FICTION: THE DOG THAT HATED ME
The art of storytelling is the conduit through which the collective history of a nation is passed on to future generations. It is even more vital in societies that have been rendered voiceless, since it is the only evidence that those people exist and their stories still matter.
99 Nights in Logar by Jamil Jan Kochai is an important book in that regard. Having grown up in the United States, Kochai visited his family in Afghanistan when he was 12 years old. There he met the hostile family guard dog, Budabash, who he was convinced hated him. Budabash escaped and Kochai and his cousins went on a trail to look for him. This event had a lasting impact on him and eventually became the inspiration for his debut novel.
Budabash’s irrational hostility towards the family guest — Kochai — compelled the author to muse on his status as an outsider invading the privacy of his apparent family. This is evident in the story where Marwand, our young protagonist, regularly finds himself to be a misfit while taking a trip from the US to his ancestral village in Afghanistan in 2005.
A coming-of-age story about a boy looking for a dog that bit his finger off in his ancestral Afghan village marks an endearing as well as an undeniably important debut
While there are quite a few novels now that are based in Afghanistan, I wager that not many would be an endearing coming-of-age story about a boy looking for a dog that bit his finger off. Prevailing cultural norms are displayed when, after Budabash viciously bites Marwand’s finger off, the host family is embarrassed and in their desire to make amends, they offer him “a juicebox, a slice of watermelon and Budabash’s life.” Marwand ends up declining all three. This is just one of the many reasons that make this novel unique and undeniably important in today’s world.
Marwand explores the unknown, rugged world he finds himself in with a childish wonderment. Initially, he lists all the weird things he sees in a day. His variegated observations include spotting a cobra pelted to death by six kids, two American helicopters, a drone, 1,226 white lilies and One True God — all in a day’s time. The writing adeptly illustrates everyday life in a war-ravaged country.
Marwand is instructed by his father to follow a strict schedule of lessons while in Logar — at least one page of writing and one chapter of reading every day. This is because the last time he and his two brothers went to Logar, their Pashto got so good that they ended up flunking their English test back in the States. This illustrates the tightrope which bilingual children must walk to hold on to their history, yet also keep up with their present. How tough it is to row two boats at the same time is depicted with effortless accessibility through the ordinary trials faced by the young protagonist.