http://www.thehindu.com/news/states/other-states/article2672271.ece


The Hindu, November 30, 2011

A beloved daughter of Assam, writer, peacemaker

Aruni Kashyap 

Indira Goswami, who died on Tuesday aged 69, was among India's most celebrated 
contemporary writers whose work spoke boldly and evocatively for the 
empowerment of women and other marginalised sections of society across the 
country. For this, she won the nation's highest literary honours, and respect 
and adulation in her home State Assam, where she was known as “baideiu” or 
elder sister. In recent years, she used her public standing and influence to 
mediate between the separatist group ULFA and the government, paving the way 
for talks between the two sides. 

Writing under the name of Mamoni Raisom, she won the Sahitya Akademi award in 
1983, the Jnanpith in 2001, and literary prizes from almost every Indian State. 
In 2008, she received the Prince Claus Award in the Netherlands. With their 
pan-Indian themes, her novels and short stories, most of which have been 
translated from the Assamese into English and several Indian languages, had 
appeal wider than the boundaries of her State. Indira Goswami was not just an 
Assamese litterateur; she was a national writer from Assam. 

Far ahead of its times, her Neelkantha Braja was one of the earliest works of 
Indian literature to highlight the exploitation of destitute widows in 
Brindavan. The book was born out of Goswami's own early widowhood, and a short 
experimental stay in a widows' home in the U.P town. 

The plight of widows in Hindu society, and the oppression of girls and women 
were themes that ran through most of her other work, notably in Dontal Hatir 
Une Khowda Howda (The Moth Eaten Howdah of a Tusker), which is set in a sattra 
— a Vaishnavite monastery in Assam — and is a modern Indian classic. 

Her novel about the bloody anti-Sikh riots in Delhi, Pages Stained with Blood, 
haunts the reader long after it is read. She told me once about a visit to the 
riot-hit Jahangir Puri. “You know, I had never seen so many fresh widows 
together wailing in a chorus,” she said. 

Indira Goswami was born in November 1942 in a well-to-do Vaishnavite Brahmin 
family in Assam. She was educated in Shillong and Guwahati. In 1962, a meeting 
with Madhevan Raisom Ayengar, a young engineer from Mysore who was working on 
the construction of the Saraighat Bridge in Guwahati, led to love and to 
marriage. But the marriage was short-lived. Less than two years later, Madhevan 
was killed in a road accident in Kashmir, where the couple was then living. 
They had no children. 

In Assam, Indira Goswami's life is an open book. Her frank Adhalekha Dastavej 
(An Unfinished Autobiography), written in 1988, details her battle with intense 
depression after her husband's death, her nights with sleeping tablets, 
handfuls of which she swallowed in two attempts to end her life, and the story 
of how she won the struggle by immersing herself completely in her writing. It 
has been read widely in Assam. Even people who have not read it would know 
about her life, in the way everyone knows a folktale. Most of her early novels 
run so close to her real life that it is difficult to separate fiction from 
reality, especially for those who have read her autobiography. 

She later joined the Modern Indian Language (MIL) department of Delhi 
University, and went on to head its Assamese language department. To honour 
her, the University made her the Professor Emeritus in 2009 after her 
retirement. It was during her stint in the national capital that she attained 
national prominence. 

She drew on other diverse settings for her novels. The Rusted Sword is set 
against a worker's agitation in Madhya Pradesh. The Chenab's Current is the 
story of exploitation of labourers working for companies building an aqueduct 
over the Chenab River in Kashmir, and drew from her own experience in the 
Valley. 

It was the quest for justice, a running thread of her oeuvre, that may have 
propelled her into getting involved in mediating between the separatist group 
ULFA and the government; perhaps, she was the only person who both sides could 
trust. 

Her own efforts came at a time when the Assamese people had begun looking at 
the ULFA with mixed feelings. Like other Assamese, she was deeply disturbed by 
the Dhemaji blasts of 2004, in which the ULFA targeted a school on Independence 
Day, killing many children. She had been working on a novel set against the 
Assamese separatist movement. The bloodshed and human rights violations shook 
her to the core. She wanted the insurgency to end. But her desire to bring back 
the lost “boys” of the generation invited people to look at the militants with 
a new perspective, as products of the unjust eighties of Assam. 

Critics dismissed it as a political move but she was detached about her 
involvement from the beginning. She stressed she was just an “observer” in 
spite of playing an influential role in the process. By the time she had a 
cerebral stroke in 2007 and was able to recover from it, she believed she had 
done her bit for it. Moi duwar muoli kori disu (I have opened doors to 
discussion), she said, and was eager to get back to what she loved most: 
writing. Thus emerged The Bronze Sword of Thengphakhri Tehsildar, her last 
novel about a Bodo woman who fought against the British. 

But that first stroke was the beginning of the deterioration in her health. 
Even though she remained active in public life, it exhausted her. Right until 
the end, when she spoke, Assam listened. 

After she was hospitalised early this year, the endless stream of visitors to 
her intensive care ward overwhelmed not just her family and friends, but the 
hospital authorities too. Suddenly, that corridor that led to her room in 
Guwahati Medical College Hospital had transformed into an equalising space 
where politicians in power, and out of power, came to visit her, jostling for 
space with innumerable unknown and known admirers. 

Turning the pages of the visitors' notebook that had filled up with thousands 
of greetings within days, it struck me then that this is what she had hoped 
Assam would be one day: where everyone would be equal and united, something she 
always tried to suggest with her fiction. Across Assam and in several parts of 
India prayer-meets were organised by her admirers. Mass texts were circulated: 
forward this to people if you want her to recover; and people did. One evening 
when I had gone to the hospital to meet her family I was struck by a sight of 
hundreds of mustard oil lamps lit by people at the entrance. It looked like 
Diwali. 

Truly, when she spoke, 31 million people listened. May be more. I don't know of 
any other contemporary author in the world who occupied such a central place 
and unparalleled popularity in the public imagination. 

(The author is a poet and writer from Assam, whose first novel, set against the 
backdrop of insurgency in the State, will be published shortly.) 


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