In Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK), Dr Nayeem and Dr Naseem – sons of veteran Hurriyat leader Syed Ali Geelani – have said that they were not allowed to perform the last rites of their father as per Islamic law which was their right.
"What brings peace to us is the fact that our father's body was treated in the same way our father was treated when he was alive. It was all struggle and torture and oppression," his sons said in a statement to Kashmir Media Service.
Dr Nayeem and Dr Naseem said they could not participate in the funeral of their father. On Wednesday night when Syed Ali Geelani breathed his last, police and government officials came and took away the body, forcibly. The family could neither give Geelani his last bath nor offer his funeral prayers, the duo said.
In the 92 years of his life, Syed Ali Geelani was imprisoned for 20 years and spent the last decade under house detention.
He was imprisoned in jails outside the territory as well. During this period he suffered several ailments, including heart problems for which he had to undergo a pacemaker implant. One of his kidneys had to be removed and he was being treated for asthma of the lungs.
But his teeth had been intact, very rare in a person his age. His one remaining kidney, which was only half of the normal size, had begun to grow again, performing the function that two kidneys do. In between these health complications, Geelani, however, continued his political life, and wrote over 30 books on subjects ranging from religion to literature to politics.
Dr Naseem Geelani said that his father, despite many difficulties, never gave up his routine. He would wake up before Fajr prayer, take a walk, recite the Holy Quran, and read books.
After August 5, 2019, however, the day when New Delhi scrapped IIOJK’s special status, Geelani's health began to deteriorate. He started losing his appetite and also his memory. He would offer prayers sitting on the chair with gestures of his eyes, a method of prayers allowed for persons who are ill.
"He was under these health conditions that he left this temporary world," Dr Naseem said. An hour before Geelani died, Dr Naseem had gone to see him.
"I left to offer evening prayer. While I was doing it, I was called by the domestic help to see about something that was not right with Abu ji's health. His oxygen level was dropping. We put him on oxygen, but the level was not coming to normal," Dr Naseem said.
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Since August 5, 2019, Geelani had been telling his family that he gets a sense of three persons regularly visiting him, asking him to be ready to leave this world.
But when the final moments arrived, Geelani gave no inkling of it to his son. In fact, his health seemed to be all right until the sudden fall in the oxygen level. It was around this time that medical assistant Omar, who had been attending to Geelani's health since long, was called.
He sounded an alert and soon after, the Director of Soura hospital arrived. He declared that Geelani had passed away. Meanwhile, police and paramilitary forces surrounded the house. Two senior officers started a conversation about how the last rites would be conducted.
"We told them (police) that it will be done tomorrow morning so that all the relatives will arrive and have a last glimpse of Geelani sahab. Women present at the home also told them to not touch the body with their hands. But then they (police) came at 3am after we refused to do the last rites during the night. They forcibly took the body and did the last rites without family members," Dr Naseem added.
"They wanted us to be part of their game. They wanted us to offer funeral prayers with them so that they can show them to the world. We did not allow that to happen," he said.
The administration had imposed curfew-like restrictions as soon as the news of Geelani's death came out.
In the morning, as the brothers left home in search of their father's grave, they found him buried in the local graveyard. Locals identified the grave for them.
"We offered prayers for him and left. But there was no one from the administration who reached out to us after that. They just wanted us to take away the right of funeral from us, and they did," Dr Naseem said.
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