Friday, 9 March 2018

Maharishi Abhinavagupt -Tantric perspective and teachings


Pencil sketch by DrMrinalini Thaker

Maharishi Abhinavagupt -Tantric  perspective and teachings 

ABSTRACT - Among  various sages and saints of  Kashmir #Abhinavagupt stands out as a luminous Maharishi, a #shivyogi. The paper is an attempt at re-reading and understanding the #tantric perspective and teaching of a guru who made #Shaivism a way of life, and also a way of merging with the infinite. Traditionally believed to have been a Yoginibhu. Abhinavagupt possessed all the eight Yogic powers explained in #Shastras. The paper discussed his philosophy in Tantraloka and a few qualities that are essential for a tantric. Tantraloka and LantraSar are based on MaliniVijayatantra, (secret knowledge of the MaliniVijayatantra as originally addressed by Siva to Uma). In Tantraloka with minute detail he discusses the development of human consciousness from the grosses state of ignorance to the subtlest state of universal God consciousness. Here he explains the process of creation and evolution of the universe in term of the expansion of Shiva’s consciousness. In details he explains the qualities of a guru, mantras, beej mantras and other rituals that are essential part of Kaul tradition. Nevertheless, understanding Abhinavagupt is an enormous task, and ultimately must be a collective venture.
Key words – #Abhinavagupt, #Kashmir, #Shaivism, #tantraloka.
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 Maharishi Abhinavagupt -Tantric  perspective and teachings

The Kashmir Valley or the Sarhad Desh or the Rishi Vav or the Land of The Blue Forest or the Paradise of Bharatvarsh has borne holy men and women who have preached true mysticism. The Rishivav is situated in the mountain ranges of Himalayas. The term Himalaya as such is a Sanskrit word Hima means snow and Alaya means home. This home of snow has also been a home for wisdom and spirituality. Abhinavagupt paid glowing tributes to Kashmir and calls it the land of learning, beauty and eternal bliss. Today also, in spite of so many terrorist and extremist activities in the valley, this spirituality whispers in the snow-clad mountains and caves of Kashmir.

Rajnish Mishra, in his article “Abhinavagupt and the Shivite tradition of the Sarhad Desh” tells us that the Sarhad Desh, getting erased from the minds of contemporary India is a grim reality. Kashmir, he says is a fading memory. J&K is my hometown and I am optimistic and I fell the current wave of violence in Kashmir seems a temporary phase which will pass away bringing back image of synchronization and love. J & K has a rich legacy of mystics, sages, saints, philosophers and gurus that makes it a paradise of learning. The land also has been a major confluence of various thought streams like the Buddhists, Saivas, Mimansakas, Naiyaikas and the Sufis. While revealing the significance of Kashmir Shaivism our deepest appreciation goes to Lalleshwari, whose teachings give a unique opportunity to have an vision into this mystic philosophy. Other Kashmir saints include Rupa Bhawani, Sheikh Nuruddin, Parmanand, Rishipir, Jeewan Shah,Anandji,  Grata Bab, Ramjoo Tabardar, Vidya Dar, Shankar Razdan, Bhagwaan Gopinath Ji, Kashkak, Sona Kak, Nandlal Ji, Swami Lakshman Joo, Sati Devi and Mathura Devi. Among various sages and saints Abhinavagupt stands out as a luminous Maharishi a shivyogi, who made Shaivism a way of life, and also a way of merging with the infinite.

According to the traditions of Kashmir Saivism, Lord Siva originally established 64 systems, or philosophies, some monistic, some dualistic and some monistic theistic. As the story goes Siva commanded Rishi Durvasas to revive the knowledge. Rishi Durvasas assigned his students to teach the philosophies namely - Tryambaka (the monistic), Amardaka (the dualistic) and Shrinatha (monistic theistic). Thus, Tryambaka at an anonymous time laid a new foundation for Kashmir Saiva philosophy. Subsequently, it is said, Lord Siva Himself felt the need to resolve conflicting interpretations of the Agamas and counter the intrusion of dualism on the ancient monistic doctrines. In the early 800s, Shri Vasugupt was living on Mahadeva Mountain near Srinagar. Tradition states that one night Lord Siva appeared to him in a dream and told him of the whereabouts of a great scripture carved in rock. Upon awakening, Vasugupt rushed to the spot and found 77 clipped sutras engraved in stone, which he named the Siva Sutras. Vasugupt expounded the Sutras to his followers, and gradually the philosophy spread. On this scriptural foundation arose the school known as Kashmir Saivism, Northern Saivism, Pratyabhijna Darshana (recognition school), or Trikashasana (Trika system). Trika, "three," refers to the school's three-fold treatment of the Divine: Siva, Shakti and Soul, as well as to three sets of scriptures and a number of other triads.

Kashmir Saivite literature can be divided into three broad divisions: Agama Shastra, Spanda Shastra and Pratyabhijna Shastra. Agama Shastra includes works of divine origin specifically, the Saiva Agama literature, but also including Vasugupta's Siva Sutras. The Spanda Shastra, or Spanda Karikas (of which only two sutras are left), are both credited to Vasugupta's disciple Kallata (ca 850-900). These elaborate the principles of the Siva Sutras. The Pratyabhijna Shastra's principle components are the Siva Drishti by Vasugupta's disciple, Somananda, and the Pratyabhijna Sutras by Somananda's pupil, Utpaladeva (ca 900-950).

In his illustrious book on Abhinavagupt, Dr. Pandey writes that Abhinavagupt, being a voluminous writer, has to his tribute as many as 41 works. It is likely that he wrote even more than this. His works include Tantraloka, a comprehensive text on Agamic Saiva philosophy and ritual. It was Abhinavagupt whose brilliant and encyclopaedic works established Kashmir Saivism as an important philosophical school. Abhinavagupt known as an incarnation of Bhairava-Nath Shiva was a multitalented genius, a philosopher, rhetorician, and a critic on dramaturgy, who injected new meaning into Shaiva Philosophy. R. K. Jalali rights calls him The Encyclopaedic Scholar. He was a Yoginibhu. Yoginibhu is a typical Kula concept. In the 29th Ahnika called 'Rahasyavidhiprakasana', this concept has been discussed under Dautavidhi (i.e., practice relating to the female messenger). When parents unite identifying themselves with Siva and Sakti giving birth to descendants, the latter who is the Siva-incarnate and instant arsenal of knowledge is designated as Yoginibhu Madhuraja Yogin, a pupil of Abhinavagupt, in the four stanzas entitled the Dhyanaslokah, which give us a vivid picture of his great master. Of his creative powers he writes that, Lord Shree-Kantha-Nath Shiva Himself appeared in Kashmir in the form of Abhinavagupt to enlighten the people. Madhuraja also asserts that Abhinavagupt was, in fact, the incarnation of Bhairava-Nath Shiva. He had achieved the eight great siddhi powers (Aṇimā, Mahima, Garima, Laghima, Prāpti, Prākāmya, Iṣiṭva, Vaśitva) and he also exhibited the six illustrious spiritual signs: constant devotional attachment to Shiva; full attainment of mantra siddhi, control over the five elements, capacity to accomplish any desired end, complete mastery over the science of rhetoric and poetry and the spontaneous dawning of knowledge of all philosophies. About his life, his family and he gurus we learn from the introduction to his Tantraloka and Paratrimshika Vivarana .

