Preview

chino loco

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
647 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
chino loco
The Ugly Kashmiri (Cameos in exile), New Delhi: Allied Publishers, Pages 186 Price Rs.250/- Reviewed by Dr Kalpna Rajput.

The Ugly Kashmiri (Cameos in exile) written by Arvind Gigoo is a unique book because on hundred and eighty cameos (short literary sketches) describe in condensed brevity the history, politics, sociology and psychology of the Kashmiri Muslims and Kashmiri Pandits. It is for the first time in Indian writing in English that one literary piece printed on a full page presents and depicts its subject and speaks volumes about it. What is remarkable about the book is that the author unravels the mind of Muslims, Pandits, politicians, security forces, intellectuals and common people with cold detachment.

During the political happenings of the nineties the convictions of all Kashmiris crumbled to dust. That is why the book is dedicated to ‘Ahmed the Blacksmith’ who stuck to his goodness even under disturbing conditions. We learn that the youth of Kashmiri Pandits are in ferment, that the elderly Pandits suffer the pain of uprooted ness in exile and that the Kashmiri Muslims cry for a glorious and peaceful Kashmiri. The author wants all Kashmiri to change from ugliness to beauty.

The cameos have layers of meanings. They abound in ambiguity, pun, and allusions to historical and political happenings, satire, irony, wit and black humour. The author hasn’t spared even Gandhi, Nehru, Sheikh Abdullah, Farooq Abdullah, Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi. He is critical of Nehru’s policy on Kashmiri and Gandhi’s ‘ray of hope’ that he saw in Kashmiri in 1947. The author talks about Jinnah and Zia-ul-Haq. He exposes the leaders and politicians who played with the sentiments of the Kashmiris. He makes fun of the vacillating political attitude of the Kashmiri Muslims. He has revealed the psyche of the militans. Arvind Gigoo, who is himself a Kashmiri Pandit, is critical even of Kashmiri Pandits. They too are a victim of his sarcasm and laughter. He

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Best Essays

    Note that Sikh “eyewitness” versions of event have been included. Without the reports of independent observers due to total press censorship by the Indian government, these versions of events became quite significant in forming the general opinion and reaction of Sikhs.…

    • 5520 Words
    • 23 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Baker, Mark. “The War of Sorrow in Kashmir.” WorldPress 4 June 2002, Vol. 49 No.9 ed. 1 Nov. 2007 .…

    • 3055 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The partition of India in 1948 led to one of the largest mass migration movements in the world. The successful attainment of independence from colonial rule is also a narrative of religious nationalism, displacement and communal violence between the two nation states of India and Pakistan or more definitively the Muslims and Hindus. In Urvashi Butalia’s (2000, pp.264-300) “The Other Side of Silence” the oral testimony of Maya Rani, a Punjabi woman who was a child living in Pakistan during the Partition is particularly important to the histiography surrounding the event as it is told from a different perspective by a person not directly involved in the conflict that the emergence and independence of the nation caused.…

    • 1116 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Train to Pakistan Review

    • 697 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Khushwant Singh sketches his characters with a sure and steady hand. In barely over two hundred pages, we come to know quite a cast: the powerful district magistrate-cum-deputy commissioner Hukum Chand, a sad but practical minded realist, and his minion the sub-inspector of police at district headquarters. The village roughneck Juggut Singh “Jugga”, a giant Sikh always in and out of prison, who secretly meets the daughter of the village mullah. The simple priest at the Sikh temple. A Western-educated visitor who is a worker for the Communist party, with the ambiguous name of Iqbal (ambiguous because it doesn’t reveal his religion).…

    • 697 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Sen, Amartya. 2005. The Argumentative Indian: Writings on Indian History, Culture and Identity. New York: Picador.…

    • 4247 Words
    • 17 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Monsoon Wedding Analysis

    • 1352 Words
    • 6 Pages

    plays out the conflict between traditional Punjabi custom and the emerging capitalist society in contemporary India, crossing boudaries of class, continent and morality…

    • 1352 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Robert Koehler’s review on Slumdog Millionaire talks about how the film failed to touch upon the problems or culture that are truly present in India today. Rather it is, “Boyle’s feverish, woozy, drunken, and thoroughly contrived picaresque also conveniently packages misperceptions about India (and the East) that continue to support the dominant Western view of the subcontinent,” as Koehler states in his thesis statement. He continues in his paper to talk about how Boyle has created a skewed view on India that takes advantage of the westernization happening in India, but over exaggerates and glamorizes many aspects…

