Akimun
Rahman’s Manly Novels about Women’s Affairs
As the
supremacy of men is observed more in every sphere of
life, the domain of literature does not delineate any
different picture. Resultantly when authors make any
literary efforts, those are generally done from man’s
point of view. When authors sketch their
autobiographical experiences, they become nothing but
the exposition of male people’s becoming. But what is
about the becoming of our womenfolk? How do they meet
their physical changes, how do they feel about the
society’s look towards them, how do they grow up and
crossing hurdles meet the needs of their thorny life?
Akimun Rahman’s novels give us the answers in full
detail, with much clarity and artistic flavour.
Akimun Rahman (b1959), now an assistant professor of a
prestigious university, teaches Bangla literature, and
prefers creative writing. She began her authorial life
as a critic and essayist. Her voluminous book Bangla
Upanyashe Bastabatar Swarup (Treatment of Realism in
Bangla Novels) came out from the Bangla
Academy in 1993. Later on her controversial book Bibi Theke
Begum (From Bibi to Begum) got published in the year
1996. Purusher Prithibite Ek Meye (The Lone Lady
in Men’s World, 1997) and Raktapunje Genthe Jawya
Machhi (A Fly Drowned in Blood and Pus, 1999) are
the two novels that Akimun has written by the year 2000.
Along with all these she has written a volume of short
stories Ei Shob Nivrita Kuhak (1999) and a
juvenile book Sonar Kharkuto (1995).
Purusher Prithibite Ek Meye is a novel about a
woman – a woman unmarried but at the age of
marriage-hood. An NGO worker Shamima is the central
character of the novel. Reaching the end of the book,
the reader may term the lovelessness and pathos of
Shamima as the protagonist of the novel. Shamima herself
narrates her story the story of her physique and psyche.
She relates it in full detail having no hypocrisy or
retreat.
Shamima’s story begins with the incident of her
menstruation (period). The terrific uneasy days draw our
sympathetic attention to her. Women’s inborn untidiness
takes a new and unknown appearance to us. Woman, who is
always and everywhere regarded as a beauty, has to
undergo such regular unpleasant period. Shamima, whose
everyday companion is this sort of loathsome experience,
falls in love with a dental-physician Monirul Islam. And
the love-incident between Shamima and Monirul
exhilarates the climactic situation of the novel Shamima
gets pregnant, receives denial from Monirul, undergoes
Menstrual Regulation (MR) and thus experiences the pangs
of life.
This tiresome, loveless experience of Shamima actually
dates far back, when she was a mere girl or rather we
should say, when she was born. With the use of flash
back, Akimun Rahman exposes the stories of the bygone
days of Shamima. Neither her birth was greeted nor at
her adolescence her physical development was accepted
easily. All her liking and disliking were simply
stoppered down under the narrow and harsh
attitude of the society. With the teasing of the mother:
Devilish girl, your birth is the cause of all my
sorrows’, with the ignoring treatment from the father:
‘Don’t create more problems for me’, she begins her
journey of life. Shamima realises that she is unwanted,
unlovable to all. Physical maturity springs more
problems for her. Nantu shows inclination to her small
breasts, the house tutor becomes interested to talk
about the use of brassieres and Monirul Islam becomes
eager to enjoy her physically, rather to give her
spiritual attachment. Monirul avoids all the
responsibilities of Shamima’s pregnancy, becomes rude to
her but doesn’t stop to make sexual contacts. And
afterwards…? The next happening is completely to Shamima,
her own self.
From the mofussil working place Shamima comes to the
capital city and contacts with a doctor and last of all
experiences MR. We see what a terrible incident it
becomes to her. The lengthy, painful physical happenings
make everything of the world yellow and worthless. All
touches of love and beauty vanish from her. Clinical
affairs rapidly throw her to a fathom of darkness.
Consequently her doctor reports that the whole part of
the embryo is not ousted Shamima is to lie down on the
operation table again. In her financial inability, her
physical unfitness crooks everything. Dark hollowness
only hovers all around.
In her second or till now last novel Akimun has advanced
farther. Her narration and language take a stronger form
in it. The plot of the novel and its diction also take
powerful and colourful qualities respectively. In
Raktapunje Genthe Jawya Machhi, we get Parveen as
the protagonist. Parveen is at the age of forty now, a
matriculate primary school teacher, yet unmarried and a
sufferer of human-physical desires through her whole
life.
