Sir Vidiadhar
Surajprasad Naipaul, a Nobel Laureate in literature of Indian descent, who, as
an astute observer of human condition, having written 30-odd books that indeed
caused many storms in readers’ minds, died peacefully in bed on 11th August in London.
**
A
while ago, as I was flipping through the morning newspapers, there came a
message in the name of our Prime Minister stating, “Aaiye swachha Bharat kaa
nirman kare, 15th Sept se swachhtaa hi
seva se juden…” (Lets strive to create a Swachh Bharat…). It at once reminded me that I have over-delayed
paying my tributes to one of the 20th century’s
most admired and contentious story-teller, V S Naipaul, who died in his home in
London, aged 85. And hence the following lines ….
Naipaul was the grandson of a Brahmin from the Benaras region
who went to Trinidad in the 19th century
as an indentured laborer. He was born in Chaguana, Trinidad in 1932 and later
his family moved to its capital, Port of Spain. It is this shift which he
claims to have transformed him from “a child [who] knew almost nothing, nothing
beyond what [he] picked up in [his] grandmother’s house” to an acute observer
of “the life of the street”—the outside world. No wonder, if it had become the
setting for his Miguel Street— a collection of stories that won him
Somerset Maugham Award in 1959.
In 1950, winning a government scholarship Naipaul went to
study at Oxford. Later, it is at BBC World Service where he analyzed West
Indian Literature that he found his footing as a writer. His breakthrough as a
writer came with his first published novel, The Mystic Masseur in 1957.
In it, he presented a dialogic intercourse between two cultures: the
conservative Indian culture and the European liberal capitalist culture that
treats the reader with an authentic history of the powerless people in a
Trinidad ghetto. It is through caricature and irony that he presented “the
aspirations, energy, vulgarities, inconsistencies and corruption of characters
who belong to a rapidly changing society in which there are few stable values.”
Ganesh Ramsumair, the protagonist of the novel presents himself as the bundle
of all the controversies of the colonial society as he, oscillating between his
traditional Indian values and the lure of the modern consumer capitalism, rises
from “teacher to Masseur, from Masseur to mystic, from mystic to MLC” quite
spectacularly. As the novel comes to an end, this struggling Pandit Ganesh
Ramsumair, becoming G Ramsay Muir—a complete “transformation into a colonial
puppet”—even defends British colonial rule. Interestingly, while narrating
these two cultures, their institutions, process and products, Naipaul never
sided wholly with either the Hindu way of life or the European way of life.
Drawing up on his real experiences among East Indians in
Trinidad, Naipaul went on writing his earlier novels—The Suffrage of Elvira
(1958), Miguel Street (1959), A House for Mr Biswas (1961)—narrating
the struggle of charlatans, braggarts and dreamers to eke out their life with
social respectability in their new world of settlement. However, it is his
fourth novel, A House for Mr Biswas—a treatise on the pangs of exiles—that
had won him major recognition. Drawing from the experiences of his father,
Naipaul, narrated the struggle of the protagonist of the novel, Mohan Biswas,
an Indo-Trinidadian, to free himself from the predicaments of the family,
custom, and religion. Being the son of a poor laborer and having lived as a
guest in one inhospitable house after another, Biswas vows to “get a job on my
[his] own. And I am going to get my own house too.” And finally, journeying
through a variety of jobs from a sign painter to journalist, Biswas acquires a
house of his own, which in his view is the signpost of his independence. But
under the stress of getting the house repaired and the burden of repaying the
debt, he suffers a heart attack and dies soon afterwards but leaving a house
behind for sheltering his family for generations to come. Naipaul, while
narrating the struggle of Biswas for dignity and independence, successfully
explored the themes of family, poverty, and the impact of colonialism on the
economy of the vanquished colonial-world from the post-colonial perspectives.
The novel could thus succeed in making an entry into Time magazine’s
“Time 100 best English-language novels from 1923-2005.”
Moving away from Trinidad, Naipaul used other national
settings in his subsequent novels—In a Free State (1971), Guerrillas (1975),
A Bend in the River (1979), A Way in the World (1994) —but continued to
explore the relationship between violence, contingency and politics and the
emerging personal and collective alienation experienced by the victims in the
new milieu emerging out of the struggle between native and Western-colonial
heritages. In a Free State (1971), a novel with two supporting
narratives and set in different countries that won him Britain’s Booker Prize
was hailed by Neel Mukherjee as “remarkable, clear-eyed, truthful and brutal
meditation on exile and displacement.” He accomplished this task by resorting
to three techniques: in “One Out of Many” , he resorted to first-person
narratives through the voice of Santosh, an Indian servant in Washington; in “Tell
Me Who to Kill” it is the poor Indian-Trinidadian who narrates the story in
London; and in the “In a Free State” he adopts a third-person narrative
to tell about a long car journey undertaken by two English persons, Bobby and
Linda across an unnamed African country, and mind you, in all this narration,
one hardly comes across the author’s presence.
