Sunday, July 31, 2022

When ideas--especially from women--frighten men

The words and sentences in Tomb of Sand flow so easily.  It feels as if someone is sitting close by and narrating the story in the voices of the different characters.  I am intentionally not rushing through the novel because I want the wonderful taste of what I have read to last a lot longer before Geetanjali Shree serves me the next course.

It was during such an intentional pause that I decided to google for the author in order to find out about her background.

Google showed me a result that was a shocker, which I read and tweeted:
Allow me to repeat this much: A literary event to honor Geetanjali Shree for winning the International Booker Prize was canceled because a nutcase filed a complaint with the police that her book contains “objectionable comments” about Hindu deities Shiva and Parvati.

The crazy man--it is always a man in such instances, just like mass shootings in the US are always carried out by men--tweeted out urging the Chief Minister of the state where Agra is located and the state's police chief to look into the matter.

What was the response from the police, you ask?  The police said that they have to first read the book before deciding how to proceed with the complaint.  Of course, if somebody complaints about a murder, then the cops first need to establish whether there is a body or, at least, find out if that person is missing.  In this case, they have to read the book first.  Chances are good that the madman who complained hasn't read the book either.  For all I know, a friend might have forwarded him a WhatsApp message that said that Tomb of Sand defiles the good lord Shiva and his consort, the goddess Parvati, and the idiot filed a complaint because, well, he is god's soldier, like the vast multitude in the Hindu nationalistic party that is in power. 

India has gone crazy with its Hindu nationalism.  So crazy that an international literary award is met with a complaint. 

Now, of course, very few people read books.  And, therefore, very few care about awards for books and authors.  In a country that is maniacally obsessed with the great tamasha of cricket and masala movies, an author and her international recognition will not blip in political and cultural radar unless a celebrity--politician, movie star, cricket player--talk about it. 

Perhaps you are thinking, hey, aren't the Prime Minister and his party excited with this award for an Indian author?  An author who was born in India and lives in India?  An author who does not write in English, even though she is fluent in it, but writes in Hindi?  As the Booker Prize notes, "it is the first book originally written in any Indian language to win the prize, and the first novel translated from Hindi to be recognised by the award”.  Don't these nationalists love such things?

Hindu nationalism is an ideology.  In that ideology, Hindi is the language of the land, and words and sentences should champion Hindu Nationalism.  My guess is that Geetanjali Shree couldn't care less for Hindu nationalism.  So, neither the Prime Minister nor his party have publicly applauded Shree's Booker Prize, nor have they called for their toadies to stop complaining about Tomb of Sand.


Rambharat Upadhyay, a spokesperson of Rangleela, told Scroll.in that ideally Adityanath should have honoured Shree. 
“Uttar Pradesh is her birthplace,” Upadhyay said. “The government...the chief minister should have felicitated her. Instead we are having to cancel this event. It’s a matter of shame.”

 Shree's response?

“My novel is forcefully being dragged into a political controversy,” the author told the organisers. “The references made in the novel are integral part of Indian mythology. Those who have objections to these descriptions, should challenge the Hindu mythological texts in the court.”


PS: As for my original quest to find out more about the author?  Wikipedia says that for generations her people have lived in Uttar Pradesh, and:

After beginning her PhD work at Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda on the Hindi writer Munshi Premchand, Shree became more interested in Hindi literature.  She wrote her first short story during her PhD, and turned to writing after graduation

Yet another PhD or almost PhD.  This list is getting longer!

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