India-Pakistan conflict grips Metro Vancouver communities
Calls for peace raised by Indian and Pakistani community leaders in the Lower Mainland
Saima Naz is trying to wait patiently for her father to come home fromPakistan but she can't help but worry.
"It's pretty scary," she told CBC News. "He's been there since early January ... he's very scared, because he's lived through war before."
Naz and her family immigrated to Canada from Pakistan in the 1980s. Every so often, they'll travel back. Andon a recent outing, her father,Abdul,was traveling through the country when tensions between Pakistan and neighbouring India erupted,reaching heights not seen in decades.
More than 40 Indianparliamentary soldiers were killed in an attack that aPakistan-based militant group,Jaish-e-Mohammed, claimed responsibility for. Military action between the two countries has escalated in the weeks since, forcing the cancellation of numerousflights to and from the regionand stoking worldwide fears of a war between the two nuclear-armed rivals.
Forpeople like Naz concerned for the safety and well-being of friends and family overseas,there's an overwhelming feeling of helplessness and hope for a peaceful resolution.
Cloudy information
"Most of the people [here], they still have their families back home," said Sameer Kaushal, a local radio host and reporter. "[Residents here] usually go back to their home or their village every year."
Kaushal works for the Surrey-based South Asian broadcaster, Red FM. Since the conflict, he says false information circulating online including fake videos have fuelled tensions between the two countries, and confusedpeople watching from afar.
The broadcaster is one of several in the Lower Mainland working to set the record straight.
"On social media right now, theyare playing games," said Kaushal, referring to fake news articles."People [here are aware], so they are clearing those things up with us and with other media as well."
Tensions and harmony
Kaushal says for the most part, there has been communal harmony between members of the local Indian and Pakistani communities. However, some local politicians are warning against growing nationalism within the Indo-Canadian community.
In an op-edwritten by Rachna Singh published in the Indo-Canadian Voice, the Surrey-Green Timbers MLA said divisions within the local community are a matter of "great concern."
Singh was one of several community leaders attending a vigil atLaxmiNarayanTemple in Surrey, following the Feb. 14 attackwhere she said several speakers attempted to "instigate the congregation against Pakistan."
She said several speakers advocating for peace were shouted atand a group ofattendees chanted "blood for blood."
"We know the historic tensions happening in that region," she said in Victoria on Wednesday. "My majorconcern is those tensions should not flow into other communities. Here we are living together ... both our communities live very, very peacefully."
A leader at the congregation told CBC News that it was only a small number of people at the event that were calling "for revenge," but the community at large is hoping for a peaceful resolution.
Singh said she's witnessed tensions simmer in the days since.
Saying no to war
Saima Naz, who is also a member of the Pakistan CanadianCultural Association, says many leaders in the community are using their position to advocate for peace and the overwhelming sentiment has been one of embracing similarities between the two communities, not differences.
"Our kids go to the same schools.We share meals together.We work together, and I think being in Canada itreally helps you understand thatyou can have differencesand have different points of view but still coexist in a very loving manner."
Naz says she'll be one of many members from both communities attending a rally in Surrey this weekend advocating for a peaceful end to the conflict.
"Ithink we'll set the tone for what's happening back in India and Pakistan."