Sunday, September 7, 2014

Crusade for Freedom

Crusade for Freedom
Much in news, Ritu Menon’s Out of Line: A Literary and Political Biography of Nayantara Sahgal catapults the duo again into the limelight. Nayantara Sahgal the first woman political columnist of India, daughter of Vijayalaksmi Pandit and niece of Jawaharlal Nehru, and Ritu Menon famous writer and publisher of the fame of Women Unlimited, and co-founder of Kali for Women. 
The Political Imagination: A Personal Response to Life Literature and Politics, Sahgal’s latest book, was also launched together with her biography. From the personal stemmed the political and the literary. The political became her truth because of her family’s legacy and literary her passion, a clear paper canvas on which she artistically inked her life in totality. A chronicler of the making of modern India, she opposed Indira Gandhi vehemently during the emergency, through her underground literature and spent a year abroad to escape the threat to her life. She became the keeper of Nehruvian (a surrogate father, her idol) democracy and secularism, when his own kith and kin were embroiled in despotic measures. She yearns for a restoration of the idealism of Gandhi and Nehru – and rests her faith on change, the harbinger of balance and rectitude.

 The title ‘Out of Line’ of the biography could be interpreted as an unusual attempt by Menon to write on a person who has already been written about expansively, and whose writings and interviews have appeared in print extensively; or the ‘out of line’ material that Menon manages to unearth, details{ intimate and personal} of her glamorous life, close to her being, which she divulges now that she is a happy 87 years old. Menon describes Sahgal’s ’writing life’ evocatively as one “in which the personal, the political and the literary were so intertwined as to be like three plyn yarn.” The chapters in the book are titled after her novels: A Time to be Happy, This Time of Morning, A day in Shadow....Rich like Us, Mistaken Identity..........

What ties the two women together, the subject and the biographer is their crusade for women emancipation. Sahgal is foremost a political writer but her fiction is a diatribe against the oppressive forces of tradition and society. Her characters are not so much as products of imagination as real life people in her own society. “In fiction there is no such thing as closure, you keep drawing on your own life and those of many people’s around you. “ Nehru’s direction that she write from her own experience, stayed with her and her political columns in newspapers, non-fiction writings and also fiction became autobiographical. The journey from Maya in A time to be Happy to Ranee in Mistaken Identity is a coming of age story of woman’s determination and self actualisation.

 Two real life events which guided her writing were her marriages, man- woman relationships and the arena of emotions accompanying them. The first turning point was her marriage to Gautam, a businessman. She got married at Anand Bhavan in Allahabad the Pandit’s  family home, attired in a khadi sari. She was at the time quiet taken in by Gautam, his suave intelligence, much like her uncle she thought. . She couldn’t have been more wrong. He was consumed with jealousy; he could not forget or forgive her affair with sculptor Ismat Noguchi and relationships with other men. The alienation and abandonment destroyed her. The unhappy marriage ended in a debilitating divorce in 1967. Thus, the major theme in her works is disharmony and dissolution of marriage. In storm in Chandigarh with a backdrop of the Punjab divide and acrimonious relationships of the chief ministers of Punjab and Haryana she portrays a miserable and discontent female protagonist Saroj who is tortured by her husband for having an affair in college before they got married. She wrote about divorce and freedom of an individual in lieu of a compromised silence at a time when divorce was heavily frowned upon.

The second major event was her decision to live with a brilliant bureaucrat, Edward Nirmal Mangat Rai which she described in her own words, “not an affair but a revolution, a self discovery that life had to be lived more fully in order to be meaningful.” Heroines in her successive novels progressively set out on a path of reflection, and self actualization, heading on a course of liberation and realization of their potential without remorse or guilt or help from any male or female counterpart. It’s as if they came upon the discovery within  themselves, to live full human lives of joy and contentment. Her feminist ideology propels women to seek autonomy and individuality, an assured self, a self- possession fired by an inner flame of shakti.  She delineates male protagonists like Ram, Dev, Inder, who propagate the patriarchal attitudes, and in the process not only victimize the women in their lives, but harm themselves through the oppressiveness and misery of their actions. When we downgrade the other, a part of us remains steeped down with them. She inspires men to rise and evolve to a full humanity.  