Among his other novels such as The Enigma of Arrival (1987),
A Way in the World (1994), Half a Life (2001), he examined carefully
his inner demands and analyzed even his deceptions through the protagonists.
Some critics consider The Enigma of Arrival as his masterpiece. Here,
the narrator—is perhaps no other than Naipaul—in his own melancholy sense of
rootlessness takes many journeys, starting from colonial Trinidad, both
imaginary and real, to the English countryside to become a writer!
Interestingly, the narrator-migrator, choosing to inhabit a pastoral England,
invents the earth below his feet and in the process feeling as though the new
piece of land has given him “a second chance, a new life, richer and fuller
than any I had had anywhere else”, he practices his writer’s trade. Later, in
the second part of the book, the narrator, under the spell of sickness,
observing the world around him from the perspective of an outsider—perhaps,
more as an anthropologist—describes in a sad, melancholic tone the collapse of
an old coloniser.
It is his non-fiction works that are large-sized narratives
of his travels to different countries over different periods of time—An Area
of Darkness (1964), India: A Wounded Civilization (1976), India:
A Million Mutinies Now (1990); The Five Societies in the West Indies
(1963), Among the Believers (1981) and Beyond Belief (1998)—that
had attracted for him immense critical hostility and anger, particularly from
the postcolonial world. But first things first: let us first examine what he
had written under these titles.
At the time of publishing his first book on India, An Area
of Darkness—a chronicle of his first visit to his ancestral homeland—India
was indeed passing through darkness: it was just limping back from the
humiliation inflicted by the Chinese aggression. Owing to the widespread
drought and the resulting shortage of food grains, we were then living off the
American wheat supplied under its PL480 program. And it was this despairing and
hungry India that confounded him when he landed in Bombay airport and yet
Naipaul with his declared state of mind—“I am profoundly Indian in my feeling,
profoundly Indian in my sensibility…but not in my observation”—said, “from the
railway train and from the dusty roads, India appeared to require only pity. It
was an easy emotion, and perhaps the Indians were right: it was compassion like
mine, so strenuously maintained, that denied humanity to many.” At the very
outset of his landing in Bombay airport, he encountered bitterest experience:
despite having permit for the two bottles of liquor that he had brought with
him, they were confiscated by custom authorities stating that “transport
permit” is needed for which he had to run from office to office, table to table
facing every official behaving either indifferently or arrogantly. Thereafter,
it was the all-pervading poverty and squalor that gave him a rude shock. He
wrote: “I had seen the starved child defecating at the road side while the
mangy dog waited to eat the excrement.” What was more distressing to him was
that it was not only a village scene but such habits could be seen on the
slopes of Himalayas, at the bus-stand of Madras and in the beaches of Goa. He
went on penning:
Indians
defecate everywhere. They defecate, mostly, beside the railway tracks. But they
also defecate on the beaches; they defecate on the hills; they defecate on the
streets; they never look for cover… the peasant, Muslim or Hindu suffers from
claustrophobia if he has to use an enclosed latrine.
In the same vein, he loathed the corruption prevailing in the
country and pained to note that no shame is coming to those corrupt people, instead
a lot of social prestige and status is bestowed on such unscrupulous officials:
It
is estimated that in Kashmir, as in the rest of India, one-third of development
funds drains away in corruption and the exchanging of gifts. No disgrace
attaches to this. The Kashmir tailor spoke with envious admiration of his
patwari friend, a surveyor and type of records-keeper, who in one day might
collect as much as a hundred rupees; a lorry-driver had a similar admiration
for a traffic inspector he knew who received monthly protection money from
various lorry-drivers.
He thus concluded that corruption has become deep-rooted in
the Indian system of government and society. And now, however sore we may feel
about these observations, can we deny the fact that the same system of
defecating is prevailing in the country even after about 50 years of Naipaul’s
visit? And even after 70 years of independence, the malady of corruption is
haunting us albeit, with more ferocity.
By the time he wrote his second book, India: A Wounded
Civilization (1976), the nation was passing through the pangs of emergency
declared by Indira Gandhi. And, of course, poverty was relentless, while
corruption mounted up in all walks of life. While the leaders were tweeting
socialist slogans, the country-side presented a grim scenario of undernourished
children. And visiting India for the second time but under such testing times,
Naipaul continued to be dismissive of India. Reacting to the emergency imposed
by Ms Gandhi, he pronounced: “The dismantled institutions—of law, press and
Parliament—cannot simply be put together again.” Speaking about the Indian
civilization as a “wounded civilization”—decayed and dying Naipaul states: “No
civilization was so little equipped to cope with the outside world; no country
was so easily raided and plundered, and learned so little from its disasters.
