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By Gemini AI |
“Is there any politician who is a poet or artist of
any sort?” Anu asks me. Anu – Anushri is her official name – is a former
student of mine. She gave up science though she was good at it and took up
literature for graduation after which she pursued a journalism course with a
prominent media house and then became a journalist.
There are a few of them, I tell her.
I name Vaclav Havel and our very own Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
Anu thinks I am joking when I mention
Vajpayee because she knows how much I detest Vajpayee’s political party to
which the present Prime Minister of India belongs.
“Did Vajpayee write any good poetry?”
Anu asks.
“I’m not sure,” I say. “He wrote
stuff like: क़दम मिलाकर चलना होगा।
We will have to go forward together.” I remember one or two such lines of Vajpayee
from my teaching days in Delhi. My students there used to recite such stuff in the
morning assembly.
“That sounds
more like politics than poetry,” Anu protests.
I meet Anu
once in a while in a café outside her newspaper office. Our conversations are
usually brief because she is busy unlike me who is a relaxed retired teacher.
But today Anu seems to be having some time on her hands.
“Have you
heard of Rimbaud?” I ask.
“You never
mentioned that name in class, I’m sure,” she says.
“I didn’t. He
wasn’t worth mentioning. He could have been a great poet. But his poetry died
the moment he came in contact with politics.”
Arthur Rimbaud.
French poet who made the whirling world stand still with his poetry before he turned twenty.
I couldn’t have mentioned him in my classes. He betrayed poetry. He betrayed
love. He became a trader. Of weapons. Of humans.
He abandoned poetry at the age of 20
and took to selling arms and slaves. He left France a few years after Otto von
Bismarck invaded his country and went to Africa. Did Bismarck’s power kill his
poetry or did Africa’s helplessness do it? I’m not sure.
“He realised that the sword was
mightier than the pen?” Anu asks. That’s Anu. Now you know why I love her so
much. Sometimes I think she is my alter ego.
“Maybe he realised that poetry was as
bourgeoisie as politics. And religion.”
“There you are! Literature, religion,
politics – all three belong ultimately to those who wield the power, right?”
I smile. “Genuine literature
dissents,” I say. “Rimbaud was too young to understand that.”
“That’s it,” Anu cries out as if she
is Archimedes in the bathtub that brought him his Eureka moment. “Dissent is
what art is.”
“Assent is what politics is. Religion
too. Assent to dogma, credo, and protocol.” And then I ask, “Do you know that
Hitler was an artist before he became a politician?”
“What?”
“Yes.”
Many of us lose art as we lose our youth. It's permitted in youth. But when you "grow up" you have to do something that you can make a living at.
ReplyDeleteOh yes, I'd have perished long ago if I hoped to eke out a living from writing.
DeleteArt is my therapy.
ReplyDeleteSo it's either or?
ReplyDeleteYeah, either politics or arts.
DeleteHari Om
ReplyDelete....and there are those who go the other way. The fashion these days is for ex-MPs to write their memoir, though that's less literature, more vendetta quite often. As for art, Winston Churchill was pretty handy with oils and canvas... YAM xx
Churchill was an exception, I think. Or maybe the times have changed. Now Trump is the rule.
DeleteArtists are of a genre. They can become very good at art or a politician! And then they do it good!
ReplyDeleteWell!
Delete