Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul
It was September 1995 when Nadira (then Alvi) phoned me and said V.S. Naipaul was in town and that I should see him. I refused. Why, he was an abrasive, disagreeable old man who had destroyed journalist Nusrat Nusrullah in his book Among the Believers. I didn’t want the same done to myself.
No, said Nadi. I had to be myself and since I always was, I would hit it off with him. It was after much coaxing that I agreed. In fact, I took a couple of days telling her I was busy with something or the other. And then I said I couldn’t because I was going away to Islamabad. Good, said Nadi because he was already there and since we were going to be in the same hotel it would be easy.
In the hotel in Islamabad, I called his room and he asked me to come at 3pm because he was seeing journalist Rahimullah Yusufzai an hour later. Though I had read several of Naipaul’s books, in those pre-internet days, I was not acquainted with his face. My knock on his door brought out a short-statured man with a pudgy face and the most remarkably noticeable eyes: they were the saddest eyes I had ever seen.
Nobel laureate V.S. Naipaul died on August 11, 2018. He will be different to different people but the world has undoubtedly lost a great writer
In my estimation, Naipaul was supposed to be hawk-faced — a long, lean face — with fangs for teeth. I looked over his shoulder expecting that person to be in the room. It was empty and I asked very tentatively, “Mr Naipaul?”
“Yes, yes. Please come in.”
We sat down, he at the writing table and me on the sofa, and talked. After 20 minutes, he ordered tea. On the table was a set of very slim notebooks, so slim that they cannot even be called notebooks. At some point in the conversation he started writing in one of those. Then he would go back and ask me about something I had said. I would paraphrase my earlier words, but Naipaul would remind me of my exact words and would ask, “Isn’t that what you said?”
Then he would say, “Thank you. Thank you so much.” The tenderness in this thanks and the touching profundity amazed me. He was not the man I had imagined him to be.
At 3:50pm, I started looking at my watch. If Naipaul was a stickler for punctuality, I was more so. He asked if I was in a hurry and I replied I wasn’t but he had to be away in 10 minutes. He could spare another 15 minutes, he said.
Then he did something astonishing. He said he wanted to read something to me and wanted my impression of the person who was saying it. He added that he would not like to disclose the name because, even in the book he would write, the man was going by another name. He treated me to two pages of his notebook of someone who spoke with a forked tongue.
“Whoever it is, is a liar and a hypocrite!” I blurted out.
It was again the same profound thanks from him. When Naipaul went to the toilet, I sneaked a quick peek at the thin, spidery handwriting and learned which two-faced politician Naipaul had interviewed. On reading Beyond Belief, I at once spotted the man.