Various research scholars have put his works into various categories- dealing with Tankra, aesthetics and philosophy. But as such it is exceptionally difficult to attempt a chronology of Abhinavagupt’s literary output. Well as a unique and radical thinker he shattered to pieces the conventional belief which laid heavy emphasis on caste and gender restrictions in relation to spiritual practice. He took to task those philosophical systems which held the prerequisite that spirituality required rigorous discipline, systems which made the pursuit for enlightenment the legitimate right of a chosen few. He abhorred the idea that spiritual revelation was only possible in a purely monastic surrounding, or that those caught in the householder way of life had to wait till the last portion of life before they could fully give themselves to spiritual pursuits. This idea was best expressed by Abhinavagupt in one of his concluding verses of Patanjali’s Paramarthasara:

O my devotees! On this path of supreme Bhairava, whoever has taken a step with pure desire, no matter if that desire is slow or intense; it does not matter if he is a Brahmin, if he is a sweeper, if he is an outcast, or if he is anybody; he becomes one with Para-bhairava.” (103)

In his Tantraloka (TL) Abhinavagupt refers to ‘Shriparvashastra’ to identify the signs by which a yogi endowed with Shaktipata can be recognized. Jagrathan, the commentator of TL says that Abhinavagupt has all those Sidhis. Madhuraja in his Gurunathaparamarsha testifying to his miraculous spiritual powers says that Abhinavagupt was recognized as the spiritual head of all the Shaiva sects – Siddhanta, Vam, Yamal, Bhairava, Kula, Trika and Ehavira, for his great power and brilliant exposition.

Since Kashmir Shaivism adopts a humanistic approach to life, its consequence to the present times may not be over-emphasized. Its universal character inspires one for both material and spiritual growth. Consequently, moving away from the obviously erroneous maya concept of Advaita Vedanta and Buddhist nihilism, it stresses positive acceptance of material world while pursuing the ultimate goal of ascending to Shiva consciousness. It does not advocate torture of the body or mind, nor does it plead for suppression or forced control but lays stress on sublimation and gradual turning away from the lure of wealth, power and sense pleasures.

Scholars believe that The Tantraloka, had been written after Abhinavagupt attained enlightenment. Furthermore, it is seen by scholars as one of the great accomplishments in Indian mysticism, it weaves together the documents from dozens of authoritative scriptures, into a massive 12 volume encyclopaedic work. While Tantrasara (TS) is a brief prose summary of Tantraloka, which is written in metrical form. Both are based on MaliniVijayatantra, (secret knowledge of the MaliniVijayatantra as originally addressed by Siva to Uma). MaliniVijayatantra, according to the introduction by Madhusadhan Kaul forms the basis of Abhinavagupt's Tantraloka. The text of the MaliniVijayatantra is difficult to be understood due to the various technicalities found in it. But the attempts of Abhinavagupt have left no point unexplained. Many scholars believe that the work belong to the Agama school. The Agamas are believed to be ancient revelations emphasizing the doctrine of liberation through Jnana (knowledge) and Kriya (action). The complete immersion of the duality in unity is the main lesson of the Tantras. The adorer becomes the adored himself. His body is the temple and his soul, the idol in it. He is the high priest not of a god above; around, or below but of his own ever-wakeful self.

It is surprising to understand just how little intellectual attention has been focussed on the study of the Tantras. Very few books on this subject are available for readers. Important scholars and book on Tantras include Bharati's The Tantric Tradition, Goudriaan, Gupta and Hoen’s  Hindu Tantrism , Goudriaan and Gupta's Hindu Tantric and Sakta Literature. In Obscure Religious Cults. S. B. Dasgupta introduces the reader to several tantric schools, including the Sahajiyas and the Natha Yogins, both of which are directly related to Abhinavagupt's Kaulism. Some scholars see the Tankra as originating in Buddhist groups, while others see its origin in Hindu environments. As such, we avoid this controversy, because in all probability it is impossible to solve this historical problem with any degree of certainty. In the Tantra we find rituals and initiations to be centre of religious life. Eventually, the Tantra was something into which one had to be initiated.  Paul Eduardo Muller-Ortega says that, its esoteric nature becomes even clearer in the Kaula Tantra. Not only was the tradition to be entered into by means of a ritual of initiation (diksa), but the religious practice or Sadhana enjoined on the tantric practitioner was itself highly ritualized. In Abhinavagupt's teachings, this ritual is to be progressively "interiorized." As the practitioner proceeds, he becomes less and less dependent on the external puja and penetrates deeper and deeper into the direct experience of consciousness. This penetration is often theoretically described as an ascent through the cakra-s of the mystical physiology and involves a progressive mastery of the pranic forces that sustain both the physical body and the mind.

Shaktipath from the guru is transmitted via four methods – signal, touch, intention and speech. In fact, the guru is always taken to be a Siva incarnate by reason of his condition of enlightenment. However, there are occurrences of a kind of spontaneous initiation by the ‘inner’ guru of the Heart who may appear to the Sadhaka in a vision or a dream and initiate him into the use of the appropriate mantra. Abhinavagupt makes reference to this process of spontaneous initiation in the TL, and describes a direct process of learning from the great Lord who resides in the Heart. In modern times also, we find examples where initiation is done by a Siddha who is no longer in this third dimension. Kathellen Milen as well as Avdhoot Shivanand Swami were initiated by Sai Baba etherically.

As such Paul Eduardo Muller-Ortega further says that the term tantra means simply "extension" or "warp on a loom”. Eventually it was used in literary environments to refer to any book or volume that explains certain doctrines, and finally the term was applied to the doctrines themselves. He further says that we must also guard against outright equations between the tantra and the Saktas, which have been judged by Payne to be "two intersecting but not coinciding circles." The image of intersection is a useful one for describing the nature of the non-dual Kashmir Shaiva tradition, which forms at the crossroads of Shaivism and Tantrism. Things get even more complicated in the case of Abhinavagupt, because he obviously fed at both Shaiva and Sakta sources. Because shakti plays a central role in the Kaula formulations.

Kashmiri Shaivism is classified by Abhinavagupt in four systems viz. Krama system, Spanda system, Kula system and Pratyabijnya system. Briefly speaking Krama deals with space and time, Spanda, with the movement, Kula with the Science of Totality and Pratyabijnya with the school of Recognition. (Ref G.T. Deshpande’s monogram on Abhinavagupt).