She was the first Indian women author writing in English to be published abroad. Ranee and Bhushan  in her last novel, Mistaken Identity, are her most evolved characters. Ranee though an illiterate 1930s queen, refuses to abide by her husband’s third marriage and live a life of indignity and utter disgrace. She abandons the veil and walks out of his house and later lives with comrade Yusuf of her own choice. Without him too she moves on bold and undeterred and does not even take help from her son Bhushan. The latter through his alliances with various women comes into his own and finds himself, for it is only through our relationship with others that we can know and discover ourselves. Each relationship is sacred and a conduit to realise your inner potential , a path to self discovery. She declares: "It takes half of life to achieve personhood but there is no greater glory." True to reflection her heroines Maya, Rashmi, Saroj, Simrit, and Devi act as real Shaktis and achieve freedom, after an initial phase of hesitation and turbulence. Thereafter Sonali, Anna and Ranee are self –realized protagonists who rebel remorselessly and fiercely treading their own paths of emancipation and victory.


Tradition and modernity are intertwined in her writings. The legacy of truth, nonviolence, satyagraha, social justice, prayer, simplicity, socialism, democracy, and progress is our political heritage. But when this tradition extends to interpersonal relationships a play field of ambiguity enters into it.  Her ambivalence to tradition in relationships comes across clearly through one of the characters: “Hinduism was boundless enough . . . to encompass the loftiest of metaphysics, rigid enough to despise the Untouchable. It was goodness and piety and the living light of faith. . . . Yet it was the sufferance of disease and clamour near the temple. It was torpor that accepted maimed limbs, blind eyes and abject poverty as destiny, letting generations live and die in hopelessness, and at the same time it was the majesty of the mind engaged in lifelong combat with the senses. It turned men into oppressors, who have internalized the violence of the patriarchy and in turn directed it outward at their wives. They have been handed down expectations about "husbandhood" and "wifehood" which are incompatible with contemporary reality.” When women like Saroj, Anna, Simrit walked out of their marriges they chose personal fulfilment, and individuality over silence and  obedience, that patriarchy upholds in marriages. The modern over the traditional – their guide being an inner strength and  shakti  which blazed a trail of light for them.

 "It has taken a million years of evolution for a person and his cherished individuality to matter . . . and no terror must be allowed to destroy that. In other words, tradition itself must provide the impetus for change by negating those of its aspects which are inimical to its survival,” states Nayantara Sahgal emphatically.

No doubt, she has been rightly compared to Nadine Gordimer and Doris Lessing for her crusades in political and feminist thought.
















Sunday, August 24, 2014

My Salinger Year

                                                           









 My Salinger Year             

The title of the book by Joanna Smith Rakoff, which appeared in June 2014, created a stir in the literary circles.  J.D. Salinger fans grabbed copies of My Salinger Year to peek into the world of the reclusive writer.  Salinger, the creator of the Glass Family stories and two priceless works of writing – The Catcher in the Rye and Franny and Zooey- remained shrouded in mystery throughout his career in writing. When he died in 2010, the world knew as little about him as aliens from outer space; conjectures and speculations continued to thrive. The mere mention that this book was a chronicle of the days that Rakoff spent working as an  assistant in the literary house of the century’s giant, piqued curiosity of many readers.
 The first quick read became both a discovery and a disappointment. The latter because at the culmination of the exercise, we are nowhere near more familiar with Salinger. On the contrary, the chance meeting of Rakoff  with Salinger in the office, resounding of a loud remote voice on the phone asking for his literary agent often, and the strict dictum issued by Rakoff’s boss,  “but you must never – never, never, never – give out his address or phone number," further thickens  the  cloud of mystery around the taciturn author, without giving any further cue to his persona.
Rakoff’s admission that she had never read Salinger in her 23 years of her study life ( she thought him “insufferably cute and aggressively quirky”) transforms into  devotion during her sojourn at the agency, reading his works  and then answering the deluge of fan mail meant for Salinger. She cannot bring herself to throw letters from Holden Caulfield-like characters (who seem at their wits and desperately need to connect to the creator) into the bin after writing a perfunctory coded answer. The entire experience changes her irrevocably, and she sees herself caught in a superficial world (which applies to her dad, live- in boyfriend and the fast changing publishing world) overflowing with phoniness and brutality.  Rakoff’s  passage from naivety, idealism and purity to stoicism and acceptance, with a rough intervening phase of emotional turmoil, is  a nostalgic Franny Glass experience. It  gives the book a Salingeresque edge, of lost innocence; and becomes a pleasant discovery for the reader.
The theme of innocence lost is very interestingly also interwoven with the delineation of the ‘world of books.’ The story is set in the late nineties, the pre-digital era on the cusp of a metamorphosis and yet a space still clinging to antiquated Dictaphones and heavy typewriters and the power of words. The agency represents heavyweight older authors, defining an age where the word was sacred and supreme and writing was a culture and not a business. When the duo, the writer and the literary house, formed a committed relationship in the sanctimonious service of the word, and did not view it as a trade to a fortune. A climate where budding artists still thought that they had to work as assistants to legendary literary figures and publishers; to garner the best education; on the road to becoming great poets and authors themselves.   
That Rakoff was able to morph a 2000-word article written in 2010, after Salinger passed away(My Adventures Answering J.D. Salinger’s Mail) into a complete book is a feat in itself. But what is more amazing is her accomplishment to imbue the ambience in the book with a Salingeresque essence. Reading the coming of age story of Rakoff, the reader is transported to the world of Franny and Zooey, Seymour and Buddy and the legendary Holden Caulfield. Lives of characters who waged battles within, on the road to understanding the world for what it is: a hypocritical illusion which in the name of love trades love and souls. Veneers of false pretence, of unscrupulous crafty humans, yes, but a complete 360 degree turn and the same finger of hypocrisy points to one’s own self. Duality and falseness stripped to the core to show your naked dark self. Finally, the journey will culminate in a merging, with a love beyond barriers of all human creed, doubts and fears.  A rendezvous with Seymour’s Fat Lady; a moment where your love flows as a clear cascading stream to subsume everything you thought was repulsive and dirty.  A cleansing that renders you and the world into a sparkling hue of light.  Salingeresque achieved!

