Skip to main content

Two Novellas by Shahidul Zahir






Book Review


Title: Life and Political Reality: Two Novellas

Author: Shahidul Zahir

Translated by: V Ramaswamy & Shahroza Nahrin

Publisher: Harper Collins India, 2022

Pages: 192


“One day in 1985, the sandal on the foot of Abdul Mojid … lost conformity with circumstances and went phot and snapped.” That is how Zahir’s stirring novella, Life and Political Reality, the first of the two in this collection, begins. The sandal strap has a reason to snap. Abul Khayer had just broadcast his thanksgiving note to the people of Bangladesh. Abul Khayer had emerged as a leader of the people.

Abul Khayer and his father, Moulana Bodu, were the traitors to the people 14 years ago when East Pakistan was fighting its War of Independence with West Pakistan. Moulana Bodu was betraying his own people to the supporters of Pakistan. The novel begins with the ominous sightings of human body parts in the homes of people. These were the pieces of human bodies that Moulana Bodu was throwing to the crows, bodies of people he had got killed as enemies of the nation. One such piece that falls in the rice pot of Jomir Byapari is a man’s penis. Byapari gifts the penis at Moulana’s house. Moulana’s young daughter thinks it is a leech. But Lotifa, Moulana’s second and young wife, knows better. “it’s a Muslim’s,” she asserts. Maulana is not quite chuffed with his young wife’s holding in her palm the penis of another man and also identifying it as belonging to a Muslim. His sleep is disturbed until “he woke Lotifa up and divorced her right there by uttering ‘talaq’ thrice.”

The plot of the novella keeps jumping between two years: 1971 when the Liberation War took place and 1985 when Moulana Bodu and his son were reinstated as popular leaders. The traitors of the people have now become the people’s leaders! Do people forget their pains so quickly? “People needed to forget a lot of things as time went by, because reality often loomed large,” the novella tells us towards the end.

The protagonist, Abdul Mojid, cannot forget it all so easily, however. When his sandal strap snaps on page one, what really snaps is a heartstring or two. His elder sister, Momena, with whom Moulana Bodu had a personal grudge, was brutalized by the army. A thirteen-year-old boy, Alaudin who had dared to make fun of Moulana, was the first victim of the army. “The day Moulana Bodu and Captain Imran first discovered one another, Alauddin’s lifeless body was found in the mohalla, face upwards, after it landed up on the lane in front of his house.”

Moulana Bodu has too much blood on his hands. The blood of his own people. He had to leave his place when his real face became clear to the people. Yet it is he who will emerge 14 years later as a popular leader of the people in the same place. The bloodlust will continue, Mojid realizes. There is no escape from bloodlust. That is the simple political reality.

The second novella, Abu Ibrahim’s Death, is relatively simpler and less bleak. Abu is in government service. He has managed to retain his integrity despite life’s problems and challenges. He loves his little children. His wife is rather corpulent and a little out of tune with him but he gets on with her.

Abu is not exactly a practical kind of person. There is some idealism within him that shows itself occasionally. It is not charity that the poor deserve but “instituting the rights,” he knows. There is a leftist revolutionary lurking in Abu’s gentle soul.

Abu is not quite sure of what he wants in life. When his old love, Helen, makes an appearance in his life once again, he is tempted to forge a deeper bond with her than is healthy for a family man. But he is not sure again what exactly it is that he is looking for from Helen.

He needs a house of his own. He needs money. He compromises with his integrity when a businessman offers him a bribe. That compromise turns out to be too costly. “Everybody can be purchased,” the businessman tells Abu. Soon Abu Ibrahim arrives at the sad realization of his fall from the heights of idealism and declares in a “somewhat delirious yet calm and quiet voice”: “I am a bastard!”

Shahidul Zahir’s stories take us to the depths of certain painful realities of life. Who controls these realities really? Who pulls the strings? Who decides that a man’s penis will make its appearance in a woman’s rice pot? Who decides that the woman will be divorced for that? Can you retain your integrity or sanity in such a world? The book raises some disturbing and profound questions.