In Tantrāloka Abhinavagupt discusses and teaches the entire path of true devotion, recognition, and self-knowledge. Breathing practices, (pranayama), hatta yoga, elaborate explanations Kālacakra, Shakti-Shadana, and secret practices of visualization and meditation, complete instructions regarding initiations and ritual, the entire quantity of tantric mantras explanations of kundalini, nadis, cakras, energies of the Sanskrit alphabet etc. Accordingly, Tantraloka in microscopic detail discusses the development of human consciousness from the grosses state of ignorance to the subtlest state of universal God consciousness. In his first chapter Abhinavagupt states clearly that he was impelled by Lord Shiva, his masters, and his closest disciples, to compose Tantraloka. In verse 284 of that same chapter he states:

That person who has read, achieved and understood the depth
of these thirty-seven chapters becomes one with Bhairava-Lord Shiva.

In composing Tantraloka Abhinavagupt drew inspiration from the Malinivijaya tantra. In shedding light on the Malinivijaya, Abhinavagupt gives profound and detailed descriptions of both spiritual practice and theoretical philosophy. Thus, there is nothing to parallel these writings in existence today.

As per Abhinavagupt’s philosophy Moksha, in the tantric sense of the word, is the unfolding of powers brought about by the self-realization. To a real Tantric, birth and death are phenomena of God’s own creation. He finds gratification as much in the one as in the other (cf. Bhairavastotra of Abhinavagupt). He is the Bhairava whose name strikes terror into the destructive agencies and at who’s will the world lives and moves. His only object of faith is that death has significance only for those who are subject to mortality and not for those who have risen superior to its idea by their living belief in the deathlessness of the soul (cf. Tantraloka p. 192, vol. I)

A Tantric, like the one believing in the Vedas, gradually marches on the spiritual path, comes to feel his close empathy with nature. To him both the living and the non-living are glowing with divinity. The wonderfully glorious presence on divinity puts an end to all his animal tendencies and inspires him to fulfil his dignified mission. To him the world is not an illusion, not a Maya of the Vedantists, and therefore he tries to make himself and his surroundings happy to the best of his ability. Abhinavagupt believes that the individual soul is a smaller version of Shiva, the supreme soul. And the aim of an individual is to merge with the infinite soul.

In the in 4th ahnika of TL concept of japa is found. In certenity we can that the main theme with which the Tantras are concerned is the power of Mantras. Mantras have been a distinguished feature of Hindu tradition. In MantraSadhana we have reference of three types of mantras – Vedic mantras, Trantrok Mantras, and Beej mantras. Shakti Shadhana is based on Trantok Mantras. In tantric Shadhana the trantok mantras are a step ahead, here language becomes a tool of production as well as prediction. The Trantras thus construct a virtual connection between language and reality within the text of the mantra itself.

Mantras, as the Tantrists maintain, are certain scientifically arranged formulas which, if practised according to the Tantric precepts, bring about certain results conducive to the fulfilment of utterer's wishes. Mantras are a mysterious formula to awaken the Kundalini. But when the Kundalinni Shakti is awakened a guru is needed for handling it, guru becomes the adhara. Abhinavagupt points out that a shadhak should never do Shakti-Sadhana without receiving the blessing of a guru in form of Diksha. As per tantric tradition a Guru should be self-luminous, who merges with Shiva by attaining the cosmic state of Shivaconsciousness.

As per Tara Pradeepa in Bhihat Tantra Saar, in Kakiyug the Mantrakshara (letter of mantras) should be accepted as Devata and Devata should be accepted as Guru. Subsequently, we should not try to differentiate between the three (Mantra, Devata and Guru). The sole object of mantra is to attain liberation. But only Siddha-Mantras given by a guru can bring desired result. Success of mantras depends on dedication of the Sadhaka, the inner potency of the Siddha-Mantra and grace of the Guru. Each and every Mantra is a living energy in itself and should in no way be mistaken for a mere Varna or letter. Thus, repeated chanting of a Mantra (japa), if practiced in complete purity of spirit, leads the Sadhak to fusion with Him (Shiva). Abhinavagupt says that Japa is an intense and repeated synthetic awareness of the essential nature of Shiva, of the self which is supreme word. Japa is associated with the vibration of prana. He also discusses the divine model of japa taking it to a higher dimension- identity with God.

Abhinavagpt also mentions Beej Mantras. From puranic times mantras have been locked – use of coded language. They have to be unlocked by a Guru, as an ordinary mortal neither has the knowledge nor the ability to unlock it. In present day, few Siddha have the knowledge and power to unlock the mantras, Beej mantras work only after the power of these verse are awakened. These beej (seed) is the most distinctive feature of a tantric mantra. Beej Mantra means a mantra which is usually of one syllable. Basic beej mantra is Om and it is further extended into the following types of beej - yog beej, tejo beej, shanti beej and raksha beej, which are respectively known as aim, hreem, sreem, kreem, kleem, dum, gam, glaum, lam, yam, ram etc. Without Guru’s grace it is impossible to receive, handle and experience the infinite energy of these Beej mantras. In Agam-Nigam it is mentioned that a mantra can only become Sidha with Bhootleepi. For example, in Siddha Kunjika Stortam we have -
अं कं चं टं तं पं यं शं वीं दुं ऐं वीं हं क्षं
धिजाग्रम् धिजाग्रं धिजाग्रम् धिजाग्रंत्रोटय त्रोटय दीप्तं कुरु कुरु स्वाहा ॥ १

Here awaking of varga is a major factor.eg A varga (A, Aaa----) Ka Varga ( ka, kha..) to awaken a mantra it also mentions 27 jap secrets, which inculd dhohan, aakarshan, amrutikaran etc.

ॐ ऐं ह्रीं क्लीं चामुण्डायै विच्चे ।
ॐ ग्लौं हुं क्लीं जूं सः ज्वालय ज्वालय ज्वल ज्वल प्रज्वल प्रज्वल ऐं ह्रीं क्लीं चामुण्डायै विच्चे ज्वल हं सं लं क्षं फट् स्वाहा ॥ ५॥
In the above manta -
ग्लौं is used for cleaning debris
क्लीं is used for attraction
जूं सः is used for purification or Amrutikaan s

Paul Eduardo Muller-Ortega says that, the symbol of the Heart plays a central role in the tantric writings of Abhinavagupt. He says that Abhinavagupt's religious vision is intimately bound up with the symbol of the Heart on three important levels. The first is the reality of the Heart as Siva, which refers to the intimacy and transcendence of Siva in the Heart. The key term here is anuttara-tattva, that is, the principle of the Ultimate. The second level involves Abhinavagupt's teachings about the methods and techniques that must be employed in order to approach the Ultimate reality of the Heart and transform it into a living human reality. The most direct and effortless method of realization is known as the Sambhavopaya.The third level intimates the nature of the state of realization of the Heart. This process of realization is termed hrdayangamibhuta, which literally means "becomes something that moves in the Heart, "and can be more simply translated as "experiential replication."The state of realization is often called Bhairavata - the condition of Bhairava.