Five hundred years after the Arab conquest of Sind, Muslim rule was established
in Delhi as the rule of foreigners, people apart, and foreign rule—Muslim for
the five hundred years, British for the last 150—ended in Delhi only in 1947.”
He pessimistically concludes his book stating: “The crisis of India is not only
political or economic. The larger crisis is of a wounded civilization that has
at last become aware of its inadequacies and is without the intellectual means
to move ahead.” No wonder, if such comments attracted outrage from the Indian
readers: “He seems to me to write for the same reason that many ossified
academics publish are else they must perish”, said CD Narasimhaiah.
Nevertheless, one may have to admit that what Naipaul wrote about India is not
wholly untrue, for India did suffer under the yoke of foreign rule by
withdrawing into itself and as a result suffering from self-deception.
In his final book on the trilogy of India, India: A
Million Mutinies Now, Naipaul appeared to have mellowed down. Or, by the
90s India was on the cusp of evolving into a nation, a promise in the
emergence, perhaps! Although he witnessed a new generation of intellectuals
crying in hoarse empty words, he could see India somehow managing to survive,
and indeed evolving: “Independence had come to India like a kind of revolution;
now there were many revolutions within that revolution. . . . All over India
scores of particularities that had been frozen by foreign rule, or by poverty
or lack of opportunity or abjectness had begun to flow again.”
It is obvious that such a probing and the resultant writing
brought a barrage of protests from the intellectuals of India. Some critics
accusing him of “look [ing] at India through Western kaleidoscope which takes
myriad unreal shapes when aimed at lighted areas”, questioned him: “Why use the
Western criteria in determining India to be an area of light or darkness?” Even
a reputed Indian critic as CD Narasimhaiah in his paper, “VS Naipaul: A Case of
Bizarre Reputation” observed: “I must confess I was disturbed when someone
spoke of the possibility of a Nobel Prize for Naipaul. I asked myself if the
world’s most prestigious award was instituted to honor someone who has injected
so much poison into the world’s body politic and seems to gloat over it?”
Amidst such widespread resentment among the Indian
intelligentsia at what Naipaul wrote about India, it is equally essential to
note what William Walsh said about Naipaul’s journey to India: “Naipaul’s
return to India is as much as a research into himself as into another country.
He is crawling on sensitive naked feet through the tunnels of his own self.”
Equally, is it not right to say that even after 70 years of independence, we
are still struggling to cope with the “long buried disruptive peculiarities”—of
religion, region, caste, clan, subalterns, the chasm between the Center and
States that has outgrown beyond the political sense of winning elections,
etc.—and the resultant strife in building a new India, in redefining the very
sense of our economic independence. Ironically, the present government’s call
for “Swachh Bharat”—
a call for ‘Clean India’ that comes 70 years after we began what Nehru called
our “tryst with destiny”—very much vindicates Naipaul’s writings.
His other non-fictional writings such as Among the
Believers and Beyond Belief attracted similar criticism. Writing
these two big books on his Islamic excursions through Iran, Pakistan, Malaysia
and Indonesia, Naipaul, approaching his subject from a secular enlightened
perspective and perhaps going against the grain of “cultural and intellectual
relativism” made “sharp and cutting” remarks on Islam. In the section on
Indonesia, he said, “Islam sanctified rage—rage about the faith, political
rage: one could be like the other. And more than once on this journey I had met
sensitive men who were ready to contemplate great convulsions.” In the book, Beyond
Belief, he observed: “The cruelty of Islamic fundamentalism is that it
allows only to one people—the Arabs, the original people of the prophet—a past,
and sacred places, pilgrimages and earth reverences… It is the most
uncompromising kind of imperialism.” Reacting to his writings Edward Said said
that while Naipaul, in the west, is “considered a master novelist and an
important witness to the disintegration and hypocrisy of the third world, in
the postcolonial world he’s a marked man as a purveyor of stereotypes and
disgust for the world that produced him—though that doesn’t exclude people
thinking he’s a gifted writer.”
Naipaul, in his long career of almost half a century,
trusting his intuition wrote about colonialism and decoloni-zation, exile and
the struggles of people in the developing world to acquire political and moral
freedom causing many a storm in the minds of his readers. And the extent of
success that he had achieved can be gauged from what Nan Doerksen said:
“Perhaps where Naipaul’s genius lies is in his ability to take an existing
literary genre, or idea, and bend it to his own peculiar vision, finally
creating something that is definitively his own as Shakespeare did.” All this
accomplishment finally won him the Nobel Prize in literature in 2001 for his
revelations about “suppressed histories.”
Let me now stop here by paying my tributes to Sir Naipaul,
the “philosophe” who “transformed the rage into precision” and
“allow[ed] events to speak in their own inherent irony” for the readers to
react in whatever way they want.
Very Informative blog.
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