The Courtesan, The Mahatma
and an Italian
Brahmin
Manu S Pillai.
Almost after one year gap, I start writing review of
a book. It is a pleasure reading a book you like and it is a joy sharing what you have read with others.
The book I recently completed
reading is Manu. S Pillai’s ‘The Courtesan, The Mahatma and an Italian Brahmin’. I was simultaneously reading two more books,
but the short and crisp glimpses of history this book revealed was more
suitable for the period of travels. I finished this book while travelling to
many places including Hampi, where the ruins of Vijayanagar empire grandness of which surprised
me.
This book has a very interesting
structure. It is in three parts, part I
covers the period before british raj and part two covers the period of British
Raj. Each of the pieces is not a
complete essay in itself. Each brief narration
records an incident of history or the circumstances leading to or consequences
following that incident. These briefs kindle
our interest about the personalities or phenomenon in the context of the
incident. This is a new kind of telling history, very
interesting one, that encourages and compels further reading.
It is, in a way, an ideal book of enlarged
titbits, suitable for those who are weary of reading long historical
treatises. This makes history more
accessible. It reveals a lot about
historical processes and evolution of personalities and demolishes many of the
assumptions and falsehoods spread by vested interests.
First part covers the period before
the British Raj. It brings out the curious
strategy of Robert D Nobili, an Italian missionary who adopts traditional
rituals of Hindu Brahmins while preaching Christianity. It records the Maratha ruler of Tanjavur who
encourages a play ‘Sati Dana Suramu’ that exposes the scandalous behaviour of a
Brahmin in pursuing women of low castes without shame who also justifies his high
status. It makes fun of his learning of ‘Vedas’ and other sacred texts.
Another piece explores the contours
of the story of Shakuntala, from Mahabharata to the poetic Abhijnanasakuntalam
of Kalidas and how the latter rescues the character of the King and husband and whitewashes his sin.
The story of Maratha untouchable
worshipper Chokhamela, is similar to that of ‘Nanadanaar’ of Tamil Region. Even the most ardent devotee, if he belongs
to lowest of the caste, was not allowed anywhere near the deity.
It would not be convenient to our
prejudice to know that Shivaji’s forces included Muslim warriors who were his faithful
generals and that Auranzeb’s forces included Hindu Rajput rulers loyal to him. In another short essay, the author indicates that the forces that obliterated Vijayanagar empire included Maratha
forces that sided with the muslim sultans of a neighbouring states. History does not fall into categories
designed by political parties in twenty first century. It evolves by the logic of power, revenue
collection, land, sustenance of hierarchy and suppression of opposition. There are hindu rulers' heirs who were given
protection by the muslim rulers and there are muslim rulers' heirs who were protected
by hindu rulers. (example Vijayanagar) Some muslim rulers of
deccan were originally Brahmins.
It tells the story of an pallava
kingdom. There was no heir with royal descendant at a particular point of time. They searched for royal bloodlines of pallava kings. A prince from Vietnam was anointed as the
king of pallava kingdom in tamilnadu on the grounds that three centuries earlier, one of the pallavas had married into Vietnamese royal family. They had
to ensure privilage of lineage, which was sacred and for that they could go to any extent.
Contrary to popular myth that Dara
Shikoh was not a man of absolute integrity, this book explains.
Meerabai refused to be a sati and
did not go into the funeral pyre with her royal husband. He considered the god Krishna as her man and
lived for him for many years after the death of her ritual royal husband.
The second
part of the book deals with the british raj.
‘If there was no british raj’
collapsing moghul empire would have gone? Or Did the maratha’s or other groups
had the capacity to rule at least major part, if not the whole of what is now
India? These were interesting and imaginary questions. Persian language had been the court, official and diplomatic language for more than 600 years before the arrival of
british. Would it have become official
language? (As in 1858) Persian was much better known than the English all over
the land of India.
There are other stories normally not
covered in other books of popular reading.
For example, (a) Resurrection of Balamani, who lived on her own terms
(b) A Brahmin Women of Scandal, which tells the story of a Namboohiri women,
who scandalised the whole caste by confessing and in the court that she had slept
with reputed people (she named them) in her area. Me too movement, in kerala of 19th century?
This book has many interesting leads
to follow. It shows that history is not
a boring chronology of events, but a play of characters involving dramatic moments of pain and
glory, victory and defeat, that it is a complex process which disturbs and revises our current knowledge and understanding.
That it does without demanding much energy, is a credit to its author. I an inspired to buy his earlier books.
No comments:
Post a Comment