Thank you, Joanna Rakoff!          



     


                     

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Book Reading - The Indian Bond - Ruskin Bond

Book Reading Session on the 16th of August. 
Let your kids go on an adventure with Ruskin Bond, the Indian Bond!  Watch Ruskin bond on screen, Hear him talk – power point on his journey through books, Book Readings, Films based on his books, Activities – Find answers and win PRIZES! Write Book Reviews.
Resource Person : Jugneeta Sudan.
Time - 3 PM - 6 PM
Age - 8 - 16 years.
Fees - Rs. 300/-
Inline image 3
Hope to see you for the events! 
Spread the word!


Warm Regards!
Sonia Fernandes
(Coordinator at Carpe Diem)

Contact - 0832 - 2881035

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Shakespeare's Shylock







Shakespeare’s Shylock

We have all read Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare in school with great censure for Shylock, who was greedy, cruel and mean. He deserved to lose his dignity, wealth and religion at the end of the trial. Justice prevails and the devil always meets a gory end. A stereotype propounded and etched in the minds of children, who grew to relate to Jews with mistrust. A play used by Nazis to stoke anti-Semitic feelings during the holocaust. Shylocks or loan sharks entered the lexicon and terms like ‘pound of flesh’ became common when someone demanded onerous returns. Is Merchant of Venice a play about anti-Semitism? A moralistic play about good and evil, mercy and justice, love and greed became a major controversial work of Shakespeare with the turn of the 20th century.
Shakespeare had good business sense and he wrote the play in the aftermath of the execution and public hanging of Roderigo Lopeza, a converted Portuguese Jew. The latter was the official physician of the Queen. In 1594, he was convicted of plotting to poison Queen Elizabeth I and was executed as a traitor. The Lopeza trial and execution inspired the revival of playwright Christopher Marlowe's The Jew of Malta, in which the play's title character is a Jew named Barabas, a greedy, cunning and murderous stereotype. It fanned frenzy against the Jews, though at the time only about 200 Jews lived in England, after they had been banished in 1290 under the Edict of Expulsion. Horrifying legends and gory stereotypical stories, about the absent English Jew became rampant; poisoning Christian children, using blood of murdered humans for passover rituals.......When Lord Chamberlain’s Men staged Merchant of Venice, it was a delightful success. The existing atmosphere of hatred for Jews gave the audience more fodder for glee and Shylock was perceived with added hatred and revulsion. The blinkers of vengeance made the masses completely miss the point of a more complex, sympathetic and whole Shylock.  
The tradition of playing Shylock sympathetically began in the first half of the 19th century with Edmund Kean, the famous English actor of his times. It established him as an actor. His portrayal of Shylock completely turned the tables on previous enactments by repulsive clowns or monsters of unrelieved evil. Henry Irving’s act of a proud aristocratic Jew in 1879 was hailed the ‘summit of his career.’ He was followed by Jacob Adler in the early 20th century, who played the role in Yiddish in an otherwise English production. The new perspective morphed him into a proud man whose self-respect is maligned and destroyed by the so-called men of God. His actions of revenge ensue from pride and he demands justice for a blow to his individuality, profession and religion. The guardians of law – Portia, Antonio, Bassanio, make a mockery of justice and facilitate the passing of a harsh sentence, contrary to their qualities of goodness, love and justice. The final act bares hypocrisy of the so-called good and lends authenticity to the image of Shylock who walks out of court with his head held high -"would he not walk out of that courtroom head erect, the very apotheosis of defiant hatred and scorn?”
