Monday, August 19, 2024

Stories of Politics, Beliefs and Myths

Vazhga Vazhga

Imagine: Your grandchild is sick, and you do not have the money to treat him in a hospital. The branch secretary of a political party (TUMK) is collecting people from your town to attend a pre-election party rally. He offers you a sari (with the party's flag colors) and Rs. 500 for being present in the rally, which is scheduled to be addressed by the party leader. Wouldn't you do it for your sick grandchild?

Andaal, an old woman has no other option. There is no bound to Venkatesa Perumal's commitment and loyalty to the party, where he serves as both its union and district representative. He is a man made from the party's funds; a man who is what he is because he works for the party and takes substantial cut for himself to add to his riches.

'Will all those goddesses give you MP and MLA posts? Our leader gave us those posts, so we put up posters. What's your problem?'

'It is the same people who demand that Rs 3 crores be deposited for an MLA seat and Rs 10 crores for an MP seat, who lecture about democracy. But our party is not like that. Whether it is an MP candidate or an MLA candidate, no one has to spend a single paisa. Everything will be taken care of by the party. What more does a party-man need? Do you know there is no party like ours in the whole of India?'

Andaal, Kannagi, Sornam, Gomathi, Chellammal and many other women and men are being carried in the vans. There is vanload of people, truckload of people and Venkatesa is collecting people from all the surrounding colonies. This is nothing new.

Few kilometers from the hometown of Andaal, at Vriddhachalam, election rally is summoning as many men and women as possible. Party members like Venkatesa are leaving no stone unturned to gather a crowd of thousands. When Andaal and her neighbors reach the venue, they are awestruck by the grandeur of the arrangement – decoration, flags, festoons, banners, cut-outs, LED screens, dais, space to land the helicopter of the leader – and the sheer number of people attending it.

All that was important for when the minister arrived was a good crowd.

There is no sign of the leader who was to attend the rally at 10 am like Venkatesa had said earlier. While the women and the whole crowd wait for the leader in the sweltering heat, hours pass by. With time, the initial enthusiasm begins to falter, and it grows into exhaustion, frustration and anger. People feel hungry, thirsty and restless. Chapter after chapter, the story is nothing less than a sequence of real and dramatic events – beaming with satire to the political parties, and brewing dark humor underneath.

'You have pushed me from the chair and now I have no place to sit. I'll go right now ad call my street men and teach you a lesson. Am I the only one who came here for the cash? These bitches also gathered here for the cash. In this, where does caste come from? All the bastards only do caste politics, who does party work?'

'The one who fell at their feet got rich. In his party, the more you fall at the feet, the more money and power,'

The early hours spent in gossips among Andaal and other women points to a political ecosystem: people and their vote bought for money; people expecting party to give them money for their vote; the people in between taking their cuts – realities which all know, criticize, disdain, but follow and can't live without. We know there is a big systematic fraud and corruption in the broad daylight. But it is too big to resist and fight against, and all we can do is become a part of it. This is not the moral of the story. But, you know…

'Being a party member is like climbing a steep mountain… Our party is worse than others. The other party people will cite rules and defy not only the panchayat secretary or the district secretary but even the leader. Not in our party. Here, we are not even allowed to stand upright. Whatever we do, we must be flat on the floor. Join palms together and bend. We cannot even breathe loudly. If anyone steps out of line, overnight the man will lose his post. The real truth about a party or a post is that one stands on top of the other's head and proclaims that he is the best.

'… Who will vote nowadays if they are not given money? In these times even the party-men expect to be given money.'

Waiting, waiting and eternal waiting for the leader to come, in the blazing heat, noise, crowd, dust, death,… In these tense hours, the story unravels caste favoritism, how politics play caste and how people themselves protect it for their benefit. We see the intricacies of party politics at the root, caste politics as well as dominance of one over the other – hell with the rights and fairness! I'll have to quote the whole story since this represents reality to its raw nakedness, like an open wound. Party gathers people to show their power and strength, but what about those people, who are their strength?

'There are banners and cut-outs as long as ten towns. And a stage as big as a village, a huge TV on which you can see the whole street. They have dragged all the people in this country by van, bus or car, stacked like cattle and goats and dumped them here. But what is the use? There is not an inch of place that is secluded for women to pee. What party are they running?'

