Writing as an Indian or not?
Shamala S. Palaniappan grapples with how her
heritage rears its head in her writing and reading.
"Are
you Indian?"
Living in
Germany, it must have be one of the most common questions I have been affronted
with. My answer has always depended on
the situation, the person asking, and my mood for the day.
That is
usually followed very quickly by, " I looooove Bollywood." At which
point, I put an end to the conversation. Don't get me wrong, I have nothing
against the industry, nor the movies, I am simply not a fan, and just simply
because I am brown and have a name with 13 syllables, does not make me an
instant expert!
I never see
myself, which probably always been one of my virtues and problems in the same
breadth. I have no sense of my height, colour, girth. I can stand amidst
six-foot tall blondes and not know that I am the odd one out.
Because I
really believe our outer shells can never do us any justice. As a writer, it is
my inner self, what I hear, see, feel,
taste, suffer that appear on paper as words, in the hope that the reader will
join my journey for the short while that they remain on the page.
But a
question that presents itself every now and then and I know that I have to
address is my Indian heritage as a writer. I stand in the wake of giants. Names
such as Tagore, Rushdie, Roy, Narayanan, Andal, Adiga, Divakaruni, Mistry,
Desai, the list is endless. Google search Indian authors and the list reels for
miles.
When I read
anything by any Indian author, I feel as if I have come home. It is really
peculiar, as I have never lived in India. But perhaps, I carry the essence of a
5000-odd year soul in me. I hear the
characters speaking directly to me, relating tales that I understand, and
showing me emotions that I immediately comprehend.
Perhaps,
there will always be an umbilical cord that connects me to the mother nation,
and as an individual I do not need to address my ties since there will always
be a connection at a very subliminal level.
I applaud
the written words that India has birthed. I have learnt, lived, and loved every
bit of the country I know only as a tourist through the books. I have read and
reread stories to visualize what life must have been like during different
political eras, through the labyrinth of history.
The voices
of Indian authors that have given life to characters who have traversed the sub
continent from north to south, east to west, coast to coast. I could wax
lyrical on each individual writer, but will save that for another post.
I want to
whisper into the air, the story that wants to be told, the story of an Indian
soul from a migrant family, who cannot stop – migrating. Where does the soul
root itself? Where does the soul find its home?
It is the
story that I am writing. It is the story of searching for answers.
Because for
now, my answer is: I am not sure.
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