India Today Cover Story

India Today issue dt August 30, 1999
August 30, 1999

Cover Story

Elections 99

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In a politically charged time, it's unusual not to put politics on the cover of the magazine. Unless, of course, the reason comes in the shape of an unusual person, a self-confessed "dirty old man". But Khushwant Singh isn't just any old man at 84. Arguably India's best-known jokester, writer, historian and eccentric, he's the author of the definitive history of Sikhs on the one hand and a compiler of silly joke books -- which sell by the thousands -- on the other. Like him or suffer him, the unkempt man is a disciplined, canny person who bridges a communication gap that spans elegant Delhi drawing rooms to the common man.

Singh's new book, In the Company of Women, is his first novel in a decade and, as he hints, possibly his last major work. "He's always playing the jolly sardar, the debauch, but in the autumn of his life, he just yearns to be recognised and remembered as a scholar," says Senior Editor Madhu Jain, a long-time Khushwant-watcher who got under his skin in an interview that accompanies an exclusive extract from the book. The interview is vintage Singh: introspective, scandalous and brutally frank in turn. He takes digs at himself as readily as he offers blunt comment on politics and politicians.

You will find this as engaging as our other major feature this week: the legacy of the heroes of Kargil. When Assistant Editor Samar Halarnkar, who put the story together, travelled to the Uttar Pradesh village of Yogendra Yadav, the 19-year-old Param Vir Chakra awardee who was inadvertently listed as dead by the army in a horrendous mix-up, the entire village turned out. In gratitude for having brought news about his son who is recuperating in a Delhi hospital, Yadav senior, a poor, simple farmer like most in this tiny village, insisted that Halarnkar take back a sackful of corn. This simple gesture echoes the selflessness with which soldiers risked their lives to win back Kargil. These emotions will linger for a long time. And it should serve as a bitter-sweet lesson from a war that should never have happened.

Aroon Purie

 

(Aroon Purie)

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