FICTION: THE CHARISMATIC THUG
Sheheryar Sheikh follows his notable debut novel The Still Point of the Turning World with an equally well-written endeavour, albeit one with a more political bent. Call Me Al: The Hero’s Ha-Ha Journey is a thinly disguised fictional biopic of the thuggish but charismatic Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) leader Altaf Hussain. Creative and poetic licence gives any novelist the right to tackle any subject that he or she may consider intriguing, and the life of protagonist Altamaash — or Al — as recounted by Sheikh comes across as both fascinating as well as enormously entertaining.
When the novel commences, Al is living in exile in Britain and two hapless individuals get pulled into his orbit. Though Ned Steinberg and journalist George Gary Gregory Jaffar believe that they have the upper hand as regards their quarry, Al gets the better of both of them and exquisitely dispatches them in a remarkably skilful double murder using a single bullet. Sheikh then introduces a metaphysical dimension into the story where an angel begins to interact with the souls of both the deceased men. We are given to understand that Jaffar will experience a purgatorial period before achieving communion with the Divine, but Steinberg is not so lucky, and is condemned to a tortuous period in a limbic region of the afterlife: his ultimate fate is utter disintegration. Regardless, both individuals continue to view aspects of Al’s rise and fall over the course of the book; this is fortunate since one grows rather fond of both Jaffar and Steinberg as well as their angelic guide.
But let us return to Al. Enormous of girth, earthily crude and unabashedly unapologetic for the many crimes that can be laid at his door, he remains a powerful and dominant, though markedly hilarious character. Touches of twisted genius abound in the book, such as when Al names his most important henchmen after the virtuous Snow White’s Seven Dwarves, in spite of his own undeniable black-heartedness. The title of the book itself comes from a song by American musician Paul Simon [of Simon and Garfunkel fame] and Sheikh characteristically makes cultural references and allusions to loaded tropes such as Pablo Picasso’s painting ‘Guernica’ and Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s novel Crime and Punishment. Hence, behind Al’s complex identity — which is repeatedly underscored by the stream of consciousness in which much of his tale is told — lies Sheikh’s own unique narrative voice: ironic, controlled, restrainedly passionate and always uncompromising.
Sheheryar Sheikh’s sophomore novel is a thinly disguised fictional biopic that underscores the ugly side of power
Al’s relationship with his parents (which culminates in patricide), his two marriages (both disastrous in their own ways) and his deep (though eventually doomed) love for his pretty daughter Pinky constitute the personal dimension of his story. But Sheikh is most in his element when describing the sway that Al holds over the Pakistan Immigrant Party, and one truly begins to appreciate Karl Marx’s sentiments regarding religion being the opiate of the masses when one watches this heinous spider at work. However, for his masses the opiate is the massive control Al’s persona exerts over them. One of the most chilling moments in the book is found not in its well-crafted torture scenes, but in a telephone call between Al and a fanatical Multani supporter of his, who celebrates the crushing to death of his beloved nephew during a riotous political stampede because he views it as a necessary sacrifice for Al’s cause. Perhaps it is for this reason that the ghost of Steinberg cuts a deal with the Almighty that he wishes to see Al truly suffer before his own spirit disintegrates into nothingness. Be that as it may, although Sheikh’s novel is naturally coloured by personal perception, the author can be commended for doing his homework, especially insofar as his central character is concerned.