Henrik Eger writes- “Some theatres have gone where most directors dare not tread, including the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon, by presenting a bare-chested Antonio with the knife of Shylock on his chest. However, few companies like the Quintessence Theatre Group have come as close to the Rembrandt-like scene with Antonio flat on his back, almost a corpse—all in the presence of the entire Venetian court, with Shylock approaching like Dr. Tulp, holding a huge knife in his hands, ready to cut out the promised pound of flesh. This naked determination for physical justice, against the background of years of having been bullied, maligned, and treated like a criminal, is a scene so direct that it is painful to watch.  Benim Foster (Shylock), originally a Jew on being interviewed said-“The play has always been a mystery to me. Something I feared. I avoided it, believing that it would just upset me too much, being Jewish. I also struggled with the thought of Shakespeare, himself, being an Anti-Semite. However, I have come to believe that he was just the opposite. He gives Shylock so much depth, so much humanity, love, pain, beauty and grief, plus his anger, stubbornness, and impatience that he shows us Shylock as human.”
Contemporary adaptations and films continue the trend of giving multiple voices to characters in the play. In the 2004 film adaptation starring Al Pacino as Shylock, the film begins with text and a montage of how the Jewish community is abused by the Christian population of the city. One of the last shots of the film also brings attention to the fact that, as a convert, Shylock would have been cast out of the Jewish community in Venice, no longer allowed to live in the ghetto and would still not be accepted by the Christians, as they would feel that Shylock was yet the Jew he once was.
‘Andrew Dickson, writing in his The Rough Guide to Shakespeare, found that audiences can view The Merchant of Venice from two different perspectives: Antonio's and Shylock's. Both sides of the story are there in this brilliant and troubling play and it's easy to feel that they're irreconcilable. “But,” Dickson continues, ''it is impossible to sit on the fence when watching The Merchant, and the issues it raises about religious intolerance and conflict seem more pressing now than ever before.'' Norrie Epstein, writing in the book The Friendly Shakespeare, calls The Merchant of Venice a troubling play, for the same reason that other critics have come to this conclusion. It is difficult to say, after you have seen it, if it is ''a tragedy or a comedy, a love story or a tale of hate.'' Epstein's conclusion, however, is that in the end, ''in its infinite ambiguity, it is quintessential Shakespeare. No sooner have you reached one conclusion about the play than it's immediately contradicted in the next scene--or line.'' Despite the fact that Shakespeare's audiences in Elizabethan times enjoyed coming to the theatre and ridiculing stock, stereotypical Jewish characters, as was a routine at that time, Epstein states that ''yet embedded within this caricature there's a real human being [in Shylock's character], and every so often Shakespeare lets him out.'' Shylock shows sadness, and he respects his own culture, Epstein writes. And he displays many other emotions in this play. ''He's like a survivor of the Great Depression who grows up valuing money more than love.'' Shakespeare's talent is demonstrated in that he is able to go beyond his ''age's prejudices'' and present ''the world from the alien's perspective.''
Thus, Merchant of Venice cannot be taught in classrooms without historical, circumstantial, political, economical and theatrical context, of the times. It remains a sensitive and highly controversial play 400 years down the line and must be dealt in multiple ways for students. The teaching must open channels for them to perceive it in a wholesome manner and exhort them to further research, to discern truth on their own.
In my humble endeavour to revisit and elaborate on Shakespearean works during his 450th year of celebration, we shall be meeting on 23rd August at ICG to expound on the tragicomedy Merchant of Venice in the afternoon from 4-6pm. Do join us!     



Sunday, July 13, 2014

Sci- fi Writings

                                             





















 Fact & Fiction

Jules Verne is the father of sci-fi fiction followed by HG Wells. The former wrote about space and submarines when they were still not a reality and fired the minds of many experts.  20,000 Leagues under the Sea and Around the World in 80 Days are timeless classics that changed fictional literature to give birth to a new genre of writing. Verne published his first book the year HG Wells was born.  The latter went on to write great literature like Time Machine, The War of the Worlds. They set the bar for writers and the foundation for speculative, imaginative and fantastical writing rooted in science, to be continued in the centuries to come. Their works of imaginations and the innovations and inventions have sparked the imaginations of scientists and inventors for a century.  The question arises – do imaginings lead to reality or reality to imagination.

