NON-FICTION: A TRUE LABOUR OF LOVE
The most exhaustive book on Sindhi culture and heritage in recent years — in English, at least — has, strangely enough, come out from Mumbai, a city nearly 900 kilometres away from the province. Sindhnamah has been published by the Hecar Foundation, which does painstaking work in conserving culture and architecture. Headed by architect and conservationist Brinda Somaya, a non-Sindhi, Hecar has come out with some exciting books on the subject. The institution was jointly founded by Gita Simoes who is the co-author of Sindhnamah. Sadly, the Karachi-born scholar passed away a couple of years before the launch of what is more than a coffee-table book. It is a tome, richly illustrated and flawlessly written. What is no less important is that its printing leaves nothing to be desired and the binding — a Herculean task for a volume of this size — is commendable too.
The younger co-author of Sindhnamah, anthropologist Nandita Bhavnani, is not unknown to well-read Sindhis in and outside the province. She is the author of the much-acclaimed The Making of Exile: Sindhi Hindus and Partition of India. This was the debut book of the Mumbai-based Bhavnani, who has made quite a few trips to the land of her parents and grandparents. Bhavnani is also acquainted with the Perso-Arabic script; how else would she have enjoyed the exquisite kalaam of Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai and Sachal Sarmast?
The book commences with a two-page ‘Timeline of Sindhi History’ that begins from the Lower Palaeolithic period — otherwise known as the Early Stone Age which spanned from 2,500,000 BCE to 50,000 BCE — and ends with the dissolution of the One Unit geopolitical programme in 1970, when Sindh regained its status as a province.
Richly illustrated and flawlessly written, the Mumbai-based Hecar Foundation’s Sindhnamah is a treasure trove on Sindhi culture
Sindhnamah portrays the landscapes, wildlife, arts, crafts, textile, jewellery, architecture, history, legends, sports, music and even the local cuisine of the region. As for wildlife, there are peacocks and deer in the desert and dolphins in the Indus, a mighty river which rightly occupies an entire chapter. To say that the camel is to be found everywhere is to state the obvious.
There is not much about sports except for the Sindhi style of wrestling called the malakhra. Contrary to what the caption of one photograph claims, the sport is confined to rural and semi-urban areas. Sindhis, it would seem, are not that vested in the sports more popular in the subcontinent, such as cricket and hockey, and only some older parts of Karachi can boast of football fans. Sindhis are, however, very enthusiastic about music and their muse is wedded to Sufism, a subject which would need at least a full-fledged article to be touched upon briefly. By the way, the volume under review is interspersed with classical Sindhi poetry and not much seems to have been lost in translation. A case in point is Bhittai’s poem on rain, which amply reflects the poet’s universal approach.