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Abu
Ishaque’s Rebellious Human-Spirit
Abu
Ishaque (1926-2003) is one of our notable Bangla
litterateurs, whose name is categorized with those who
wrote the least and showed the best. Three novels - one of
which is a detective novel, two collections of short
stories and the voluminous Samokalin Bangla Bhashar
Obhidhan (first two parts of it have already been
published from the Bangla Academy and the rest [how many?] are being prepared). As
literature celebrates only quality, not quantity, he comes
forth as a major novelist in contemporary literature with
the publication of Surya-Dighal Bari (A Cursed
House) written at the age of only twenty one and till now
its mighty presence is felt by readers of Bangla fiction.
Abu Ishaque, born in the village Shirmangol of Naria in
Shariatpur District on 1st November 1926, had his first
story (1940) ‘Abhishap’ published in the Nabajug edited by
the Rebel Poet Kazi Nazrul Islam. He passed his
Matriculation with scholarship in 1942. His first big
literary effort, Surja-Dighal Bari, which he
finished writing in August 1948, had to wait about seven
years for a publisher. Graduating from Karachi University in 1960, he served in many important posts in the country as well as
in diplomatic positions in the high commission offices of Bangladesh. In
the year 1984 he retired from the government service.
His first book of stories Harem came out in 1962. Next
(1963) came the other collection of stories Mahapatango.
The second novel Padmar Palidwip (Alluvial Island of the Padma) was published in 1986, 31 years after the
publication of his first novel. The third and the last of
his novels is Jaal (1989). In the introduction to
the book the author has given the history of writing such
a novel of light temperament, far away from his writing
serious fiction. While he was trying to manage a publisher
for his Surja-Dighal Bari in the early fifties, he
says, he decided to write detective novels that could draw
publishers very easily. Jaal was composed from
Ishaque’s own experiences of his administrative life.
True, the book addresses less serious readers but it is
well written. In 1954 when he had finished the manuscript
of Jaal, his Surja-Dighal Bari drew a publishing
house and when the book attained many appraisals, Abu
Ishaque hesitated to give the manuscript of Jaal a book
shape and this hesitation endured till 1988.
What features of Surya-Dighal Bari established the
book nationally and internationally? If we say, because it
presents us with a character named Jaigoon, it will not be
wrong. In the society of rural Bangladesh in the 40s where the whole social environment was in dark
with illiteracy and dogmas, Jaigoon held up her head
against all. Humanitarian demands compelled her to acquire
those rebellious qualities, which make one ‘human’. Surya-Dighal Bari is set in such of time of Bangladesh
or the then East Bengal where the famine of the decade as
well as communal riots and separation had deeper
impression on everybody. Abu Ishaque presents this theme
in a very lucid every day language.
The main story of the novel dates around the years of
World War II and independence from the British. Jaigoon, a
divorcee of Karim Baksh, is the protagonist of the story.
At about 30, she had a son, Hasu and a daughter, Maimun
and nothing else except that house of bad omen. Generally
it was believed that any house made across East-West
demolishes all the people residing in it. During the
famine that occurred, she finds it difficult to feed her
children. And after a upheaval in her mind, she decides to
go out of home for work, violating the restriction of purda. The author says, ‘Two young faces! They must
survive.’ How can she stay home, where her little boy Hasu
goes out to work as a porter near the streamer-station!
And the sad picture is, even then they partially starve.
Jaigoon sends the first eggs of her pet duck to the Imam
of the nearby masjid but the Imam refuses to accept her
offer. She bears these humiliations. But when the question
of her daughter Maimun’s marriage advances, she sees no
other alternative but to be submissive to the conditions
imposed by the local elders. The condition reads that she
will never go out for a job We can realise that the reason
behind her submission to them is nothing but the welfare
of her children.
The author of the novels has exposed the financial crisis
as something stronger than spiritual crisis in our village
context. Not only an individual but the whole society is
the victim of it. The independence of 1947 was expected to
bring a chance but everything remained the same. Every one
was to surrender to it. But Jaigoon is such a character
who never surrenders to any force for her own sake. She
has to fast but her only anxiety is the fasting of her
children. Even in such a situation when Karim Baksh
requests her to come back, she only rejects him. And last
of all, she denies her socio-religious promises also that
she committed during the marriage of Maimun and walks out
of her home, because there is nothing edible available for
her children at home.
The episode of Kasu is another important one to illustrate
the motherly aspects of Jaigoon. Karim Baksh, the former
husband of Jaigoon, snatches the little kid Kasu from her
and keeps Kasu with him. Karim Baksh tries his best that
Kasu does not feel for his mother. But every plan goes to
naught. Kasu gradually arranges some ghostly spectacles to
put fear in him so that he would never ask about his
mother. In such circumstances, Karim Baksh becomes
compelled to call for Jaigoon. Jaigoon comes and does all
the nursing necessary including the involvement of a
genuine physician instead of some village quacks.