PS. This review is powered by Blogchatter Book Review Program 

Order your copy of the book from Amazon

Comments

  1. Hari OM
    As we face a political situation in the UK just now that is beyond farcical, I think I shall avoid reading anything else remotely to do with politics! I appreciate your review, though. (Sat up through the night with the lamps lit and prayed for light to enter those dark corners of Westminster... I gal can have a Deepavalli Dream, heh na?!!) YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Diwali greetings to you, Yam. May your dream come true and let light descend in the dark spheres of contemporary politics.

      Delete
  2. Thanks for sharing, adding to mhy to read list

    ReplyDelete
  3. Though your review looks good, I will pass reading anything by this author for sometime.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I can understand. I don't think I'll pick up another book by him having read this. His style fails to grip the heart.

      Delete
  4. Detailed review. Well written!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

Terror Tourism 1

Jacob Martin Pathros was enthralled by the ad on terror tourism which promised to take the tourist to the terrorist-jungles of Chhattisgarh. Jacob Martin Pathros had already visited almost all countries, except the perverted South America, after retiring at the young age of 56 from an ‘aided’ school in Kerala. 56 is the retirement age in Kerala’s schools, aided as well as totally government-fed. Aided schools belong to the different religious groups in Kerala. They build up the infrastructure with the money extorted from the believers and then appoint as staff people who can pay hefty donations in the name of infrastructure. The state government will pay the salary of the staff. The private management will rake in millions by way of donations from job-seekers who are usually the third-class graduates from rich-class families. And there are no students to study in these schools because they are all Malayalam medium. Every Malayali wants to go to Europe or North America and hence Malay

The Little Girl

The Little Girl is a short story by Katherine Mansfield given in the class 9 English course of NCERT. Maggie gave an assignment to her students based on the story and one of her students, Athena Baby Sabu, presented a brilliant job. She converted the story into a delightful comic strip. Mansfield tells the story of Kezia who is the eponymous little girl. Kezia is scared of her father who wields a lot of control on the entire family. She is punished severely for an unwitting mistake which makes her even more scared of her father. Her grandmother is fond of her and is her emotional succour. The grandmother is away from home one day with Kezia's mother who is hospitalised. Kezia gets her usual nightmare and is terrified. There is no one at home to console her except her father from whom she does not expect any consolation. But the father rises to the occasion and lets the little girl sleep beside him that night. She rests her head on her father's chest and can feel his heart

Terror Tourism 2

Terror Tourism 1 in short : Jacob Martin Pathros is a retired school teacher in Kerala. He has visited most countries and is now fascinated by an ad which promises terror tourism: meet the terrorists of Dantewada. Below is the second and last part of the story. Celina went mad on hearing her husband’s latest tour decision. “Meet terrorists? Touch them? Feel them?” She fretted and fumed. When did you touch me last ? She wanted to scream. Feel me, man , she wanted to plead. But her pride didn’t permit her. She was not a feminist or anything of the sort, but she had the pride of having been a teacher in an aided school for 30-odd years and was now drawing a pension which funded a part of their foreign trips. “I’m not coming with you on this trip,” Celina said vehemently. “You go and touch the terrorists and feel them yourself.” Celina was genuinely concerned about her husband’s security. Why did he want to go to such inhuman people as terrorists? Atlas Tours, the agency which b

Brownie and I - a love affair

The last snap I took of Brownie That Brownie went away without giving me a hint is what makes her absence so painful. It’s nearly a month and I know now for certain that she won’t return. Worse, I know that she didn’t want to leave me. She couldn’t have. Brownie is the only creature who could make me do what she wanted. She had the liberty to walk into my bedroom at any time of the night and wake me up for a bite of her favourite food. She would sit below the bed and meow. If I didn’t get up and follow her, she would climb on the bed and meow to my face. She knew I would get up and follow her to the cupboard where bags of cat food were stored.  My Mistress in my study Brownie was not my only cat; there were three others. But none of the other three ever made the kind of demands that Brownie made. If any of them came to eat the food I served Brownie at odd hours of the night, Brownie would flatly refuse to eat with them in spite of the fact that it was she who had brought me out of