CULTURAL MARKERS IN EARLY KASHMIR ATTEST TO INDIC AND SANSKRITIC IDENTITY...SOCIETY AND CULTURE WERE OPEN.

It is a common notion that historically Kashmir Valley has been isolated. Shonaleeka Kaul, a historian and Associate Professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) who works with Sanskrit text, talked to aarti Tikoo Singh on how Rajataranginini, the Sankrit chronicle of Kashmiri kings, proves otherwise. The interview was published in The Times of India dated 14th February, 2018 (Wednesday), p. 14. 
--Not many among youth of India seem to be inclined towards Sanskrit. Why?
Sanskrit has come to be rather misunderstood as merely a language of ritual and scipture, which is why it is regarded   

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