Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Book Review: A Destructive Demoness From The Ramayana Or Tormented Woman?

IANS, 16 Jan, 2017 12:16 PM
    Title: Lanka's Princess
     
    Author: Kavita Kane
     
    Publisher: Rupa Publications India
     
    Pages: 280
     
    Price: Rs 295
     
    Like the space-time it is set in, Hindu mythology too seems to trace a circular course -- in fiction. 
     
    Its once unmitigated villains are being re-evaluated, their motives and actions re-assessed, and epics retold from their perspective. But while the great "demon" king, the Pandavas' unknown brother and "jealous" cousin have had their say, what about a calamitous woman long-perceived as a cause of the war that destroyed Lanka?
     
    But it was time that Surpanakha got her chance to tell her story of repression, rage, revenge -- and eventual redemption. 
     
    We have long known her as Ravana's younger sister, a "wanton" asura whose advances to Ram and Lakshman, the exiled princes of Ayodhya, were spurned and earned her horrific mutilation from Lakshman's swift sword. Her subsequent complaint to her brother set in motion a chain of events that led to the death of almost every male relative. But do we know anything else about her -- her past, her thoughts, her future?
     
    Remedying the deficiency is author Kavita Kane, who has long been trying to give the overshadowed women -- wives, mothers and sisters -- of the great mythological epics a voice -- and their due.
     
    And after Karna's wife Uruvi, Sita's sister Urmila and the apsara Menaka, it is time for Meenakshi, the youngest child and only daughter of sage Vishravas and asura princess Kaikesi. It was her mother who named her Surpanakha, because of long sharp nails and equally sharp and destructive temper.
     
    Meenakshi's story cannot, however, be seen in isolation from her family, especially her brothers, the powerful and ambitious Ravana, the slow but solid (and unexpectedly perspicacious) Kumbha, and the righteous Vibhisana, and the growing tensions between her parents, and her father and eldest son.
     
    But this is not where Kane begins her tale, which starts in another, later age, where a young prince, raised as a cowherd, returns to Mathura to reclaim his heritage.
     
    Among the crowd, Krishna immediately identifies an old, hunchbacked woman, who makes her living by making sandalwood paste, as an "acquaintance" from an earlier life and approaches her. She is discomfitted by the attention of "an eerily familiar" but unrecognisable interlocutor, who seeks a favour, and promises to return. He does after fulfilling his primary mission, restores to proper form and reminds her of her previous life. 
     
    It is then a flashback to the hermitage of Vishravas as she is being born, and her mother's disappointment at giving birth to a daughter. From then we follow the childhood of Meenakshi and her elder siblings, which give us insights into their latter, more-known selves. It also, through their examples, shows us how some human traits and social issues have been part of our lives in the ages.
     
    And before the events segue into those we know as the Ramayana, we learn how Meenakshi's bids at happiness in her trying life fail and what an elaborate revenge she plans and implements -- though there are times when she balks at the cost it demands.
     
    Her campaign doesn't end on the battlefields of Lanka but continues well into Ram's Ayodhya, though she finds herself unable to carry out the final part of her revenge due to the unexpected reactions from her prospective victims. It is then she finally understands the patterns of her life and fate.
     
    The narrative returns to Mathura, where Krishna, who has comforted her with her eventual redemption, foresees -- but forbears to tell her -- her future (setting the stage for the next book?) 
     
    But, Kane's fourth book is not just a mere retelling of the epic from the viewpoint of a significant but minor character, and providing more space to the likes of Ravana's mother, wife Mandodari, and brothers as well as Sita, though it is her sister, who has a more vital role.
     
    It also may not lead us to view Surpanakha more sympathetically (though we can understand her) but shows how epics are not about the struggles between "good" and "evil", but of and between humans, of their choices, aspirations, their different social systems and outlooks. We read them not to find god but to know more about ourselves.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto TV Journalist Becomes Canada’s First Hijab-Clad News Anchor

    Toronto TV Journalist Becomes Canada’s First Hijab-Clad News Anchor
    Massa, 29, said on Friday that she became Canada’s first hijab-wearing television news reporter in 2015 while reporting for CTV News in Kitchener, Ontario, a city west of Toronto.

    Toronto TV Journalist Becomes Canada’s First Hijab-Clad News Anchor

    Drug Users Take To Vancouver's Back Alleys To Help Peers Stay Alive

    Drug Users Take To Vancouver's Back Alleys To Help Peers Stay Alive
    Vancouver Coastal Health says the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users has developed outreach teams of two people each that will also walk the streets to guide peers to use safer injection techniques and pick up discarded equipment.

    Drug Users Take To Vancouver's Back Alleys To Help Peers Stay Alive

    Review Following Serious Crashes Finds Bus Travel In B.C. Is Safe

    Review Following Serious Crashes Finds Bus Travel In B.C. Is Safe
    Minister Todd Stone ordered a private consulting firm to conduct a study after dozens of passengers were injured in two unrelated bus crashes in 2014 and 2015 on the Coquihalla Highway

    Review Following Serious Crashes Finds Bus Travel In B.C. Is Safe

    Evening Walk In Edmonton Ends In Emergency Hospital Trip For Pregnant Woman

    Police the 25-year-old woman suffered serious but non-life-threatening injuries when she was hit in a marked crosswalk early Thursday evening.

    Evening Walk In Edmonton Ends In Emergency Hospital Trip For Pregnant Woman

    Tests Required To Determine Responsibility Of Calgary Brothers In Sex Assault Case

    Tests Required To Determine Responsibility Of Calgary Brothers In Sex Assault Case
    The sentencing hearing for Corey Manyshots, 25, and his brother Cody, 21, was scheduled to continue today but has been postponed until Dec. 8.

    Tests Required To Determine Responsibility Of Calgary Brothers In Sex Assault Case

    Ontario Police Bust Luxury Car Theft Ring That Sold Vehicles Across Country

    They say 23 people have been arrested and $5 million in high-end vehicles, drugs and cash has been recovered as a result.

    Ontario Police Bust Luxury Car Theft Ring That Sold Vehicles Across Country