The wait for the leader amongst thousands, soon turns to a torture they all want to escape – where there are fights for the chairs; where you have to hold your pee for hours on end because you'll be crushed by the crowd if you separate yourself from your friends and try to find a place to relieve yourself; where people are fighting because they cannot withstand those of lower caste sitting along with them.

The story is laced with humor, fine detailing, and crude dialogues with local colors. Imayam's characters are not idealists, they are people from normal walks of life. The uninhibited conversation fuels the story, since this is how common people vent out their frustrations. I came with this phrase: Money is a dark power; politics is even darker. When these two find each other, darkness is poured all over.  

By the time the leader arrives and the meeting ends, much damage has already occurred.

Tiruneeru Sami

Annamalai, a South Indian boy and Varsha, a North Indian girl are a couple with two kids. Both of them are scientists.

At the beginning of the story, Annamalai books tickets for the family to have their children undergo tonsure, ear piercing, and a naming ceremony in his hometown, Tamil Nadu, at their kuladeivam (family deity or deity of the clan) temple. Varsha disagrees to the plan and is adamant about making the long trip only for the sake of the ceremony which could be done in any Tamil temples in Delhi. Both of them think that the other one is being stubborn and unreasonable.

What starts as a simple disagreement soon escalates into a serious confrontation between Annamalai and Varsha. Annamalai does not want to break the family custom of performing such auspicious ceremonies at the kuladeivam temple – a burial place of Tiruneeru Sami. But who is Tiruneeru Sami, if he is not a god? If you are unfamiliar with the concept of Siddha, you will find that, especially after the peak of the conflict, Imayam has wonderfully woven a narrative resembling a folklore and a myth, which seems to offer reverence to these men.

"We are our own burden, the mind alone is our enemy, kill the mind and still the mind. The mind is a devil, kill it." He lived his life like that.

'Annie Besant came to our temple and built an arch with her own money. Vivekananda stayed there for five days and meditated. Eyden, who was our district collector, visited it. Bhagwana Ramana came and paid his respects. Sir, Bharati, the modern poet of Tamil Nadu, wrote about him as the light that came to drive away the dirt in our heart and the diseases in our body.'

This story also questions our beliefs – does one we revere must have a place in the ranks of gods? The discomfort of two cultures – of South and North India – mingling together is just a part of the story. Here, the discomfort between two belief systems is rather more serious. And this can hurl us into more darker depths of our reservations and force us to make choices of divergence. Does one have to be false so that the other one becomes true. In matter of beliefs, two truths cannot co-exist?

In among the disagreements, fury, abuses, misunderstanding and stubbornness, Annamalai seems to have convinced at least a member of Varsha's family about Tiruneeru Sami and the tide seems to be turning.

Samban, Son of Krishna – An Untold Tale

Samban was the son of Jambavati and Lord Krishna according to Hindu Mythology.

This is the story of Samban, who was cursed with leprosy by his own father, Lord Krishna. The unavoidable fate seems to have its roots in the Mahabharat war, when Gandhari had cursed Krishna for conspiring to kill her 100 sons.

The milk that has come out will not go back into the udders. The butter that has been churned and separated will not re-form into curds, the fallen bloom and the withered fruit will not get back onto the tree. Karma cannot be erased.

After being cursed, Samban leaves the palace without any riches or attendants. Guided by the great sage Narad, Samban embarks on a journey to find the Sun God temple, crossing forests, mountains, caves, beasts, and streams in search of a cure for his disease. He reaches a leper colony after seven years of travel, but the search for salvation from the curse does not end there. He takes a group of lepers with him and begins another phase of his quest for a cure…

Imayam has once again demonstrated his exceptional talent for storytelling and spinning a fable out of mythical characters. The story of Samban presents a modern flavor of retold myths.

We'd like to applaud the efforts of Prabha Sridevan for her flawless translation of Vazhga Vazhga and Other Stories.

Author: Imayam
Original Text: Tamil
Translator: Prabha Sridevan
Publisher: Penguin India https://www.penguin.co.in
Source: Review Copy from the Publisher

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