I agree with Paul Eduardo Muller-Ortega that even today, after so many years of research by a handful of excellent scholars both in India and in the West, Abhinavagupt’s importance is only beginning to be recognized. A figure who is perhaps second in importance and influence only to the great Sankaracarya is barely mentioned in the standard surveys of Indian thought. We have something to learn from the planet’s most ancient tradition about how to nurture the capacities that will help us develop a peaceful, healthy, and happy society, a society in which learning is engaged in for sheer and utter pleasure, and for the genuine welfare of humanity.

Accordingly, Abhinavagupt teaches us two important things - to become fully human and to become fully divine. He does not believe in two separate absolute consciousnesses. Purush and Prakriti are not separate, but two ends of one individual spectrum. Abhinavagupt is not only philosopher, a Maharishi, but through his encyclopaedic contribution and multidimensional personality he transforms himself into a living Mantra (re-reading, re-reading), Trantra (a system for transformation) and a Yantra (an instrument that gives energy) for peaceful and blissful future of Bharatvarsh and humanity at large.


Reference from -
1.     Cultural Heritage of Kashmiri Pandits By Kulbhushan Warikoo
2.     The Philosophy of Sadhana: With Special Reference to the Trika Philosophy of Sadhana with special reference to trika philosophy of kasmir By Debabrata Sen Sharma
3.     From Early Vedanta to Kashmir Shaivism: Gaudapada, Bhartrhari, and Abhinavagupt By N. V. Isaeva
4.     Abhinavagupt - the Philosopher by Prof. K. N. Dhar
5.     The Triadic Heart of Siva , Kaula Tantricism of Abhinavagupt in the Non-Dual Shaivism of Kashmir by Paul Eduardo Muller-Ortega.

Published in - 
AYUDH – international referred journal ISSN: 2321-2160       
UGC Approved no. 47772
33rd Issue February Volume – 1 & 2, 2018  Page – 22 to 27.

Wednesday, 28 February 2018

Veer Savarkar- the thought

                                         


Veer Savarkar- the thought





Abstract - Veer Savarkar's personality is an integral mixture of three very different traits ­ revolutionary, poet, and intellectual reformer. It is generally held that Savarkar’s life was a tragedy because he was too far ahead of his time. But during the last two three decades condition in the country is changing rapidly. The paper discusses these three traits of veer Savarkar and shows how this dynamic person is not just an individual but a thought that can change and guide our society.
Keywords – Veer Savarkar, revolutionary, poet, writer, reformer.
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Veer Savarkar- the thought
Mr. Barack Hussein Obama the first African-American President of USA in his presidential address (2009) says -
‘We are in the midst of a season of trails....Yet the story of America is one of adversity, reconciliation in the face of discord, and we know that there is purpose for everything under heaven. ....this legacy is not simply a birthright, it is a glorious burden!
A nation that has been in existence for just two centuries considers its history as a glorious burden! And we, who are the inheritors of a timeless civilization, feel history to be a burden. Friends, I strongly feel that it is time to redefine and rewrite history. In redefining and rewriting history from an Indian Perspective, we need to look at Savarkar's concept of history and his writing of history, which includes facets of human life- material, moral and spiritual, and not just dates.

Veer Savarkar's personality is an integral mixture of three very different traits ­ revolutionary, poet, and intellectual reformer. It is generally held that Savarkar’s life was a tragedy because he was too far ahead of his time. But during the last two- three decades condition in the country is changing rapidly. Thoughts of Savarkar, which were yesterday rejected because they were thought to be too radical, are today finding growing acceptance. Savarkar's prophetic words, I shall prove a Prophet, are proving true. The time has come for Savarkar The Thought. It is a gentle breeze today but it will be a tornado tomorrow. The paper focuses on Savarkar as a writer and the thoughts and philosophy that originated from his various writings.

Swatantrya-Veer Vinayak Damodar Savarkar was born in 1883, which is 134 years ago. Today he is remembered as one of the foremost revolutionaries of the Indian struggle for independence. He had a multifaced personality. He was not only a fearless revolutionary but also a great orator and a writer with an unparalleled literary gift for prose and poetry. From his school days, Savarkar was a voracious reader. He had a sharp penetrating intellect and an excellent memory. His literary contribution includes newsletters, articles translation works, historical and biographical novels, and poems. He went to Pune in 1902 and was a student of Fergusson College. At this junction of his life, he was greatly influenced by Tilak and Mr.S.M.Paranjape. In 1906 he was awarded a scholarship and left for London. From London, he started sending newsletters to Marathi papers at home. A published collection of these newsletters runs into 122 printed pages. He also wrote articles in Gaelic America published by Irish patriots in New York. These articles were translated in Germany, French, Portuguese, Chinese and Russian.

Savarkar was a revolutionary, an outstanding orator, and an enthused historian. Well, it would be right to say that, he was a maker of history as well as a writer of it, who used history as a means of national awakening. G.S.Sardesai, the famous historian of Baroda, once said to Savarkar himself, ‘We are after all just narrators of history, but you are a real maker of history’. He was a historiographer who could use history for guiding the nation. His writing of history is not just a collection of facts and dates, not an intellectual dissection or distortion of the past events, but his approach to history is positive and creative and Indian. The Indian educator, Madura, says –

We have had the Muslim view; the European view; the Missionary view and yet no Hindu view. Mr. Savarkar's dramatic presentation serves as a healthy antidote’.

Savarkar wrote books like Joseph Mazini (Biography of an Italian revolutionary), 1857 Che Swantantra Samar (The first Independence struggle of India of 1857), Shikhancha Itihas (History of the Sikhs), Mazi Janmathep (A narration of his jail term in the Andamans), Sanyast Khadga (a play), Kaala Pani (Black Water), Mala Kay Tyache (What is it to me), Hindutva: Who is a Hindu? and Gomantak. Savarkar’s three plays include UsshaapSanyastakhadga, and Uttarkriya. They are notable for their dialogues and dramatic content. Savarkar also wrote three books on history. They are The Indian War of Independence 1857Hindu padpaadshaahi, and Six Glorious Epochs. These books disclose his deep learning and insight into the history, desire for detail, and inspirational but well-researched content.
No doubt his first important book was 1854: The First Indian War of Independence. This book proved to be a work that inspired the whole nation. His pen was like a Sword. He penned his 1857, sitting right in the lion's den i.e. in London. This book was a history bomb that aimed to blast the enemy. In this book, for the first time, we see an Indian approach to history. The events of 1857, which were called Mutiny by the English historians were given the name of freedom struggle by Savarkar. His '1857', literary became a gospel of revolution. Finding it impossible to get the original Marathi text printed anywhere in India or outside, because of the ban by the British Government it was translated into English and was smuggled out. Thanks to Savarkar the sense of Mutiny was itself changed. The change of value is the first thing that comes to mind when we think about Savarkar's approach to history. However, it is our tragedy that it took us 50 years, to change the word Mutiny in our history textbooks. For the same reason, he wrote The History of the Sikhs. He wanted to make the Sikh soldiers in the British Indian Army conscious of their duty towards their motherland. His objective in writing history was to inspire his people.

