Ahmad
Sofa
Among the contemporary fiction writers
of popular track in Bangladesh, the name of Ahmad Sofa
(1943-2001) is seldom included. In his thirty years
of authorial life as a novelist, Sofa was never seen
hankering after name and fame in a trivial sense. One
of the well-known essayists, critics and poets Sofa
always handles his novels with a much meticulous thought
and plan. In every novel he articulates innovation in
both form and content. Without novelty in thought and
characterization, in technique and narration he never
ventures for a novel. The trend of telling mere stories
in novels never attracted him.
Surya Tumi Sathi (The Sun the Companion) was the first
with which Ahmad Sofa launched his novelist career.
The book was written in 1964-65 and in the year 1967
it was published. The next one Onkar (The Om), very
much appreciated nationwide and even in West Bengal,
was written in 1972 and published in 1975. In the year
1994 a different type of novel Alat Chakra (The Circle
of Fire) came out of his pen, though the book was actually
written ten years earlier. 1988 was the year in which
Sofa wrote two novels, one was Aali Kenan, published
in the same year, and the other Maran Bilash (Luxury
in Death), printed in the following year. The novels,
which came to the bookstores later on, are Gaavi Bittanto
(Tale of a Cow, 1994), Ardhek Nari Ardhek Ishwari (Half
Man Half Woman) and Pushpa Briksha Ebong Bihanga Puran
(A Tale of Flowers, Plants and Birds), both published
in 1996. Along with these eight novels Sofa is the author
of hundreds of lyrics and poems, short stories and essays
and columns. His Bangali Bushalmaner Mon is one of the
most thought provoking and much hailed books in Bangladesh.
Any conscious reader would not fail to identify the
two fairly long gaps in the period of his writing novels
- the first was from 1973-1983 and the next was 1989-1994.
Surya Tumi Sathi was composed in the first years of
Sofa’s 20s. The whole story of the novel centres
around Hashim, a youth whose father was a convert to
a Muslim from a Hindu. The religious conflict of our
society has been vividly painted in the book. The grandmother
of Hashim Poddar Ginni rises above all orthodox rituals
and thoughts of the dark society by taking the responsibility
of Hashem’s newly born baby in Hashem’s
house. Living in a society where a Hindu does not even
take food from a Muslim neighbour, Poddar Ginni, an
aged and ordinary minded pious woman does not hesitate
to come to see the dead body of her grandson’s
wife and thus humanity takes the upper hand above all
other things. It is true that the whole story has been
narrated in a very conventional way and nothing new
has been introduced in the narrative technique but despite
that the book has been acclaimed as a remarkable one
in the annals of Bangladeshi novels for its characterization
and the sincerity of the novelist to the analysis of
social volues.
But in Onkar, Ahmad Sofa comes out of the traditional
tendencies of a novel writer. In this second novel he
achieved his own individual qualities as a novelist
in the context of form and content. The 24-page novel
gives a pen picture of assimilation of an extraordinary
theme in a simple story. In the story due to his father’s
unwise activities, the narrator is trapped to marry
a mute girl. Having no other alternative to save his
own family, he has to do it. The mischievous father-in-law
arranges for him a job also. In his town house in Dhaka
his sister, who resides with him there, practises songs
with a harmonium. Once it is discovered that his speechless
wife herself is trying to make sounds with that musical
instrument. All these make the narrator-husband more
sympathetic to his wife and it inspires the woman more
and more to speak. One day after the death of Asad in
1969 while a procession passes by their house, in her
natural tendency the housewife comes out to the veranda
and assays to voice like the slogans, but alas, it is
only blood that flows out of her throat and she dies.
In the novel the socio-political condition of the then
society as well as the socio-familial environment has
been delineated very minutely and skillfully.
The next novel of Ahmad Sofa is Alat Chakra. Liberation-time
helpless Bangladesh in Kolkata is the focal point of
the story. The story of the speaker Daniel and his lover-friend
Tayeba works as a thread of the loosely related episodes,
though in the same scenario. Under the shade of Daniel-Tyeba,
the novelist possibly intends to bring out all the political
and pseudo-political aspects of people in the then Kolkata,
driven off from Bangladesh. Different opinions of different
people about the liberation of Bangladesh, its possibility,
its way to success have been moulded here. On December
3, 1971, when India declared war against Pakistan and
the independence of Bangladesh became certain, the cancer
patient Tayeba passes away in the blackout night. About
the novel the other thing must be mentioned that the
integrity that Onkar attained earlier seems a bit loosened
here.
After only four years of Alat Chakra, Aali Kenan came
into light. Ahmad Sofa created an existentialist character
in the novel in a very true Bangladeshi context. The
political scenes from Ayub Khan to Sheikh Mujib have
also been portrayed vividly.
Death in Maran Bilash, as a comfort, is on a par with
Aali Kenan. It is about the spontaneous talks of a minister
at his deathbed. From 12:13 in the night to the dawn
the minister opens his mind to his attendant cum political
follower Moula Box. In these episodes the whole life
of the minister has been pictured - from his boyhood
to his maturity. All the misdeeds of his life as the
minister are revealed here one after another. In a society
where immorality is the only ladder for a politician
to climb the top gets an exposure in this novel. The
hateful activities of the minister include such misdeed
like poisoning his younger brother, having sexual relationship
with a woman of his mother’s age, burning the
headmaster in his house with a communal attitude etc.
After his Onkar and Aali Kenan, Gaavi Bittanto is also
a very significant novel that will get a permanent place
in the history of Bangla novel. In a very satiric milieu
Sofa has placed the supreme institution of our country
- the Dhaka University. Making caricatures of the people
of this highest education centre Sofa has tried to ridicule
the whole society in general. In Gaavi Bittanto the
author actually attempted to expose the so-called intellectuals
of our society.
