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Moinul
Ahsan Saber’s Kobej Lethel
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Moinul Ahsan Saber (b 1958) ranks among the popular
trend of Bangladeshi novels. But he has authored
some books that can be categorised as serious
fiction. His pen has proved potential in both novels
and short stories. As he has penetrated the
socio-political issues of post-liberation war, he
has analysed the inner psychology of human beings
also. Liberation war and its aftermath are very
common themes in his fiction. Kobej Lethel
(Kobej, the Ruffian, 1992) is one such novel where
Moinul Ahsan Saber has tremendously treated an evil
character who, by virtue of the emergence of
liberation turns into a true freedom fighter and
later on again his spirit gets demolished when the
post-liberation Bangladesh began to wheel out its
social-political issues.
Moinul Ahsan Saber started his authorial life with
Porasto Sahish (The Defeated
Horse-Keeper), published in 1982. The later novels
of him that attracted a good number of readers are
Aadmer Jonye Opeksha (Waiting
for Adam, 1986), Pathor Somoy (Stone
Time, 1989), Char Torun Toruni
(Four Teenage Boys and Girls, 1990), Manush
Jekhane Jai Na (Where Man Doesn’t Go, 1990),
Dharabahik Kahini (A Continuous Story,
1992) Opeksha (Waiting, 1992) Tumi
Amake Niye Jabe (You Will Take Me,
1993), Prem O Protishodh (Love and Revenge,
1993), Songshar Japon (Family Life, 1997)
etc. Excluding the above-mentioned ones he has
written a huge number of novels and volumes of short
stories to satiate the thirst of Bangla fiction
readers.
Kobej Lethel is a significant novel by
Saber where he has illuminated the liberation spirit
through an ordinary character – Kobej, who is a
lathial i.e. muscleman by profession. Saber has
shown how an illiterate village muscleman who turns
gradually into a brave freedom fighter and how this
person degrades to a damnable character after the
liberation war and being trapped by the insane
society cooperates the anti–liberation
collaborators.
The story of the novel opens in June 1971 with the
news of the arrival of the Pakistani military
personnel. Though in the later part the earlier
incidents are also presented in flashbacks where we
observe the rising of Hares Master who later on
becomes a commander of the locality in favour of
liberation. In these flashbacks we experience the
heroic activities of Hares. Hares did many things:
he motivated students and common people to voice
against the Pakistan regime and organised meetings
and processions by them. Finally ignoring all
protests from the few pro-Pakistan people on 23
March of the liberation year he hoisted the new flag
of the emerging nation Bangladesh.
The news concerning the arrival of Pakistan Military
personnel creates a tumult among the society. All
the village folk gather around two people – one is
Akmol Prodhan and the other is Romjan Sheikh. These
two people are rivals to each other but they belong
to the same group – they both help the military
people to operate their activities against
liberation spirit.
But what is the role of Kobej? Kobej is a criminal
and commits all his evil activities under the
direction of Akmol Prodhan. Kobej has been jailed
several times and for the last time he came out of
the jail during the liberation fight when the
administrative strata broke down.
During this tumultuous period Akmol Prodhan plans to
eliminate his enemy Romjan Sheikh for which he tries
to encourage Kobej. In various ways he endearours to
convince Kobej in performing the action but the
later does not agree without any protest. Thus the
good spirit of Kobej begins to come up. When the
military personnel come to the village and begin
their heinous activities Kobej is seen very
pondering. The army people kill many villagers as
they appear before them as untrue Muslim, though
they themselves do not know the Suras of the
holy book and they only know, as the officer
asserts: ‘I know how to shoot. I know how to kill
those who are against us.’
- The question of
true and untrue Muslim haunts Kobej very deeply.
The military men identify, with the help of Akmol
Prodhan and Romjan Sheikh, the persons who are in
this way or that uphold the spirit of liberation
war. These heinous military men shoot the elderly
mother of Hares Master, and take away Hares’
sister, a little girl of merely thirteen. On that
day a feast is arranged at Romjan Sheikh’s where
the heads of the village along with Akmol Prodhan
are also invited. In the feast the Pakistani
military officer gets Hares’ sister Haoya married
with a Muazzin of the village, as the rumour goes
she was to be married with that Muazzin. After the
marriage ritual the sepoys shoot the bridegroom
and the bride is ordered to pass the night with
the officer. The next morning the bloody dead body
of Haoya is discovered. All these incidents arouse
the true senses in Kobej.
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Afterwards some more incidents happen. One day the
Mukties i.e. the freedom fighters attack and
kill two Pakistani soldiers who were roaming away
from their camp. Resultantly the rest soldiers get
furious and accelerate their action. By their severe
action they catch hold of two tender-aged boys who
are involved in anti–Pakistan movement. Romjan
Sheikh plays vitally in imposing punishment on and
killing of those two boys for which Kobej reaches
his climactic decision to kill Romjan. The first
part, which is the largest one, of the novel ends
when Kobej replies to Akmol Prodhan’s offer of
giving money or land or anything he can demand,
‘what shall you give me Prodhan? I haven’t killed
Romjan for money.’
The middle part of the novel runs only for about
eighteen pages. In this part we can know that after
killing Romjan, Kobej went across the Bangladesh
border where he happened to meet Hares. Afterwards
he proved himself as a faithful freedom fighter and
last of all after the 16th December they all come
back to the free land.
In this part the readers begin to get the
inconceivable scene that the people of Bangladesh
had to undergo. Those who did not participate
actively in the freedom fight gradually grasp all
the instruments of the administration. The true
freedom fighters surrender their arms and ammunition
but the untrue ones do not. Consequently the untrue
people begin to practise everything like grabbing
others’ property, belittling real freedom fighters
and many other things whatever they liked.
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In
the situation Kobej tries to encourage Hares to
speak violently against all these, but sorrowfully
Hares fails as he does not posses any power. But
Kobej himself can not remain silent. The newly
emerged evil people trap plans to take revenge
against Kobej. As a result a case is filed and Kobej
receives sentence for fourteen years in the murder
case of Romjan.
The last part of the novel has been subtitled as
‘Bortoman Porbo’ i.e., the present phase. This part
deals with the black days of Akmol Prodhan as well
as the revival of him. Prodhan manages to meet the
leaders of the ruling party at the cost of a big
amount of money and gradually begins to tackle
everything about him. He returns back to his
village, manages everything to bring out Kobej from
the jail and establishes Kobej as a great freedom
fighter and he also publicizes that he was the
person to send Kobej to the fight in 1971.
Eventually 1974 comes and during the famine-stricken
day Akmol Prodhan speaks out ‘Pakistan days were
better than now.’
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Kobej Lethel ends
with the scene of a village court where the
accused is Hares Master and on the seat of the
judge Akmol Prodhan is seen. This time Kobej
denounces all his good spirits. In an argument
when Hares Master blames Kobej for announcing
Akmol Prodhan as a freedom fighter and reproaches
him, Kobej jumps over Harej furiously and
reaffirms that Akmol Prodhan was the person who
sent him to the fight.
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We must agree that Moinul Hasan Saber has sketched
the up and fail of Kobej’s spirit in a very
meticulous way. He has not tried to present Kobej
as a good soul anywhere, rather he has delineated
the transformation of his soul and shown how the
surrounding social environment changes one’s inner
mind. Kobej Lethel is not only the
change of Kobej, the person, but it is, in fact, a
meticulous document of the change of our society
after the liberation.
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