In Andaman jail, he used to keep notes by scratching with a nail on the walls of his cell. All this soul – enthralling poems runs into some 13,500 lines. In one of his poems Saagara he writes –

‘I miss the love of the mango tree, the flowers in my garden back home the blossoming creepers and the blooming rose… I feel desolate…
 Oh Ocean, I am pining for her… Take me back to my motherland
Oh Ocean, I am pining for her…
In Jayostute (Victory to you!) he writes -
‘Death for your, oh motherland, is life and life without you is death’
At this time this is a literary truth. Savarkar lived the poem.  No doubt his legacy in form of some of his poems will always motivate generations to come. After his release from prison, Savarkar wrote about his experience in jail in the book titled My Transportation for life, the book no doubt is a classic deserving an honored place in world literature.

While he was serving his term of imprisonment in the Ratnagiri Jail, he wrote Hindutwa a book born out of his deep meditation and thinking of many long years of observing the society. Here in this book, he has traced the glorious history of the term Hindu right from Vedic times. He convincingly and with solid proof, shows how the term Hindu was used both by the ancient Hindus and contemporary foreigners to mean the Hindu Rashtra and not a Hindu community as it is mistakenly or maliciously used today.

After his conditional release from prison at Shirpur - Ratnagiri, he wrote his famous book Hindu Pad-Padashshi. This book stands apart. Savarkar himself in the forwarding to this book says that, the Maratha movement transcends the limits of provinciality and that it deserves Pan-Hindu importance and treatment. Later on, after Independence, he wrote his famous Bharateeya Jtihasted Saha Soneri Pane in Marathi. The book has been translated into Hindi (Lokhitt Parashan Uttar Pradesh), English (Six Glorious Epochs of Indian History), and other languages. This book was written with the purpose of infusing pride in the Hindu psyche and dispersing the defeatist psychology drilled into our minds by foreign historians.
In the first four chapters of Six Glorious Epochs of Indian History, Savarkar explores the myth that Alexander was the world conqueror as he could not even cross the western border of India. While in the fifth Glorious Epochs the diabolic nature of the two-pronged religious-political aggression of the Muslims is explained at great length along with its ultimate downfall and the persistence of the Hindu warriors and the Hindu society in spite of the atrocities of the Muslim rulers. While in the Sixth Glorious Epoch Christian domination under the British leadership is shown to have met its end. Savarkar never spares them. He blames them for their acts and for not understanding the events happening around them in their proper perspective. He knew that the foreign Historians were misguiding the nation and the politicians were also doing the same.
Dr. R.C.Majumdar in his History and Culture of the Indian People in his preface to the VI- volume The  Delhi Sultanate(1960) says –
‘The real and the effective means of solving a problem is to know and understand the facts that give rise to it, and not to ignore them by hiding the head, ostrich-like into the sands of fiction.’
This insight Savarkar had. He could not close his eyes to the way Hindu interests were sacrificed by our national leaders for appeasing the minorities. Dr. Majumdar further says-
‘A fear of wounding the susceptibilities of the sister community and historians, and not only prevents them from speaking out the truth but also bring down their wrath upon those who have the courage to do so’.
From the age of eighteen to eighty, Savarkar had been writing on history. But he was neither a mere compiler of historical accounts for the students nor was he interested in fixing dates and places and such other details, as the research scholars in history generally are. He was essentially a commentator of history, throwing new light or adding new insight to particular happenings and characters of history. But yet he never perverted nor did he tamper with the historical facts. He accepted the proven historical facts as they were. He studied them carefully, understood their antecedents and values, and developed a deep insight to it. He looked upon history as a trustworthy friend and guide for future course of action.
Savarkar's views on How to read and write history- particularly by a Hindu Sanghatanist are in Marathi. Here he advises the reader to take a broad sweep of historical account right from the earliest times to the present day, to understand carefully how the Aryans spread over the whole of India, assimilating different cultures into a single all India Hindu culture.  In his opinion, the writing or reading of history should not become dry, unresponsive, valueless, and emotionless. The history he feels should be looked upon as a great panorama of life, which should thrill us, chill us as the occasion demands. The ultimate aim of a historian, he believes is to give value-based historical perspectives to a historical event, a perspective that is befitting the majority and its sentiments and culture.

Consequently, in a nutshell, we can conclude that Savarkar believed in a value-based Historical approach. Arun Shourie in his Eminent Historian (1998) tells the same. We should not allow any more mischief with our history. The great philosopher Arnold Toynbee says –
Today we are living in the transitional chapter of the world's history, but it is already becoming clear that a Western beginning will have an Indian ending if it is not to end in the self-destruction of the human race’
 I would like to conclude with Savarkar's lines –
Those historians who deny this basic fact of history are fooling themselves and are also fooling others. They have yet to learn the real history.
112(1967, Organizer).

Accordingly, history written by political motive should be rewritten, redefined, and rediscovered with a spiritual reality and splendid ideas which coalesce into a common identity. Savarkar was a warrior, a reformer, a philosopher and a writer, a multi-faced person. This multidimensional person is not an individual, but thought, that will guide the Hindu society for years to come.

References -
 Bhararia Itihas  Ke Cha Swarnim  Pusth by V.D.Savarkar, Lookhitt
Prakashan, Lucknow,1989.
2.    Bharatia Itihas Kaa Veekruticaran by R.P.Sharma,Hindu Writers Forwm,New
Delhi,2007
Veer Savarkar -A Profile of a Prophet  by J.D.Joglekar

Published in - International Journal of Research and Analytical Review.
E ISSN 2348-1269
Print ISSN 2349-5138
impact factor 3.215
volume 5, Issue 1, Jan-March, 2018.


Sunday, 31 December 2017

The immigrant experience in Arranged Marriage, by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni




The immigrant experience in Arranged Marriage, by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni


ABSTRACT - #Arranged Marriage (1995) is #Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s debut assortment of short stories. The collection has 11 short stories, and majority of the stories deal with the immigrant experience along with the social- cultural encounter that an Indian experiences when he moves towards the west, which is an important theme in the mosaic of American Indian culture. The paper focuses on some of the short stories in this collection and analyzes them from different perspectives. It also reflects on the impact of the cultural dis articulation on the protagonist and studies whether they end dejected and disillusioned or they learn to acclimatize and accept their conditions. It also evaluates their attitude and approach to life, whether they abandon their conventional values or preserve them.

key words -  #Arranged marriage # Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni # Indian Experience # women writers # short story

Published in - humani.philica.com  ISSN 1751-3030 

The immigrant experience in Arranged Marriage , by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni.

Women writings and its evaluation has attracted a large number of women authors and critics over the last two decades and has acquired a substantial space and size in the history of Indian writing in English. Although India has a history of ancient civilization, the surfacing of the first written record of women’s literature in India has been traced back to the advent of Buddhism in the early 16th century. According to A.K.Ramanujan, who has translated most of the poems of the Sangam age, the disparity in gender is apparent in the way women have written about their experiences. The rise of Islam in India brought an innovative set of experiences and influences in women’s literary world.

