With the release of The Kashmir Files, Kashmir and its insurgency during the 1990s, is being debated. This debate is welcome, but it should not be one-sided; that’s not art, it is politics. Any art which is influenced and dictated by politics only brings disaster. The ongoing reactions to this movie should be taken seriously because it will not only increase the gap but also gives more currency to hate-mongers. The vandalism of Delhi’s CM House in reaction to his statement about not making the film tax-free in the state explains how films are being used for political purposes and how influential these movies are to control the psychology of the masses. Many pro-capital, right-wing propaganda movies have been released before with great ease. What makes The Kashmir Files so different? The ‘Files’ in the film’s title alludes to secrecy; some unknown data related to the exodus of Kashmiri Pandit and their suppression by Muslims In the film, the director consistently tries to label the exodus as ‘Hindu genocide’. The Kashmir Files shows a false and exaggerated number of Hindu Pandits who were persecuted. To support the film, right-wing people tried to give evidence about the number of Hindu Pandit killings. According to their view, approximately 4,000 Pandits were killed and five lakh were displaced from Kashmir. But the Jammu and Kashmir’s government website declares 60,000 Kashmiri Hindu families suffered during the violence. An unofficial source, The Kashmir Pandit Sangharsh Samiti, says that the death toll could be up to 650 in the Valley. Vivek Agnihotri, the director, twisted the facts. According to Hindutva websites, around one lakh Pandits were killed in a lake and buried in the Valley. But no one will not talk about what happened on January 21, 1990. Just two days after Jagmohan took office as J&K Governor, at least 50-60 Kashmiri Muslim protesters were shot down by security forces at Gawkadal, a bridge in Srinagar. It seems Agnihotri wanted to wash out the real data from our memory.