Parveen is a daughter of a petty but devilish
businessman and a village woman. She has a little
education with a lunatic younger brother and a talkative
and vulgar grandmother. Though Parveen is a girl of a
poor and uneducated background, she does not lack the
desire to have a normal marital life, a husband and much
satisfaction with him. But reality of life never honours
our hopes and desires it goes in its own way. Parveen’s
dreams are also shattered by the storms of life.
How did Parveen begin? She began her girlhood days
through taking care of her brother Shah Alam, who, very
often, created many nasty incidents. Her father did not
have enough money to maintain the family, nevertheless
had women, though the family had an outwardly religious
importance. In such an environment Parveen turns eleven.
Both her brother and she suffered from skin diseases,
which take an unprecedented description in Bangla
literature. Parveen had Rabeya Bubu, a maid of the house
and Jumma Kakka, a fellow brother of his father.
family
on her future education. But the sorry saga is Parveen
never cut the minimum figures in the examination.
Moreover, she suffers from the complexity of being the
eldest among the students in the class. Meanwhile she
discovers the unusual hair in her armpit and abdomen.
Hearing this her grandma orders to make them clear,
though that cleaning is a mammoth task for Parveen, a
novice in this arena. Her innocence in this spiteful
chore present the readers a very obnoxious experience of
life that they lad never gone through in black and
white. The other complexities, which Parveen, feel
deeply, are regarding her unequal breasts, hairs under
nose, and longest middle toe. Thus she only considers
herself as a vile woman of the society.
In the meantime Parveen, once, observes the bed scene of
her parents. One day her father comes back home in the
afternoon very unusually. Due to her mother’s illness
Parveen is sent to her. The virile smell from him makes
Parveen uneasy. An inexperienced desire begins to
torment her. In other situation she also observes her
mother’s pregnant condition and labour hours very
closely. Moreover she has lesbian contact with Rahela
Banu. In addition to that while one day she washes Shah
Alam, he ejects out semen and this incident drowns
Parveen in a more blackish hole. By now Jumma Kakka also
begins to molest her very often.
All on a sudden there comes the opportunity to pass the
barriers of matriculation examination. Jumma Kakka
arranges everything - supplies books for home and copies
in the exam-hall. Parveen overcomes the hurdle and
latter on gets the job of a primary school teacher.
Jumma Kakka tells Parveen many sweet words but at last
leaves for Saudi Arabia and with this Parveen’s first
love-affair is nipped in the bud. Later on Sultan Ali
appears and with no different behaviour he comes close
to Parveen, tells her sweet words, gratifies his
physical lust and marries another girl. And through all
these Parveen remains as a fly drowned in blood and pus.
Akimun has created a very realistic atmosphere of the
outskirts of Dhaka
City where slang language and gestures are not unusual. With
a touch of myth and superstition Akimun sets the past
and present familial and social milieu of Perveen. If
Perveen were a member of the so-called educated family
and cultural society, possibly this demonstration would
not have been so real.
From the above story-lines of the two novels certainly
it becomes obvious to the readers how brave Akimun
Rahman is! She doesn’t hesitate to tell us all that
which others dare not to tell. All the untold tales of
woman-life, their physical realities, their social
backwardness and their personal lives have been exposed
in a very practical point of view in Akimun’s novels.
Someone may raise the question whether if it is very
essential to pick all these affairs in literature. They
can only be answered that nothing in life is worthless
to be a subject of literature if the presentation is
artistic. Moreover everything that is in some way or
other has some connection with life its sorrows and
agonies, joys and smiles can be the part of literature.
As literature is not devoid of real life, Akimun Rahman
has appropriately chosen the subjects of her novels. How
successfully and artistically anything in literature has
been presented is actually the main concern. In that
respect also the author of Purusher Prithibite Ek
Meya and Rakta Punge Genthe Jawya Machhi
should be acclaimed. In context of language and
presentation, plot and imagination Akimun supersedes the
normal practice. It is true that she was not yet able to
formulate a radically individual language and technique
of story telling in her first novel but in regard to her
second one she has proved it wrong. And we must agree
that her efforts demand our admiration from every
respect.