However, in the18th century due to political and social reasons women writing declined. Again, in the late 19th century with the rise of the reformist movement we see women contributing in all spheres of society. This led to a fresh stage in the development on women literature in India. The initial women writings were from the pen of Savitribai Phule and Pandita Ramabai Saraswati. Their writings were aimed at social reform. With Sarojani Naidu, we see a second trend of women writers, who were fluent both in mother tongue and in English. The 20th century women writers, move towards a more complex theme. Writers like Mahashwetadevi pooled women’s causes with political movement, while Shashi Deshpande in her Binding Vines, builds a platform of collective female experience.

Women writers of India in the post-Independence era have in their works originality, authenticity, conflict and the native flavor of the soil. Shashi Despanda, Arundhati Roy, Anita Desai, Kamala Das, Kamala Markandaya – only to name a few have a hold of their one. Over the years with the alteration in political, social and economical scenario, women’s literature by Indian women living in India and abroad have evolved to demonstrate some universal experiences that question the persistent face of patriarchy, the paradoxes, ambiguities and the contradictions of old and new, convention and change, ethics and freedom.

Prominent Indian-American women writers include Chitra Bannerjee Divakaruni, Anjana Appanchana, Padama Hejmadi, Meena Alexander etc. In an article published by the Indian Embassy in 1999, Titles Women Writers of the Diaspora Create a Big Impact, Chitra Bannerjee Divakaruni says that many of us articulate in our books the deepest fear and trauma faced by women in India and here and show them emerge, at least in many cases, as stronger and self – reliant women. Some of our women characters are good role models for women readers and women activists.

Chitra Bannerjee Divakaruni’s Arranged Marriage is an assortment of 11 short stories. Her work belongs to the class termed as expatriate literature. It won an American Book Award, a PEN Josephine Miles award and a Bay Area Book Reviewers Award and went on to become a bestseller. Adopted as a text in many college classes, the collection focuses on women from India caught between two worlds. The paper focuses on some of the short stories in this collection and analyzes them from different perspectives. It also reflects on the impact of the cultural disarticulation on the protagonist and studies whether they end dejected and disillusioned or they learn to acclimatize and accept their conditions. It also evaluates their attitude and approach to life, whether they abandon their conventional values or preserve them.

Arranged Marriage (1995) is Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s debut collection of short stories. The collection has 11 short stories, and majority of the stories deal with the immigrant experience along with the social- cultural encounter that an Indian experiences when he moves towards the west, which is an important theme in the mosaic of American Indian culture. Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni was born in 1957 in Calcutta (India). In childhood, she attended a convent school and has a bachelor’s degree from the University of Calcutta. In 1976 at the age of 19, she immigrated to The United States. In America, she continued her studies and earned a master’s degree in English from Wright States University in Dayton, Ohio. Afterward she completed her PhD. from the University of California at Berkeley. To pay for her education Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni did a variety of small jobs in America which includes babysitting, selling commodities in an Indian Boutique, slicing bread in a bakery and washing instruments in a science lab. Today she lives with her husband and two children and teaches creative writing at the University of Houston. She is an award winning author and poet. Her works are widely known moreover they have been translated into 13 languages.

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni is also a lively social worker. She became engrossed in women’s problems when she went to America and saw the troubles faced by so-called black in a country of so-called white. In 1991, she established Maitri – a hotline for South Asian women who are sufferers of domestic cruelty and abuse. It was her involvement with Maitri, that ultimately led her to write Arranged Marriage – a work that includes stories about the abuses and bravery of immigrant women. A good number of stories in this collection are based on the lives of Indian immigrants that she has dealt with. Her other works also namelyThe Mistress of Spices, Sisters of My Heart etc are set in India and America and features Indian-born women  sandwiched between old and new world ethics. She writes with insight and consideration, in a language that is expressive as well as uncomplicated. In all her stories, she takes the readers deep into the many-layered worlds of her characters, the world that is crammed with terror, optimism, and discovery. In an interview in The telegraph, March 13th 2005 she says that women in particular respond to her work because she is writing about them – women in love, women in difficulty, women in relationship. She wants people to relate to her characters so that they can feel their joy and pain, since it will be harder to be prejudiced when they meet them in real life.

In the present collection of short stories Arranged Marriage (1995) the author, skillfully tells stories about immigrant Indians who are both modern as well as trapped by cultural transformation, who are struggling to shape out an identity of there own in a unknown land. The Indian expression in America and the clash between the culture of the native country and the adopted country in which one has to live – is the focal point of most of the stories in this collection. The stories in this collection also focus on and exactly capture the experiences of the immigrant Indian. Divakaruni herself is an immigrant. Consequently, she seems to have a first-hand knowledge and experience about life in India as well as that of USA. It is therefore customary that she draws heavily for the plots of her short stories upon Indian women, Indian beliefs and the changing principles of the Indian immigrants, especially women as they are exposed to the western ideas and values. It is the social-culture encounter that has made Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni a promising literary celebrity and her books an instantaneous success.

It seems that majority of the protagonists in Arranged Marriage face the problem of cultural displacement. The characters are caught in the web of dualism of convention versus modernization. This displacement gives birth to situations and troubles that leave them befuddled and helpless. Thus, the protagonists of Divakaruni are trapped between the two ideologies and are desperately trying to find a way out. The dilemma is either to break away from or to adapt with the changing social cultural scenario. Divakaruni says that she writes to help unite people by breaking old stereotypes. The stories in this collection addresses issues such as racial discrimination, inter racial relationship, discrepancy, abortion and divorce.

Divakaruni in an interview to The Hindustan Times January 31, 2011 says that she explore complex Diaspora identities. She further states that many of us articulate in our books the deepest fear and trauma faced by women in India and America-and show them emerge, at least in many cases as stronger and self-reliant women. All characters in this collection of short stories are women of potency and energy, who in some way or other question the value and tradition of the age that has ended. Sumita in Clothes, Aunty Pratima in Silver Pavement, Shona in The World Love, Meena in A Perfect Life, Manisha in The Maid Servants Story, Meena and Abha in Affair, Asha and Mrinal in Meeting Mrinal – are women torn between the two worlds. The visualization of the future may not be clear to them but it is accurate. From the first story of this collection Bats to the last story Meeting Mrinal the women protagonists constantly try to strive a balance between the old conventional beliefs and their new life in America.

Chitra Divakaruni questions the basic man-woman relationship in Indian society, which is essentially a patriarchal society. Simone de Beavvoir in her The Second Sex tells that marriage is the destiny tradition offered to women by society. Finding a suitable match for their daughter is the sole concern of many parents in our society. This task of finding a suitable match is so inherent in the Indian culture that it is believed that a girl’s life begins and ends with marriage. Similarly, the sati-savitri and patiparmeshwarsyndrome is also deeply rooted in Indian psyche. In the short story, The Clothes Sumita’s marriage is fixed, or arranged with Somesh. Sumita surrenders to Somesh only for the reason that she fells that it is her wifely duty. However when after marriage Somesh goes back to America, Sumita feels that she is not able to recall Somesh’s face. Chitra Divakaruni shows the readers the paradox of an arranged marriage. Again, Sumita who has constantly been fed on traditional ideas feels that it is her moral duty to act like a good Indian wife…. serving tea to her mother-in-law’s friends… covering her head with her sari…. not addressing her husband by his name, etc.

