed saffron town of Pampore on the strategic Srinagar-Jammu highway, the twin high-rise buildings of the institute, five-storied administrative office and seven storied hostel complex, were designed by Naqashbandi and Associates, a valley-based architectural firm.
The institute is spread over 40 kanals of prime land flanked by Jhelum River and saffron fields. The administrative block was badly damaged in a 48-hour long encounter in February. The new batch of militants reportedly crossed Jhelum using a boat and then sheltered themselves inside the hostel complex.
"It is, of course, heartbreaking to see our workplaces being blown up, our private spaces being violated. We offered a window of hope for thousands of educated youths. I don't know how we are going to come out of this now," a senior officer at the EDI told The Quint.
Built at a cost of nearly Rs 27 crores, the EDI proffers a window into the struggles of lakhs of disillusioned educated youths who are starved of the economic opportunities due to rampant unemployment in the state.
Among the six siblings, Shaheena Akhtar, a resident of Srinagar, was the only one who didn't leave education midway, until a financial crisis forced her to drop the idea of pursuing a doctorate degree. After initial hiccups, she enrolled for a program at the EDI in 2011 and managed to get a loan of Rs 60 lakh for her handloom firm.
In J&K where the rate of unemployment is one of the highest in the country which also boils down to political alienation and demands of freedom from India, the institute turned into a game-changer within years.
While Kashmir has been reeling under shutdowns and curfew from the last three months, few people are aware that the churning at the EDI never stopped, with the staff showing up at work almost on a regular basis.
According to insiders, the management of the institute had planned to raise another multi-storied building at a cost of Rs 30 crores to accommodate more students in newer courses. The twin assaults this year may derail that process.
Although a three-storied guest house has been left unscathed in the fresh attack, officials say it will not suffice the administration needs against the backdrop of the lockdown in Kashmir.
The scars on the walls of JKEDI may heal with a fresh coat of plaster and paint but the bruises on the idea of what the institute stands for will not heal so soon.
For Dr Parray, the destruction of infrastructure is a "deeply personal loss":
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