Jules Verne predicted the moon landing in ridiculous detail in his book From the Earth to the Moon in 1865. He was slightly off the mark on the cost and weight of the rocket, but the detail on the weightlessness that the astronauts experienced was uncanny prediction. ‘They were like drunken men having no stability in themselves. The three adventurous companions were surprised and stupefied, despite their scientific reasonings.  They felt themselves being carried into the realm of wonders.   If they stretched their legs and arms they did not fall, their feet no longer clung to the floor ....’
Similarly Mark Twain, besides writing on the famous characters of Tom Sawyer and Hucklebury Finn, wrote sci-fi fiction, ‘From the London Times of 1904.’ He dreamt up a telelectroscope which was a phone system to link the worldwide network of information sharing – the modern internet. This was in 1898 when the telephone was fairly new and rare.
Arthur C Clark predicted in his writings the presence of global telecommunication coverage using geostationary satellites above the Earth’s surface.
Facebook founders named the central communication hub The Wall for their social networking site; a take from Ray Bradbury’s writings delineating digital exchange between people.
Michael Crichton treated technology and the human interaction to create absorbing fiction. He was a writer whose gizmos are more interesting than his characters.  He reads like a walking encyclopaedia with everything put in from nanotechnology, submarines, space and genetics to medieval banquet halls.  Beginning with Andromeda Strain, his books topped book sales charts, parleyed into box office films and created iconic genres in writing and visuals (Jurassic Park, The Lost World).
The struggle of man to master natural phenomenon through manmade biotechnology formed the bases of many of his books.  Creating dinosaur clones from fossilized DNA is a classic example per se. The books are an outpouring of his scientific/medical knowledge kneaded with intricate mechanics of a plot. The delineations of scientific principles involved, convey his deep passion for the innumerable amazing techno-breakthroughs that he wanted the world to know through his stories. The books give a feeling of a boy on an adventure trail full of gadgetry, mechanics, processes and their effect on the world, very much like a man in love with his car and machines. This takes on a scientific veneer with his Harvard medical school brouhaha thrown in.   A marriage of make-believe environments with meticulous detail of inner working of things rather than people, men and women. This mechanics of a made-up world provides endless engineered entertainment to readers, culminating on a wave of knowledge.  The utter craftsmanship, of weaving rich scientific knowhow with suspense and elemental fear makes his works unputdownable.

Does the work of this genre of writers just stop at entertainment and a thrilling experience or there is more to the story. The centre for Science and Imagination Arizona brings sci-fi writers into collaboration with inventors, engineers and technologists. Intel and HarperCollins are involved to create a network hub where moon shot ideas can be turned into realty. An unusual variety of people who otherwise would not work together cut across boundaries to think and execute in a more evolved manner. Thus imagination turns to reality.  A thread worth exploring.  Kudos!