Sumita’s life in America is not different from the life led by other daughter-in-laws in Indian society of these days. Her life as she says in the short story is frozen. Her life is a world so small, a glass world and America rushes by. It is this syndrome of playing sati-savitiri, which does not allow her to be herself. In this story Somesh, Sumita’s husband is also trapped into the deeply rooted cultural bashfulness. He is very much conscious about the American way of life – of impartiality and emancipation. Nevertheless, the fear to break the customary knobs does not allow him to articulate his views or disagree with his parents. He does not have the courage to break the sravan-image that is present in Indian traditional male. He is not prepared to live disjointedly from his parents as he feels that he could never abandon them (parents).He is stuck between his love for his wife and his devotion towards his parents. The story reaches its climax when Somesh is murder by some unknown persons. This is an enormous shock to Sumita as she realizes that her life has also ended with Somesh’s death. She further realizes that her life, her happiness, her sorrows, her clothes, her habits etc. had never been her own but always had been for her husband and his family. At the end of the story, we see Sumita standing in her bedroom and seeing her image in the mirror. Tradition asks her to wear white however, the mirror, as personified by the heart, shows a different image. Sumita feels that America is calling her .America that emblematically stands for liberty, gratification, and existence. She rejects what fate has given her and decides that she does not want to become a Dove with cutoff wings. She visualizes a new independent woman in the mirror. Thus in this story she is able to reject the widow’s clothes and position that the society and the family customarily imposes on a women.

The first story in this collection of short stories is Bats. This story is quite opposite to what Clothes is. The protagonist in this short story is totally engulfed by the traditional ties. The protagonist in the short story is a victim of domestic violence. She is constantly beaten by her husband and desperately wants to escape. However, her traditional ties are so strong that she cannot break from the myth of pati-parmeshwar. Her life with her husband had been a hell furthermore, she escapes to her native village with her child. Here in the village the atmosphere is reasonably good, the open sky, the river, and the trees - all that a child requires for a holistic development is present in the village. However, a letter from her husband and a small promise, a bit of gesture of love is enough for her. Consequently, she returns to her husband and this time she hopes that life will change. Nevertheless, she does not realize that by flying somewhere else she may be secure. However, we are acquainted with the fact that life will not change, her miscalculations concerning her husband may lead her and her son’s life into another hell-like situation.

 In the story, Affairs Meera and Asha are two characters that are poles apart. Meena feels that marriage for her is a miscalculated blunder of life. Asha also feels the same however her way of expression is different .Meera and Asha, both in their own way are in search of themselves- in search of their identity. On the other hand, Srikant and Ashok – the male characters in the short stories are also suffocated with their conventional roles. Srikant – Meena’s husband knows and accepts the fact that they (Srikant and Meena) are not made for each other. He agrees with the fact that Meena is a falcon and he is a penguin, they do not match each other. Meera also knows this; nevertheless, the traditional ties do not allow her the choice to be herself. For her, her friend Asha she is an icon of Indian traditional womanhood. Her predicament is that she appreciates the qualities that she sees in Asha, but she cannot be like her. As such, she is totally westernized and self-centered in her approach to life and its problems. Nevertheless, she wants Asha’s sanction, that is to say appreciation of tradition that is personified in the character of Asha, as she sees her. This mind-set of Meera is quite surprising for Asha, for her Meera is a personification of America and what America stands for. She does not understand why the beautiful Meera whom she envied, admired, and adored wants her approval.

On the other hand, Marriage between Asha and Ashok is also on an edge. They feeling of the empty acheis always felt by both. Meena’s disenchantment with her marriage has helped Asha to realize that time has changed her priorities of life. She feels that convention gives no scope for transform. Her priority until now had been her husband and her family, which resulted in a state of depression. She realizes that the old rules are not always right, not here and not even in India. To move on in life old cuffs have to be broken. Asha reflects back and she accepts the fact that her own individuality has no place in the system of marriage. Here gender roles clash with individual goals. Here Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni questions the basic man-woman relationship. She points out that marriage under such circumstances is not a union of two souls and individuals as it should idyllically be, however it is a burden where evolution is not possible. Asha has matured with the experiences and with maturity, she welcomes with open arms all that she has deprived herself of.

To preserve equilibrium between old traditions and new requirements is a tricky task, but with the shifting times, this has become necessary. A radical change is taking place round us and most of the writers of today are aware about it. The solution to the problem may or may not be in sight, but the enormity of the clash is surely felt. In the short story Meeting-Mrinal, both Mrinal as well as Asha feel the conflict. Asha is a simple and traditional homemaker, while Mrinal is an unmarried worked woman - slim and fashionable. Asha wants to be what Mrinal is – an independent modern women. She wants to free herself from the traditional role of a wife, of a mother, of a daughter-in–law. Contrary to Asha’s expectations, Mrinal fells that Asha has all good things in her life –things that she wishes and envies in life. Mahesh is also feeling the social cultural conflict. He is also caught between the web of tradition and modernism. Mahesh is also feeling the wave of change. All his life, he tells Asha that he has been doing what people wanted, being dutiful son, a responsible husband, and father. Finally, he finds the person who makes him feel alive and happy. This happiness may also be a delusion. Nevertheless, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni wants to show that the Indian male is also feeling the load of convention. They also wish to break away from the typecast roles that the society has allotted them.

Indian men who leave their native country and drift to USA also feel the conflict between traditional and modern way of life. In the short story Doors the author talks not only about Preeti’s sensitivity, but also about Deepak’s. Preeti is a girl who is born and educated in US, while Deepak, as Preeti’s mother describes him is a man straight out of India. She is completely against such type of marriage, as she knows that Indian and America stand for different values. In Indians families, ‘I’ is not a concern, but in America, privacy is a part of life. Preeti’s mother fells that the Indian concept of family is an old concept and that is why she says that Deepak is a person with pre – historical values. However, to begin with Preeti and Deepak are happily married. They consider that their marriage to be based on mutual esteem, it is something more than the traditional marriage, but ultimately this proves to be a misconception. Raj a cousin from India comes to stay with them. Deepak is quite happy with Raj. However, their socialization is a burden for Preeti as she faces a problem of a different kind. She is not able to recognize the joint family and the extended family values that an Indian has. She is much used to the American ides of privacy. Here the conflict is between “I” and “WE”. Preeti is not able to and does not even try to appreciate the difference between the two cultures. On the other hand, Raj is also not able to understand the meaning of privacy that Preeti desires in their marriage. The close – door system of America is like a riddle to Raj, as he has never seen any door being shut in a traditional Indian family. In due course, Preeti decides to depart from Raj and the door finally is clicked shut. The title of the story is also quite remarkable. In an inter-country marriage when values change, a person has to adapt to new values. However, when this flexibility is not there, marriages are predestined to fail. In this short story, Preeti and Deepak are not able to recognize this fact of life and thus they close their doors. Little more understanding of each other’s value would have led to better appreciation, esteem, and love, but that is a far possibility.

