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INDIA TODAY
     CURRENT ISSUE OCTOBER 23, 2006
 
   SOCIETY & THE ARTS: BOOKS
 
The Love Letter

The touching narrative brings out the deeply spiritual aspect of Imroz's relationship with Amrita Pritam
 

AMRITA IMROZ: A LOVE STORY

By Uma Trilok

Penguin


Price: Rs 195; Pages: 128

This moving narrative should have originally been in Punjabi. And in verse. Then it could have been put to music and sung by faqirs, darveshes, bhands and mirasis with an iktara (single-stringed lute) at melas and mazaars (Sufi shrines) by the banks of the Ravi or the Chenab. And in keeping with the tradition of the region, it would have been immortalised to join the long list of classical love-ballads like Sohni-Mahiwal, Heer-Ranjha, Sassi-Punnu....

  PICTURE SPEAK
INNER VOICE: Imroz claims space for the first time
But it's never an ideal world; and English might bring the book a readership and an exposure that this extraordinary creative couple (author Amrita Pritam and artist Imroz) shunned and were impervious to in their long and passionate tryst with each other and their respective muses. Pritam had a strong public persona-because she was a successful writer and because she chose to live life on her own terms-and attracted widespread (even if at times negative) notice. Imroz, however, perhaps temperamentally shy and reclusive, chose not to 'exhibit' (he dislikes the very word) his works in the professional art gallery domain. He thus remains somewhat of a shadowy figure looming on the fringes of Pritam's popular presence. After meeting Pritam, he had so completely merged his identity with hers that he was always present but hardly ever noticed. What makes this little book significant is that within its pages Imroz-who-was-once-Inderjeet claims both voice and space for the first time-albeit through Uma Trilok's artful mediation.

Charming intimacies apart, despite all the moralistic accusations hurled at them by a hypocritical society, the book brings out the deeply spiritual aspect of their love. To take just a sample of Pritam's lines:

Chadar phateyan mein taakiyan laawan
Ambar phate kya seena?
Khavind mare hor karan mein
Aashiq mare kya jeena?

(A sheet is torn, I stitch it with patches
But can I stitch the sky?
A husband dies, I take another If my lover dies, what use is life?)

Imroz means today in Persian. As Trilok points out, the artist Imroz was the present that Pritam inhabited for 40 long years. And as Imroz himself asserts, even after death, Pritam will live on in him. The great Urdu poet, Jigar Moradabadi, says in a famous ghazal:

Ik lafs-e-mohabbat hai
Adna sa fasana hai,
Simte to dil-e-aashiq
Phaile to zamaana hai.

(There's word called love
It's but a small story,
It contracts to fit the heart of the lover
When it expands it fills the epoch.)

With Trilok's book, the story of Amrita and Imroz will indeed pervade our more cynical times

  NEW RELEASES
TRUST ME
By Rajashree
Rupa
Price: Rs 95
Pages: 242

A funny take on errant men and a woman who has learnt her lesson the hard way, Trust Me, one of the many ongoing attempts at desi chick-lit, is about finding love, dealing with lust and knowing the difference.

INDIAN PAINTING: THE GREAT MURAL TRADITION
By Mira Seth
Mapin Publishing
Price: Not available
Pages: 464

The well-researched book, replete with 348 lavish colour illustrations, delves into the history, methods, influences and schools of Indian wall painting, offering a panoramic look into an age-old tradition.

APU AND AFTER: RE-VISITING RAY'S CINEMA
Edited by Moinak Biswas
Seagull Books
Price: Not available
Pages: 322

Film and literary scholars interpret Satyajit Ray's work 50 years after his first film and magnum opus Pather Panchali established him as a filmmaker par excellence. The essays view Ray's cinema in the contemporary context.

 

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INDIA TODAY
CURRENT ISSUE
OCTOBER 23, 2006
 IN THIS ISSUE
COVER STORY

BEST OF INDIA

OTHER STORIES
 

Date With Death

Politics Over Clemency

Beating The Red Terror

Political Missile

Stalled On The Road

Korean Bombshell

Room With A Roof

The Inner Game

The Political Engineer

The Love Letter

Irony In The Soul

Murkier By The Day

Mosquito Menace

A Winning Inheritance

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