The
Reluctant Fundamentalist:
Other end of the smoking pipe.
A
provocative title; the writer calls himself Mohsin Hamid; and
September 11 as background. What else would you ask for to complete
your Metro ride(s)? . Ever wondered what is being like carrying the
burden of a certain name in an aggressively volatile situation?
That’s Hamid for us. In his semi-autobiographical novel,
experimenting with the narrative: a monologue laced with heavy irony,
his narrator-protagonist treads the path of a presumed
fundamentalist, expression invented by the Vilayati press to
categorize all those people not “fully co-operating” in its war
against evil. Well, all this is déjà-vu. The novel is about a
Pakistani student, having studied at Princeton and worked in the USA
finds himself in a state of schizophrenia after America’s handling
of Afghanistan and India’s posturing at the Pakistan borders after
a militant attack on its parliament. “…America
was maintaining a strict neutrality between the two potential
combatants, a position that favored, of course, the larger and – at
that moment in history-the more belligerent of them.”
These few lines are enough to fill many of our Indian readers’
hearts with a brazen notion of pride and jingoism. Hard to skip the
irony though, at the time when peace was mainly required, these two
nations chose not be very forthcoming with it.
This
novel deals with the concept of Identity crisis; the protagonist
doesn’t have any problem per
se
with his Islamic identity and name, typical “Changez”: he manages
with an outstanding performance at Princeton, rated continuously as
the top employee at the quarterly review of his company, and is
successful with the fairer sex too. As the hero puts it decently “I
was a perfect breast, if you will- tan, succulent, seemingly defiant
of gravity- and I was confident of getting any job I wanted”.
The
novel is not about weakness, not even meekness, no surrenders, only
priorities shifted, worries inherited, sense of culpability induced.
In brief; a South-Asian male context, parphrasing Adiga from his last
Man in Tower:
an India (rather South-Asian) male doesn’t live for himself; he is
condemned to live with many other responsibilities. Moreover, this
boy Changez has opted himself for both the versions of his life: the
American and Pakistani. As a matter of fact, he is the narrator,
narrating from Pakistan, the story of his life to an alleged American
interrogator, presumably there to interrogate him on his activities.
This part also symbolizes the American intrusion deep inside the
Pakistani territory; another obligation to survive. The Reluctant
Fundamentalist is not only a title; it’s also a posturing against
India and the USA. It’s a confirmation that belligerence is not
only the prerogative of the almighty America and some tin-pot
terrorists. It’s a universal malady, not confined to rich
countries.
The
modesty of this article is not at all a reflection of the book; it’s
just the inability of yours sincerely in expressing his sentiments
regarding a novel that ridicules the whole idea of Westernization in
the aftermath of a reactionary reaction by the same West that was
supposed to be faith keeper of the free world (sic).
This notion was/is also applied to our great India (sic). Although I
am not in a habit of quoting passages from books on a blog site,
don’t know what could be the infringement of someone’s copyright,
yet, there are certain passages, very humanist in nature, difficult
to avoid.
I
was struck by how traditional your empire (US of A) appeared. Armed
sentries manned the check post at which I sought entry; being of a
suspect race I was quarantined and subjected to additional
inspection; once admitted I hired a charioteer who belonged to a serf
class lacking the requisite permissions to abide legally and forced
therefore to accept work at lower pay; I myself was a form of
indentured servant whose right to remain was dependent upon the
continued benevolence of my employer.
Calling America
traditional tantamounts to pushing that country notionally into
anachronism. In other words, the basis of modernity are not KFC’s
and Wo
And then, as if not
to make things better, Changez gets into nostalgia, contrasting it
with the American primitiveness:
In
fact, they (comparisons) did more than trouble me: they made me
resentful. Four thousand years ago, we, the people of the Indus River
basin, had cities that were laid out on grids and boasted underground
sewers, while the ancestors of those who would invade and colonize
America were illiterate barbarians. Now our cities were largely
unplanned, unsanitary affairs, and America had universities with
individual endowments greater than our national budget for education.
To be reminded of this vast disparity was, for me, to be ashamed.”
Lost South-Asian
civilization, or lost a lost civilization to live with for ages to
come, something to feel nostalgic about; the age long remedy for many
evils that our societies have collectively, undergone, and they keep
us feeding with the superiority complex, with which we could have
indeed lived had we been that superior. It’s an American dream
shattered along with a mixture of culpability on the part of the
narrator, the guilt of living in a country far away from his; the
terror inflicted upon his country by America in the name of terror
inflicted by his community on the ‘free world’.