Simone-de –Beavoir in her Second Sex tells that feminine literature is in these days animated less by a wish to demand our rights then by an effort towards clarity and understanding. Similarly, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s short stories show a protagonist in a particular situation and leave the rest for the readers. All her characters look forward to a better tomorrow. In the short story, Silver Pavements – Golden RoofsJayanti is an optimist character. In spite of seeing the horrible face of America, she realizes that an Indian in America is a brown or coloured. Nevertheless, she feels that the situation is not as bleak as it seems. She notices that the snow has covered her hand so they are no longer brown but white. Enlightenment comes a hard way, but she feels that it will come. This story was penned in 1995 and today in 2012; we have a black African American as the President of America. Thus, a change is being seen. As the author puts it, beauty and pain should be part of each day.

Anwar Sheikh the political and social critic feels that the basic association of man and woman is a search of security and happiness through harmony. When this harmony gets disturbed, a marriage fails. Our belief-system, the stereotype traditional roles, literature, religious conviction, myth, movies, and mass media – all, especially in India creates limitations. These limitations in turn create social pressures. Even during pregnancy, contrary to popular Indian belief 20% of women experience symptoms of depression. {Times of India March 5, 2006} This fact is brought to surface in the short-store titled Ultrasound. Ranu in India and Anju in America are both depressed and aggravated during the time of their pregnancy. The author in this story skillfully touches the topic of abortion. The Indian attitude is biased towards a girl-child. A girl-child is a burden and an unwanted addition to a traditional family. The best solution that many opt for is illegal abortion. The end of the story is quite absurd – it leads to a void. Yet again, the writer is not showing a path, but is viewing a situation.

Does motherhood complete the picture of a woman? – this question is also asked by the writer in the short-story The Perfect Life. Meera the protagonist in the short story feels that she a good life – an interesting job and a supportive boyfriend Richard. She has, as she says space in her relationship with Richard. She appreciates and loves her independence but she also feels the curse of solitude. She is many times miserable as she misses the tenderness that comes from living in a family especially Indian family. Conversely, the scene changes as the child Krishna enters her life. She is psychologically attached to Krishna and wants to adopt him. However, this is not possible due to certain rules and regulations of adoption in America. Ultimately, Krishna’s disappearance greatly affects her. It takes great toil on her, however with the passage of time she comes out of her depression. The mask that she is supposed to wear – the mask of education, the mask of social pressures, the mask of controlled behavior and her own limitations, she feels does not allow her to be the victim of the circumstances She  feel the void in her life, but she is ready to compromises. Again, her concept of a perfect life with Richard or Krishna may just be a fantasy.

The protagonist and the narrator of the story Disappearance, faces a very different situation. The protagonist this time is a man, who is married to a quite, pretty, well-bred Indian girl. It is an arranged-marriage. The narrator who is also the protagonist in this case is quite happy, contented, and comfortable with the marriage. But one day his wife suddenly disappears. Now he is a lost man, not knowing the why and how about the person he has married. His concept of realism is traumatized .He looses his peace of mind as he realizes that he knows nothing about his wife. The unknown areas of his wife’s existence keeps on yawing blankly around him like a charm. Having a child does not help here. A child is no insurance for a perfect life. The police ask him if he had quarrel with his wife – this interrogative question makes him reflect back on his married life. He believes that he is an honest person but the introspection of his past reveals the hidden skeletons in his cupboard. He reflects that many a times he had to put his foot down and refused his wife - like when she wanted to get a job or go back to school or buy American clothes. These aspects of her life were useless by him, he has never tried to understand the person his wife was. The story is written from a pure masculine viewpoint. Some act or thought that may be quite typical for a traditional man may not be the same for a woman. Silence does not always mean agreement. The protagonist who is quite busy with his own world and views does not notice the anxiety felt by the wife. Again, for him forced sex in marriage is quite customary. He thinks it is the husbandly rights and wife’s duty to do what he thinks is right. There is no understand and equality in this marriage. In this short story for a change the writer does not presents before us the viewpoint of her female character. However, the act of disappearance itself suggests that the wife has escaped from the cage. Marriage for her has become a prison – physically as well as intellectually – in which no progress was possible. The only solution that she saw was to break the oppression furthermore this also requires guts.

At the same time, The Maid Servant’s story is a story that requires some particular consideration. In this short story, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni deals with human relationship at various phases of life. We are shown the relationship between Manish and Bijoy, Deepamasii and Manish, Manish and her mother, and relation between Manish’s mother and father. However, it is Sarala’s story – Sarala the maidservant. In this story, the writer introduces us to women from different generations and economical groups in our society. Manish belong to a traditional Bengali family. However, after her immigration to America, she undergoes a transformation. In her ideas about relationship, she is entirely westernized. She wants a librated relationship with no strings attached. She is more close to Deepamasii when compared to her own mother. As a child, she had always yearned for parental love, which she never got. She never got the praise she carved - that squeezed – breathless, delirious with joy hug that other mothers gave their daughters. She is emotionally starved and accordingly in all her relationship she does not fell the complete contentment that a perfect relationship should give. Her relation with Bijoy also does not make her happy. She persistently feels the feeling of guilt that tradition many times imposes of us. She also, indirectly blames her mother for her current juxtaposition.
Sarala, the maidservant in this short story is a person dedicated to her work. However, when the mistress of the house is ill, the husband behaves in a typical manner. Emotion of guilt is not to be seen as he goes towards Sarala’s room, with mal intentions in his mind. He tells the servant not to act so virtuous - once a whore, always a whore. Nevertheless, when he sees that his plans have failed he threatens the maidservant he calls her a Bitch. Now because he is a man and morals in our society are only for women, he does not feel the guilt that is felt by Manish. The writer shows us the double standard of our society. In marriage, fidelity and loyalty are considered to be the greatest virtues that a woman should possess. Well! What about men? Does not our tradition stand on double values?

Divakaruni once explained her reason for writing she says that there is certain spirituality, not necessarily religious – the essence of spirituality – that is the heart of the Indian psyche that finds the divine in everything. It is important for her to start writing about her own reality and that of her community. She writes with a purpose and for a purpose. Barbara Anna Barabara, the spiritual writer says that happiness will not be ours until we do what is right for us. The quest for happiness and harmony is what the characters in this collection of short stories – Mita, Jayanti, Meera, Preeti, Abha, Meena, Mrinal - are trying to achieve. They are also questioning the values of old traditions and seeking to accomplish something innovative and different. It is time to alter and the priorities of human beings are changing. In this changing scenario, writers like Divakaruni are rewriting the history of their characters.