An example of Muhaqqaq calligraphy from the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul
The quest for a monolithic-authentic-higher-stable self is the central theme of Umera Ahmed’s latest novel Alif. This highly idealised aspiration drags the novel into a realm where a very specific interpretation of a particular religion — in this case, Islam — gets invoked. The notion of stability of the human self — a quintessentially metaphysical one — finds its validity in the backdrop of a mundane, secular, material world which, remaining unendingly in a state of flux, eventually destabilises itself. So, it makes sense when one sees that everything redolent with secular, mundane and worldly stains is painted as ‘sinful’, consequently desisted, lamented and finally abandoned.
The main characters — Qalb-i-Momin, Momina and Husn-i-Jahan — are made to ditch the secular world of showbusiness in order to tread a clear spiritual path. Master Ibrahim, another lead character, also follows the same path and gives up his prosperous business of shoemaking in a bid to give in to Allah.
The Muhaqqaq style of Islamic calligraphy, which evolved in 15th century Turkey, becomes not only a metaphor for the characters’ transformation into spiritual beings, but a ‘sole’ path that leads to spirituality and falah [salvation and spiritual wellbeing]. Playing on ecstasies, transformative progression is made to happen; ecstasy stemming from the affluence of flesh and then from the affluence of the soul. Having abandoned secular showbiz life, all the major characters finally embrace the art of Quranic calligraphy.
Umera Ahmed’s latest novel is all about simplistic binaries and the rejection of the world in favour of the author’s chosen truth
Qalb-i-Momin’s grandfather, Abdulali, comes from a family of Turkish calligraphers. His son, Taha, revolts against family tradition by painting dancing images of Husn-i-Jahan — images that become ingrained in his imagination when he sees her performing at a cultural show in Istanbul. He falls in love and marries Husn-i-Jahan, a leading Pakistani film actress of the 1980s. She takes a mere second to bid goodbye to the ‘profane’ world of showbiz — and, of course, Pakistan — to lead a simple family life in Turkey. Their son, Qalb-i-Momin, joins the Pakistani film industry and soon becomes an icon. In the words of Abdulali, he chooses the path of worldly success instead of falah, as the novel seems to consider Islamic calligraphy as the one and only alternate form of art.
The path of alif, the first letter of ‘Allah’, is portrayed as the wahid [single, incomparable] path to spirituality. However, seeing how the characters are transformed into spiritual beings, the word ‘spirituality’ in the novel’s context appears most problematic. In the story, spirituality means “woh seedha raasta jo GPS dikha sakta hai na aql ... wo raasta dil ki galiyon say guzar kar rooh tak pohonchta hai aur sirf iman ki roshni men nazar aata hai [that straight path which neither GPS nor rationality can lead to ... that path reaches the soul after passing through the alleys of the heart and can be seen only in the light of faith].”
An aversion to human intellect and its products — ranging from the imaginative arts to free thinking to freedom to individuality — seems entrenched in Ahmed’s notion of spirituality.
The main theme of her novel is unravelled through fabricating the lives of characters deeply embedded in sets of binaries and the continuous process of othering. The major binary consists of religion and the material world. Sacred and profane, spirituality and rationality, godly and human, soul and body, permanence and mortality, falah and success are subsets of the said binary. These binaries have been in place since modernity. Modern philosophy, social sciences and modern fiction, too, have been, in one way or another, entangled in the discursiveness created out of these binaries. Imagining the world through the lens of binaries ends up in an either/or state; either constructive and liberating or destructive and enslaving.
One side of the binary coin is deemed to be wrapped in absolute darkness while other side is thought to be permanently glowing. The world of human art, its amusements and vivacities are regarded emblematic of the darkness that pulls people away from the straight path of falah. Falah, with its godly rewards, resides at the centre of Islamic calligraphy. Falah is not just superior to the success which Qalb-i-Momin, Husn-i-Jahan, Master Ibrahim and Momina experience in the field of human art; it possesses an exclusionary value. None of the characters cast even a cursory glance at the possibility that the core aesthetic value of human art can give disinterested pleasure that doesn’t collide with spirituality — a much cherished and celebrated notion in the novel. Each major character is made to desist and consequently abandon their destabilised, distorted selves — reminiscent of their successful lives — for single, stable, higher selves which the path of falah augurs.