FICTION: THE SUPERMARKET OF SORROW
The difference between fiction and non-fiction,” writes Arundhati Roy, one of South Asia’s most famous authors, “is simply the difference between urgency and eternity.” In The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, her sprawling new novel consisting of history, romance, political activism and satire, there is an eternal mix of hope and grief woven inextricably together. The novel leaves the reader moved by the fury of its anger — with its constant use of Urdu profanities by its many characters — and the profundity of its compassion for the poor, inconsolable Dalits and Muslims of India.
In her stunning debut The God of Small Things written 20 years ago, Roy focused on the intimate, personal loss in a lyrical, Faulklerian tragedy of an inter-caste family in Kerala. In this, her second work of fiction, the focus is more on public turmoil, resulting in a scarring story of India’s modern history. Hence, the books are, at times, written differently.
In Roy’s own words, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness is an endless “supermarket of sorrow” perpetrated by the virulent Hindu nationalists of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), environmental degradation, searing inequality, brutal repression of the freedom movement of the Kashmiri and Maoist people, the Bhopal toxic gas disaster of 1984 and the Gujarat massacre of Muslims in 2002 where the then chief minister, ‘Gujarat Ka Lala’, looked the other way. She quotes members of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the extremist wing of BJP, who state that “just as Pakistan declared itself an Islamic Republic, India should declare itself a Hindu one.” She writes: “Some of its ideologues openly admire Hitler and compare the Muslims of India to the Jews of Germany.”
Arundhati Roy’s new novel, longlisted for the 2017 Man Booker Prize, is a story of persecution, albeit one in which hope overcomes grief
All these themes fuelled Roy’s political activism of the last 20 years in which she marched with the downtrodden, poor and persecuted Muslims and Maoists of India and did not write any fiction. It is truly courageous on her part that she has told truth to power and debunked corrosive development plans of making India ‘great again.’ Particularly courageous is her support for the freedom movement of India-held Kashmir. A few years ago she co-authored a book, Kashmir: The Case for Freedom, in which she wrote: “The Indian military occupation of Kashmir makes monsters of us all.”
However, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness is not a political polemic. It is a poignant work of art. The novel opens in a graveyard in a dilapidated section of Delhi: “She lived in the graveyard like a tree. At dawn she saw the crows off and welcomed the bats home. At dusk she did the opposite.” This is the life of Roy’s heroine in the first half of the novel. Her name is Anjum, but she was born a biological hermaphrodite and named Aftab by her Muslim family.
After having suffered the anguish of being a female trapped in a man’s body, one day Anjum watches a charismatic stranger disappear into “Khwaabgah” — the house of dreams. Subsequently, Anjum joins this community of transwomen. These hijras [transgender people] are the novel’s ruling metaphor for sorrow and represent India itself. “Do you know why God made hijras?” Anjum’s housemate Nimmo asks her one day. “It was an experiment. He wanted to create a living creature that was incapable of happiness. So he made us.”
Some of the most evocative writing in this novel is the portrayal of poverty-stricken Muslim Delhi as an elderly grandmother: “Each wrinkle was a street, each street a carnival. Each arthritic joint a crumbling amphitheatre where stories of love and madness, stupidity, delight and unspeakable cruelty had been played out for centuries.”
The second half of the novel introduces a new set of characters and covers a much wider panorama: the ongoing struggle for Kashmiri independence with the beleaguered city of Srinagar as the backdrop. Roy writes of the insurrection in Kashmir: “Death was everywhere. Death was everything. Career. Desire. Dream. Poetry. Love. Dying became just another way of living.”