When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
Winner of this year's Nobel Prize for literature,
V.S. Naipaul is not anti-Islam
or Christianity,
merely because he found a lot that was wrong in the practice of these
religions. Nor should he be dubbed pro-this and anti-that for his admiration
for the recent Hindu
revival in India
Over the past 25 years, any year would have been appropriate for awarding
the Nobel Prize for Literature to V.S. Naipaul, the Trinidad-born English
writer of Indian origin. In that sense the decision of the Nobel Prize
committee to grant it to him this year is an old wrong, belatedly righted.
However, it comes with a suspicion that the prize has been given to him,
not because he is among the countably few finest writers of the English
language alive, but because of his recently expressed views fitting in
with the current Western thinking on the "clash of civilizations".
Of course, Naipaul's views on the life and attitudes of the Islamic people
have been brilliantly expressed in writings and talks over the past two
decades. A master of the craft of narration, he blended fiction with reality
in a manner that led to unmistakable conclusions without the author himself
offering or drawing any 'conclusions'. Sir Vidia, as he is known in literary
circles all over the world, in his later life and fiction tended to be
morbid and bitter in sharp contrast to his earlier writings where he fashioned
himself to be "a comic writer".
I met Naipaul in Chandigarh in 1993, and my first impression of him at
that meeting was of a man (to borrow Bertie Wooster's vivid imagery) who
looked perpetually disgruntled about everything and everybody around him
and quite unwilling to reveal any sign of "gruntling". Questions
I asked about his literary journey from the cheeriness of A House for
Mr Biswas, The Suffrage of Elvira and The Mystic Masseur
to the gloomy and painfully autobiographical The Enigma of Arrival
only evoked grunts accompanied by frowns as response. At that moment I
left him in the company of admiring but uninquisitive guestssocialites
and bureaucratsand returned some time later when he started talking
about India and Pakistan.
The Nobel Prize citation, while entirely right in its assessment of Naipaul's
travel books which "allow witnesses to testify, not least in his
powerful description of the Eastern regions of the Islamic world, beyond
belief", gives the game away. It has become routine to expect American
preferences and prejudices to influence the award of Nobel Prizes for
Peace, Economics and Literature. All too often, the prize is a Nobel 'reward'
rather than an award. In this case however, the motives of the giver do
in no way diminish or disprove the worthiness of the receiver.
Naipaul's
travel books on India and the Islamic world are masterpieces of reportage,
besides being top quality literature. His ability to move from one character
to another, one place to another and going back and forth on events never
fails to grip the reader.
Coming back to Naipaul on India, I guardedly enquired him about a discernible
change of perceptions about India as 'An Area of Darkness' and 'A wounded
civilization' to the more sympathetic 'A Million Mutinies Now' as a movement
towards a more realistic and mature understanding of India. Not inhibited
by modesty in any way to even think of the possibility of his earlier
views being immature, Naipaul ignored me and addressed his answer to audiences
other than me.
"What is happening in India is a new, historical awakening,"
he was saying. "Gandhi used religion to marshal people for the cause
of independence. Though he invoked Hindu scriptures to mobilize people
for the freedom struggle, many of his social reformist ideas drew inspiration
from Christianity. But Indian academics and intellectuals had a distorted
vision of history and the common people had no awareness of their own
history.
"India's intellectuals must rise to the occasion. Their prime duty
is proper use of the mind. To use the mind is to reject the grosser aspects
of this vast emotional upsurge There is a big, historical development
going on in India. Wise men should understand it and ensure that it does
not remain in the hands of fanatics. Rather they should use it for the
intellectual transformation of India."
The Swedish Academy's description of Naipaul as a "literary circumnavigator"
is aptly chosen. Not only has he elevated travel writing into a sublime
art but also embellished it with an inimitable technique of speaking through
the mouths of nondescript people of different societies and arriving at
truths about whole civilizations. Here's a sample from Beyond Belief
on the basis of three conversations with three forgettable characters
over "bad sips of coffee" at three different places. "At
the very beginning, the new religious state was touched by the old idea
of plunder. The idea of the state as God was modified It didn't have
to pay its way. It became the satellite of the United States; it didn't
develop a modern economy; it didn't feel the need. Instead it began to
export its people; it became a remittance economy.
"Then there came the Afghan war against the Soviet puppet regime entered
into as a kind of religious war. And again, the loot was prodigious. American
arms and Afghan drugs followed the same route for eight years. Hundreds
of millions of dollars stuck to the hands of the faithful all along the
way. After the cynicism and idleness of four decades, the state (of Pakistan),
which at the beginning had been to some like God, had become a criminal
enterprise."
The point about the above is that it was not written after much reading
of history and meeting of influential people in government and media but
through travel and contact with ordinary folk. Naipaul saw things all
too clearly and wrote in precise and delicate prose of the highest quality.
The Nobel award is a cause for celebration because it has been given to
someone who elevated 'essaying' on life and reality into a supreme literary
form. He put, according to Salman Rushdie, "the life of the mind"
above all forms of life.
Writer Paul Theroux, who called himself Sir Vidia's 'shadow' but broke
off a long friendship in utter disillusionment over the Master's distinctly
unlikable qualities of head and heart and wrote an engaging account of
it all, dwells at length on Naipaul's quest in life. Somewhat cynically,
he said that the quest would end with a million dollars.
Quite unfair. Whatever else he was, Naipaul was not after money, just
as he was not anti-Islam or Christianity merely because he found a lot
that was wrong in the practice of these religions.
No, the quest of the 'literary circumnavigator' will go on. And it should.
The man, who began the search of life with A House for Mr Biswas
and went on to hoist A Flag on the Island somewhere In a Free
State taking A turn in the South and Finding the Centre,
Among the Believers negotiating A Bend in the River to visualize
The Enigma of Arrival, Beyond Belief, has just managed to
complete Half a Life (his latest book). The literary world expects
the other half too from him.