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Zorba the Greek

                    ZORBA, THE GREEK
I just finished rereading Zorba the Greek by Nikos Kazantzakis – a book that sets you free every time you visit it. Kazantzakis works are full of joy, especially Zorba the Greek. The book is a hymn to life and love, personified in the character sketch of Zorba; the epitome of pulsating life force. It urges you to stop reading words and go jump into the stream of life; and live it king size.
Zorba, the wonderful Macedonian man lives each day as if it is his last, completely involved in what he is doing; making love or working the lignite mines. He dances to life, actually, authentically and practically. When he cannot express the feelings and energy in words, he dances with gay abandon to the beat of each moment. He lives in perpetual awe of everything around him. He looks at trees, the sky, flowers, women, children as if he is seeing them for the first time. He revels in the mystery of creation and considers the world his playground to frolic and indulge.  His zest for life is all inclusive. The catastrophe of the closure of the mine is another challenge from which he rises unscathed. He understands life in all its colors and is awake to each of its tests and turns. If ever there was a role that Anthony Quinn was born to play, it was the lusty, life-affirming character in Zorba, the Greek. The film made the book world famous.
The narrator played by Alan Bates is a foil to Zorba. He is a writer wrestling in his lair with his writing of Buddha, trying to comprehend the world through words and mysticism. In a bid to realign and rethink the paradox of man’s life on earth, he decides to partake of life with the day-to-day life of workmen. He travels to Crete to inherit a lignite mine. He hires Zorba who turns out to be Man Friday. The dialogue between the two is the core of the book through which Kazantzakis throws light on metaphysical, existential questions in people’s lives and the varied perspectives to it. Friedrich Nietzsche’s ‘God is dead’ and the ‘man as Overman’, are concepts which pattern the exchange between them. In the end, it isn’t squiggly inky impressions of words on paper, and the endless ruminations and reflections, but the act of living them which can make a difference in our lives. 
Kazantzakis was an existentialist as much as Franz Kafka, his contemporary. But their philosophy was so very different. Whereas Kafka battled with a meaningless existence with paranoia, absurdity and madness, Kazantzakis pitched into the flow of life with a madness of sheer abandon and love. While Kafka is disturbed and depressed by the cruel universe, Kazantzakis is delighted by its mystery. He does not know if God exists or truth exists, but he has an amazing appetite for plain existence. Life is simple, devoid of Cartesian duality. Therefore the ordinary is extraordinary for him. The Kafkaesque ideology imbues us with dread and gloom.     
Franz Kafka’s quote on books reads: “I think we ought to read only the kind of books that wound or stab us. If the book we’re reading doesn’t wake us up with a blow to the head, what are we reading for? So that it will make us happy, as you write? Good Lord, we would be happy precisely if we had no books, and the kind of books that make us happy are the kind we could write ourselves if we had to. But we need books that affect us like a disaster, that grieve us deeply, like the death of someone we loved more than ourselves, like being banished into forests far from everyone, like a suicide. A book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us. That is my belief.” Readers who have read his story ‘The Metamorphosis’ will appreciate and understand his message very well. A contemporary writer who comes to mind in the same line of thought would be Milan Kundera.

 On the contrary, Paulo Coelho and the erstwhile Nikos Kazantzakis deliver the same content through a symbolic parable or through characters who serve as illustrations for different philosophical principles. The story of the butterfly emerging out of its cocoon is recounted by Zorba to the narrator, a lesson in nature’s mysterious workings. ‘A man spent hours watching a butterfly struggling to emerge from its cocoon. It managed to make a small hole, but its body was too large to get through it. After a long struggle, it appeared to be exhausted and remained absolutely still. The man decided to help the butterfly and, with a pair of scissors, he cut open the cocoon, thus releasing the butterfly. However, the butterfly’s body was very small and wrinkled and its wings were all crumpled. The man continued to watch, hoping that, at any moment, the butterfly would open its wings and fly away. Nothing happened; in fact, the butterfly spent the rest of its brief life dragging around its shrunken body and shriveled wings, incapable of flight.’
‘What the man – out of kindness and his eagerness to help – had failed to understand was that the tight cocoon and the efforts that the butterfly had to make in order to squeeze out of that tiny hole were Nature’s way of training the butterfly and of strengthening its wings. Sometimes, a little extra effort is precisely what prepares us for the next obstacle to be faced. Anyone who refuses to make that effort, or gets the wrong sort of help, is left unprepared to fight the next battle and never manages to fly off to their destiny.’ The tone is optimistic and full of faith. The mysterious universe will connive to deliver to us our wishes and desires, provided you align your energy with it! It is indeed an appealing and interesting way of passing on philosophical teachings where parables are interspersed with nuggets of wisdom.
Kazantzakis was beset with existential, metaphysical questions since his growing up years and his trilogy Zorba the Greek, Freedom and Death and The Temptation of Christ patterns the path of a human being on earth. Zorba, the Greek is about attaining individuality. Reveling in the spirit of freedom and relishing a human life of pleasure and pain. Wrapping oneself in an atmosphere of daily sights, sounds and smells – wild sage, savory mint and thyme. The orange-blossom scent worn by Madame Hortense, silvery olive trees, fig and vines, kitchen gardens, swims in the sea, the wine drunk; dancing to strains of the santuri, friendship, sex, separation and loss. Freedom and Death delineates life in a community, of living for a cause. It celebrates the idea of extending oneself beyond personal needs. It is about commitment to others, loyalty and patriotism. The Temptation of Christ is the story of Christ, the man who struggles with his own human needs of love, family and companionship. He wrestles with guilt, pain, fear and emotions and rises above them to fulfill a cause for the wider humanity. Kazantzakis’ Christ is a human who becomes God.
The epitaph on Kazantzakis tomb further illuminates the path of freedom - "I hope for nothing. I fear nothing. I am free."