The story of the novel is set in a very superstitious
Bangladesh village where no one can escape the spell of
this vital misbelief. The belief in ghosts torments not
only Jaigoon or Shafi’s mother, every people of the
village is a believer of it. The oldies tell long stories
about them; the mischievous people use them to oust
Joigoon of her house. Syed Waliullah’s Lalshalu is
a parallel to Surja-Dighal Bari on the theme of
superstition in our life in this region. Jaigoon herself
comes out of this trouble when Jobed Ali Fakir himself,
who gave Jaigoon some safety measures to adopt to guard
against evil powers, exposes his carnal desires. The other
incident is about the brickbat by invisible creatures on
Jaigoon’s house. It turns out that Gedu Pradhan, the
village head and his gang, have been throwing stones.
The novelist has used dialect very frequently in the novel.
The story, plot and the whole socio context have taken
appropriate colours for this use of dialect. He has also
manipulated legendary stories and traditional songs and
poems that have helped him in his creation of the rural
life. And thus Surya-Dighal Bari has become a literary
success. Like Syed Waliullah’s Lalshalu, Shaukat Osman’s Janani, Shahidulla
Kaisar’s Sangsaptak or Sareng Bou, Surya-Dighal Bari has also
become a classic in the history of novels of Bangladesh.
Joygoon of Surya-Dighal Bari has also been a symbol
of revolt like Jamila of Lalshalu, Dariabibi of Janani or Nabitan of Sareng Bou. Some may
try to find semblance between the characters like Shyama
of Janani by Manik Bandopadhyaya, Sarbojaya of Pother Panchali by Bibhutibhushan Bandopadhyaya
and Daria Bibi of Janani by Shaukat Osman. All
of them took every responsibility of their family to protect
their children in the hurdles of life. But in respect
of Jaigoon, it may be mentioned that she is rather more
than the rest because of their rebellious attitude against
every sort of superstition of the Muslim society.
If we look into the socio-political context of the novel,
we will get the contemporary picture when Abu Ishaque
wrote it. Incorporation of the scenario after the Second
World War, the historic famine of 1943, the black days of
the Riots of 1946, the Partition of 1947 have made the
novel more realistic and lively. How these incidents
impressed the social village life is also under the
consideration of the novelist. Abu Ishaque himself was a
witness of all these for which he has been able to give
the real colour to the stories. The unbearable situation
of the famine and the consequences of it must touch any
sensitive reader.
Though the total context and plot of Ishaque’s second
novel Padmar Palidwip is a different one, here the
indomitable human spirit is also present as a theme as
experienced in the first novel. The vast canvas
encompassing the whole populace of the story’s locality,
their thoughts and feelings, love and hatred, their
invincible zeal and their defeat, gives the book an epic
disposition. Padmar Palidwip began to be written in
1960 and ended in 1985, as the novelist asserts.
Padmar
Palidwip is about acquiring new char (the strip of
sand bar that is constantly rising out of a riverbed).
Ishaque builds the story on this acquisition of char
through muscle power. He does not forget the personal
lives involved. The conflicts devised from the acquisition
of a Char play most vitally to form most of the characters
of the novel. Along with the touch of agrarian village
life, the special features of a Char life have added
novelty to the whole milieu of the novel.
The location of the story of Padmar Palidwip is
Khuner char (Murderer’s char), previously known as
Lotabonia, and it got the new name when five persons were
killed in trying to gain possession of this sand bar.
Since then the char was in the possession of Erphan
Matubbar, the father of Fazal. But in two months time an
attack comes from Cherag Sarder. Rashid, the eldest son of
Erphan Matubbar dies in this conflict. After facing legal
procedures, Erphan remains as the owner. But the most
hazardous attack comes from the river Padma itself: it
grasps the char some three years after its emergence!
After some seven years the char comes up again. Again the
same occurrences take place. Erphan continues his
occupancy.
As Ishaque did in his debut novel Surya-Dighal Bari, Padmar Palidwip is also a demonstration of the life
of our huge poor people. War and its consequences have
compelled them to turn into landless and last of all
either they work for the biggies of the locality or leave
it for searching a new livelihood. But along with all
these stories, the conflict of the Matubbars pose as the
central theme of the novel.
Fazal establishes himself as the main character while
Jangurullah remains as the villain. The author traces how
the poor famine-stricken people gather behind the two
possible owners of the char only for a little food or
money, when their lives are always at stake. The emotional
relationship between Fazal and his divorced wife Jarina or
Fazal’s present wife Rupjan draws our attention.
In the novel Abu Ishaque has juxtaposed the emotional life
of the humans along with the acquisition of Chars. The
company of Fazal gives Jorina a sort of comfort, but that
cannot endure for some incidental reasons. On the other
hand though Rupjan is to remain separated from her husband
due to the misunderstanding of the in-laws, she gets her
husband at the end of the novel.
Critics of Bangla novels opine that Padmar Palidwip does not take its readers to a final conscience and
superhuman feeling which a great novel generally does. The
prospect that Abu Ishaque created through his writing Surya-Dighal Bari does not supersede in Padmar
Palidwip. And in this regard his debut novel is
regarded as a masterpiece not only of the novelist himself
but also in the history of novels in Bangladesh. |