[Reader-list] Naipaul's Kashmir

abir bazaz abirbazaz at rediffmail.com
Sat Nov 3 22:43:57 IST 2001


I forgot to add that this is an excerpt from the two part article by Ethan Casey,the editor of blueear.com.You can read the article at blueear.com.

On Sat, 03 Nov 2001 abir  bazaz wrote :
> 
> 
> 
> ...
> It was a year before I could return again, by bus this 
> time, in June 1995. I had changed, but the Valley had 
> not: I had the familiar, eerie ineffably sad sensation 
> I had felt too many times before, in Kathmandu, in 
> Haiti, in Milwaukee, of coming home to a place I was 
> only passing through. There was the Valley stretched 
> before me, green and yellow and sky blue, as we came 
> down into it from the Pir Panjal range. There in turn 
> were the mountains immutable as ever in the distance as 
> we rode along the straight, flat National Highway 
> toward the town, poplars and rice fields on either 
> side. And at last we were in Srinagar, and I was in 
> first a motor rickshaw, then a shikara, then finally I 
> had arrived at the houseboat and among the friends I 
> felt I now knew so well. It was almost as though a long 
> year dense with work and adventure and loss had not 
> intervened. 
> 
> Haji and his servant welcomed me effusively with hugs 
> and protestations of having waited anxiously these many 
> months for me to return. The houseboat had the pleasant 
> dry woody smell I remembered, though a few small 
> changes bespoke the passage of time. There were new 
> cushions on the balcony and new upholstery on the 
> couches in the front room. This particular family had 
> not suffered too badly this past year. The birds that 
> had nested inside Haji's house were gone: the women had 
> objected to the mess, and Haji's son had prevailed on 
> him to keep them out for the sake of domestic 
> tranquillity. The chicken whose life my companion had 
> sentimentally saved the year before at Lidderwat, Lucky,
>  was nowhere to be seen; she may not have been so lucky 
> in the end. I didn't have the heart to ask. Nor did I 
> want to visit Mr Bhat and Aziz agai
em in peace to get on with their lives. Mr 
> Bhat's health had greatly improved, I was told. The 
> mullahs still moaned their hauntin!
>  g prayers at dusk, and the sunset across the lake was 
> as unbearably beautiful as before. 
> 
> At the end of An Area of Darkness, Naipaul writes of 
> India "slipping away" from him. Hav
>  seeing it once again, realising not only with the mind 
> but in the gut that life and death had been going on in 
> my absence, I tried and failed to retrieve my earlier 
> two visits from personal memory. Where does the time 
> go? As I write, with my return to Kashmir now similarly 
> irretrievable, I need no literary critic to explain to 
> me the meaning of Naipaul's final sentence: "I felt it 
> as something true which I could never adequately 
> express and never seize again." 
> 
> One evening near the end of my last stay in Kashmir, I 
> sat alone for a while on a wooden pier and watched the 
> world go by on the lake between me and the typically 
> stunning sunset. It came to me to what an extent my 
> experience had hinged, very much for the better, on the 
> kindness and friendship of one particular family and 
> their relatives and close friends (the two categories 
> not always easily distinguishable). Haji's citified 
> elder son was back from Delhi, preparing to take a rare 
> group of clients on a long trek, and other young 
> relatives were about. Suddenly, I found myself on the 
> verge of tears. But I challenged myself not to indulge 
> in the sadness of leaving a place, pleasurable though I 
> knew that to be. "Tears were running down his cheeks," 
> writes Naipaul of his 1962 parting with Aziz. "Even at 
> that moment I could not be sure that he had ever been 
> mine." It was a Kashmiri trait, I now knew, to be 
> finally inaccessible: I was to have a disturbing 
> similar experience the mor!
>  ning I bade farewell to Haji. I wanted to say 
> something that would last, that would insure my 
> attachment to him through the nex
er but distracted, perhaps thinking of his 
> own worries. 
> 
> I would move on, I realised that evening on the pier, 
> and life and death would go on in Kashmir as before. 
> This was their life; it was only a slice of my varied, 
> attenuated experience. I had no right to claim Kashmir, 
> to feel sure that it was mine. I was not suffering and 
> dying, I was not losing my livelihood. On the contrary, 
> as a journalist I was quite literally ma
> fering. And in more important ways, I had been given 
> more than I deserved or felt I could repay. Maybe the 
> best I could do was to say, with a faith truer and more 
> confident than I could have mustered a year earlier: 
> We'll meet again, enshallah. 
> 
>  
>  
> 
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