    • 1958 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Stories buried under the debris of thousands of nightmares are suppressed under the ones with no authenticity. That's when two 25-year-olds from Jaipur mutually decided to write about everything that is amiss about our country. Made it into a rap, gave it an exciting title, and waited for it to grab the attention of many. 'Holi Hai' satirically steers out everything we’re not proud of and is everything the “Motorcycle Shayaries” hoped it would be.…

    • 925 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Abbasi Character Analysis

    • 923 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Abbasi is a small time business man serving the export market and the nation by earning precious foreign exchange and providing employment to women in particular. Like the rest of the nation, Abbasi had great faith in Rajiv Gandhi when he became the Prime Minister after his mother's assassination and whose initial attempts to rejuvenate the ailing economy was a welcome relief after decades of socialist stasis. But, Abbasi's exasperation reveals that little has changed between the assassinations: “I thought things would get better with the fellow Rajiv Gandhi taking over” (33).…

    • 923 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    ALTHOUGH it focuses on the fate of a few powerless individuals, Kiran Desai's extraordinary new novel manages to explore, with intimacy and insight, just about every contemporary international issue: globalization, multiculturalism, economic inequality, fundamentalism and terrorist violence. Despite being set in the mid-1980's, it seems the best kind of post-9/11 novel.…

    • 429 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    The stalwarts of Indian writing in English like Salman Rushdie, Khushwant Singh, Mukul Kesavan, Vikram Chandra, Amitav Ghosh and the like, are writing in a postcolonial space using novel as a means of cultural representation. Their novels are generally assumed to be engaged in postcolonial consciousness but a close study of the thematic range proves that the novels also attempt to universalized humanistic gesture, for human nature and social relationships are as important as the interplay of power and national relationships. Twentieth century novelists were preoccupied with the historic past and the unabated interest of the readers in the novels that depicted the past or that treated some event of national importance having wide repercussions, like the freedom struggle of India. The countrymen’s vitality and their devotion to the cause were amply reflected in the novels of Raja Rao, Mulk Raj Anand and K. A. Abbas in the 1930s and the 1940s; but the most historical event of our age, as is evident from the writings of the Indo-English novelists, was the partition of the Indian subcontinent by the English rulers in the year 1947. The Hindu-Muslim religious and political difference climaxed with this event which led to widespread disturbances. Many novels were written on the theme of Partition, the destruction it brought and the plight of the refugees; but a novel is never a mere recapitulation of historical events. To call Amitav Ghosh’s novel as mere political allegory would be facile. Instead what Ghosh shows is the impact of politics on the lives of ordinary people and human relationships. To do that he uses the historical events as raw material in his novels and The Hungry Tide is one such novel Ghosh wrote at the peak of his powers. This novel is limited to quite a narrow geographical area, i.e., to the Sunderbans in the Bay of Bengal, and perhaps by extension Bengal, and the novelist does this on…

    • 5004 Words
    • 21 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Literature has said something always fascinating. It is to man’s advantage that he has always managed to derive a message from literature. Indian English Literature is a product of the Indian Colonial Rule over India. And even though this is a thing of the past its hangover persists in the Indo – English Literature which cannot ignore the native models. With the achievement of national Independence India may be politically free but there is still an invasion of cultural colonization from the west.…

    • 3088 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    A passage to India, written by E.M. Foster, depicts a certain situation in an India city Chandrapore among British and Indian citizens at that time. Under this background, one remarkable element in this story should be friendship between each character, especially between Dr. Aziz, a educated Muslim India and Cyril Fielding, an English principle somehow.…

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Shadow Lines

    • 1601 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Such moments are rare indeed these days when one takes a book in the hand and is completely captivated by it after reading the first few pages. That happened to me recently when I started reading "The Shadow Lines" by Amitav Ghosh. "The Shadow Lines," Ghosh's second novel, was published in 1988, four years after the sectarian violence that shook New Delhi in the aftermath of the Prime minister, Indira Gandhi's assassination. Written when the homes of the Sikhs were still smouldering, some of the most important questions the novel probes are the various faces of violence and the extent to which its fiery arms reach under the guise of fighting for freedom. Ghosh's treatment of violence in Calcutta and in Dhaka is valid even today, more than ten years after its publication. What has happened recently in Kosovo and in East Timor show that answers still evade the questions which Ghosh poses about freedom, about the very real yet non-existing lines which divide nations, people, and families.…

    • 1601 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    final solution

    • 4681 Words
    • 19 Pages

    India is a country of communal diversity. The existence of such society demands mutual understanding among its religious…

    • 4681 Words
    • 19 Pages
    Powerful Essays