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HOME | NEWS | COLUMNISTS | RAJEEV SRINIVASAN |
October 22, 2001
NEWSLINKS |
Rajeev Srinivasan
Triumph of the dispossessed: Naipaul and the enigma of exileI predicted quite confidently a few weeks ago (in my column In Memoriam: Narayan, Greene, Desani and Adams) that V S Naipaul would never win the Nobel Prize in Literature, primarily because of his skin colour, and partly because he is the very antithesis of political correctness: he has picked on the entire Third World, most especially India; and most recently, on Islam. I am delighted that I have been proven so wrong so quickly. Many of us in the diaspora deal with our Fourth-World-ness with our own defence mechanisms: perhaps by embracing the culture and customs of our host country wholeheartedly; perhaps by rooting ourselves wherever we go. I wrote about this in my earliest column on rediff.com, Under two flags: the existential pleasures of the expatriate. I personally have discovered that for me, roots are important; and those roots are in Kerala, in the verdant village of my ancestors. But I do have another home: San Francisco, where I have spent some of my happiest days. Yet, even so, when I listen to the heart-breaking cries of migrating Canada geese on a cool California night, I hear in their cries the whisper, "Exile! Exile!" I realise I am dispossessed, vaastuhaara, deprived, in a way, of self-image, as in the superb Malayalam film of that name by G Aravindan. In the aftermath of Black Tuesday, the alienation that many Indian Americans have felt has increased. The singular feeling of being unwelcome that I used to feel when in Germany or the UK is now present with more vehemence in the US as well. I know Indian women who have started, rather desperately, to wear a bindi to signal that they are Hindus, and hence harmless. There have been many instances of hate crimes against anybody who is not mainstream WASP. The slightly worn-out welcome mat is now truly threadbare. And many of us remain singularly attached to India: the home country exerts a magnetic influence on us. We who are voluntary exiles have given up one of the truly important elements of self-hood, our home, in the not unreasonable pursuit of a fortune: nothing to be ashamed of. Nevertheless, as Vikram Seth said in his perceptive Diwali:
I know the whole world Means exile of our breed Who are not home at home And are abroad abroad.... Naipaul clearly does not feel this way about India, or about his native Trinidad. In fact, in a truly rude gesture, he mentioned only India and the UK in his Nobel acknowledgement speech -- not a word about Trinidad. He has become a true internationalist, even though being so entirely rootless must be a chore. My first encounters with Naipaul's work made me think of Joseph Conrad and, in particular, The Heart of Darkness because Kurtz's "The horror! The horror!" was clearly the feeling that India invoked in Naipaul, as he detailed in An Area of Darkness and A Wounded Civilization. As a young man, I found these books deeply disturbing, I thought in the same category as the naïve but malicious writings of a Katherine Mayo and a Barbara Crossette, full of imperial hauteur about superficialities that do not matter, missing the essence. However, on re-reading those early India books years later, I realised that Naipaul was not wrong: he merely wrote what he had observed, and he had been horribly disappointed. The culture shock must have been brutal. For the India of his imagination and of his ancestral memory, of the resplendent culture, was not visible: it was hidden under the weight of a thousand years of shame and grime. It is this hidden India that he discovered later in A Million Mutinies Now. For Naipaul had grown mellower and wiser, not so impatient. And he realised that there was, below the surface, the stirring of an Indic renaissance: India was renewing herself, yet again, from her own inexhaustible stream of history and civilisation, her native genius. This is cause for celebration; and he said so, instantly gaining the wrath of the 'secular' 'progressives' for his pains. But Naipaul is right: India is capable of infinite rejuvenation, and this is happening once again, right in front of our eyes. The Asian century will become the Indian millennium; the feminine principle and the Empire of the Spirit will vanquish the war-like, patriarchal mindset of the last 2,000 years. I once wrote that I preferred Naipaul's non-fiction to his fiction, and in particular that I liked The Enigma of Arrival. To me, although it is billed as a novel, this is mostly autobiography. It is when I read this book that I understood how well Naipaul has realised the state of exile, and even hallowed it, bearing it as his personal crown of thorns. I could see the enigma of my own arrival in San Francisco -- beloved but never mine -- explained in Naipaul's bittersweet Salisbury. I also realised, to my surprise, that behind the cranky, arrogant, imperial façade was a human being, one who was vulnerable, one who was uncertain, who was terribly insecure. Then, the collection, Letters Between Father and Son, sharpened that feeling: this was a man who owed a great debt of gratitude to his father, and who knew it, immortalising Seepersaud in A House for Mr Biswas. Quite human, our Naipaul has turned out to be, after all. In our time, there have been other exiles writing evocatively about their lost homes: for instance, the poet Pablo Neruda or Ariel Dorfman (who has, incidentally, written about another September 11th: the day of the coup against Salvador Allende). But none writes better or more evocatively about the experience of exile, about being dispossessed, than V S Naipaul. The Nobel is a richly deserved tribute that is an acknowledgement of the 'suppressed histories' of exile, one that speaks to all of us in the floating population of voluntarily and involuntarily displaced persons.
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