How Kashmir’s 16-YO ‘Rabbit Girl’ Turned Her Home Into a Shelter After the Pahalgam Attack

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When the gunfire cracked across the emerald meadows of Baisaran on Tuesday afternoon, it tore through more than just the still mountain air—it ripped through Kashmir’s very soul.

Five kilometres above the sleepy tourist town of Pahalgam, where ponies graze and laughter usually echoes among the pines, terror unfurled its dark wings. Yet amid the chaos, it was not fear that claimed the day—but the fierce courage of a 16-year-old girl known simply, and lovingly, as the Rabbit Girl of Kashmir.


A Sudden Storm

Rubeena, a bright-eyed teenager from a nearby Gujjar settlement, had spent her days offering tourists a fleeting moment of joy: a photo with her beloved pet rabbit, a few rupees exchanged for smiles. After the COVID-19 lockdowns snuffed out normalcy, guiding visitors through Baisaran’s Eco Park had become her new lifeline—one that fed not just her family, but also her dreams.

On Tuesday, she had been helping a young couple from Chennai navigate the gentle, winding trails of the park. They had just finished cooking Maggi noodles over a portable stove—one of those small, forgettable joys that travel offers—when the first shots rang out.

“At first we thought it was a celebration, firecrackers maybe,” Rubeena said, her voice carrying the tremble of memory. “But then… the screaming began. The running.”

It was not a celebration. It was a massacre.

Gunmen had stormed the meadows, targeting tourists. When the dust finally settled, 26 souls had been lost. Seventeen others were left wounded—bodies and spirits broken alike. Kashmir, just beginning to taste hope again, found itself plunged back into mourning.


The Heart That Wouldn’t Run

How Kashmir’s 16-YO ‘Rabbit Girl’ Turned Her Home Into a Shelter After the Pahalgam Attack

As the world tilted on its axis around her, Rubeena did what instinct dictated—she fled. But only for a moment. Safety, once reached, became unbearable. The faces of the tourists she had been guiding haunted her. Were they safe? Were they alone?

Braving the gunfire and confusion, she sprinted back to the park entrance—once, twice, three times—searching, hoping.

“I didn’t even think. I just… had to go back,” she whispered.

As exhausted, dust-caked visitors stumbled down from the hills, Rubeena and her 17-year-old sister, Mumtaza, transformed their humble mud-and-thatch home into a sanctuary. Tourists, barefoot and shivering, found shelter there, along with cups of water and soft, broken words of comfort.

Mumtaza, despite nursing a fractured foot, even carried a ten-year-old child down from the chaos above. In their darkest hour, these teenage girls became the light.


A Father’s Terror, a Valley’s Tears

Their father, Ghulam Ahmad Awan, frail and ailing, remembers hearing the gunfire from afar. He froze. His daughters were up there.

“I thought they were gone,” he said simply, blinking away tears. When Mumtaza finally limped through the doorway, he collapsed with relief.

But the scars of that afternoon run deep. With tourism now at a standstill, the family’s only source of income has vanished. Rubeena had already left school behind to support them, earning Rs 400 to Rs 500 a day. It wasn’t much, but it kept hope on their table.

“That money kept us afloat,” Awan said. “Now… I don’t know.”

And yet, even as grief shrouds the valley, so too does something else—something defiant and enduring.


Grief, Solidarity, and a Stubborn Flame

Across Kashmir, mourning has knitted the people together. Silent marches wind through abandoned streets. Candlelight vigils flicker against the falling night. Hotels, pony-wallas, shopkeepers—every hand that once welcomed visitors—now join in collective sorrow.

“This wasn’t just an attack on tourists,” a pony-walla said during a silent protest. “It was an attack on our hearts. On who we are.”

In a region often misunderstood by the world beyond its mountains, the story of the Rabbit Girl spreads quietly. A symbol not of tragedy, but of who Kashmir truly is—resilient, generous, unbreakable.

Rubeena sits now on a wooden cot, the weight of memory heavy on her small shoulders. Her rabbit, her steady companion through countless sunny afternoons, is gone. Her routine has crumbled. But her spirit, like the snow-fed rivers she grew up beside, keeps flowing forward.

“I just want peace,” she says, a soft but steady promise. “I want people to come back to these mountains. Not in fear—but with smiles.”


The Valley Listens

Maybe one day soon, laughter will return to Baisaran’s meadows. Ponies will carry wide-eyed children up misty trails. Rubeena might once again offer tourists a photo with a new bunny, trading not just snapshots, but slivers of joy.

Until then, Kashmir grieves—and waits.

And in the silence, in the weeping wind over Baisaran, a quiet hope endures.
Just like a girl with a rabbit, who chose courage when the world crumbled.