Sofa’s novels are generally small in size. Even
the bigger ones like Alat Chakra, Gaavi Bittanto and
Surya Tumi Sathi are of 129, 110 and 93 pages only.
But surprisingly Sofa is always successful in making
his creations in such small volumes. All his novels
draw the attention of the reader for their compactness.
Almost never the plots of his novels are loosened.
Concerning his language and form Sofa attained his best
from the very beginning. In Surya Tumi Sathi the story
is narrated in a third person narrative, the technique
which he pursued in his later novels like Aali Kenan,
Maran Bilash and Gaavi Bittanto. In his other novels
Onkar and Alat Chakra he went for a first person narrative
technique. But in novels excluding Alat Chakra the aspect
that rolls on with immense success is his objectivity.
It is, as if, from a distant place the author observes
everything of his story - the characters and the incidents.
Such honest and courageous observation is only possible
for Ahmad Sofa, personally who is not a man of general
track. Constant experimentation and novelty are the
hallmark of all his works. When a new book of the author
emerges, we find in it a new Ahmad Sofa coming alive
and attractive as is seen in the context of his novel
Pushpa Briksha Ebong Bihanga Puran.
William Wordsworth’s (1770-1850) attitude to nature
provides his writings with a unique characteristic.
In different phases of life, nature itself made noticeable
impressions, which contributed a lot in moulding his
spirit. On the other hand, Robert Frost (1874-1963)
visualises a sort of similarity between himself and
the nature around. All the novels of Bibhutibhushan
Bandapaddhyay (1894-1950) deal with the close relationship
between human beings and the surrounding natural phenomena.
The soft human attitude has been delineated there with
much sympathy. In the works of the above mentioned writers
nature in a true sense is the flora. But in the novels
of Thomas Hardy (1840-1928) nature has been pictured
from a different point of view. In his novel The Return
of the Native (1878), the protagonist becomes the landscape
‘Edgon Heath’ itself. Besides, nature also
plays another role in literary pieces. Storm and calmness
are symbolic presentation of various conditions of human
minds. But in Pushpa Briksha Ebong Bihanga Puran, the
approach of Ahmed Sofa is very distinctive. In this
novel the writer takes the trees, flowers and birds
for his children. The narrator-protagonist Ahmed Sofa
nourishes and loves them from the core of his heart.
The novel begins with a very autobiographical attachment
in which the whole story revolves. Later on gradually
we begin to get that moments when the writer comes closer
to nature, when he feels inclined to them.
In life, we come across some people, who love their
pets as their kids but Sofa enjoys a different telepathy
between them and himself. He wonders at the blooming
of the flowers, the budding of the seeds. Their gradual
and surprising growth astonishes him. He becomes bewildered
seeing the oral expressions, especially the voice of
the birds. All these incidents mark a deep impression
on his life-- on his thought and spirit. With pride,
love and solemnity Sofa recalls all those bygone happiness
of his life and pays great tribute to them.
The seventy-three-page novel begins with the shifting
of Sofa’s residence. In the year 1993, he took
his new rented apartment. The attached roof of it was
a great award for him. His foster-son Sushil began the
real plot of the story while cleansing the roof. There
he saw some buds and showed them to Sofa. The love-bond
of Sofa and the plants thus began to get language. In
the first ten pages, Sushil does the other thing - he
brings a Jhuti Shalik from Nilkhet and the episodes
of Sofa and the birds thus began their journey. Afterwards,
we get some stories in flashback, where Sofa’s
attitude and attraction towards trees have been portrayed.
The bygone story begins with the tale of an apple seedling.
In this plant, the author felt the existence of a living
creature. All its growing-up amazed him. Once when the
writer was shocked due to a sad news of a kith, he went
near the plant and sat there. Suddenly he comprehended
that the small plant began to caress him. To make sure
his assumption, he went to the other side of it and
astonishingly the little plant tilted to that side.
In relation to this story, more tales begin to upsurge
connected with plants. In this episode takes place the
episode of children. Here we come to know that, along
with a friend, Sofa started an elementary school for
the little urchins of slum areas. There he experienced
new realisation about the so-called innocence of children.
In this part, we behold that children are not so innocent
as we believe them to be. Rather, they are the products
of their own environment. Surrounding milieu gives a
new shape to their psyche.
The Juti Shalik mentioned earlier, generates the new
story about birds. It opens, through flashback, an episode
of Sofa’s previous personal experience on pet
birds. A parrot that he domesticated in his university
life marked a permanent impression on his mind. The
story of Jhuti Shalik exposes more stories of birds
like crows, sparrows, nightingales, hornbills etc. The
fatherly attitude of the writer to these creatures softens
readers’ minds as well. They no more appear to
us like the non-human beings.
To evaluate nature surrounding us from a paternal point
of view is an innovation in Bangla literature. Such
an approach to nature was quite unknown to readers of
Bangla literature. To the Bangalis, this perspective
may not seem unfamiliar and for this very reason, this
novel can arouse a deeper feeling in us. One can get
back, through this book, the childhood memories of rural
Bangladesh that seemed to have been disappeared due
to quick urbanisation.
Necessarily, the novel comprises three episodes on flowers,
trees and birds. But we realise that flowers do not
get an outstanding framework. On the other hand, the
episode of children forms a new and independent tale
and inevitably demands the title of the novel as Briksha
Shishu Ebong Bihanga Puran.
Related
Link:
http://banglapedia.search.com.bd/HT/S_0448.htm