It
is difficult to write about those whom you love. Curiously enough, the
difficulty is not only because of the fear of excessive partiality: it
is also because love brings with it the freedom to be exasperated. And
intimacy creates very complex and textured perceptions, often too nuanced
to be easily captured in mere words.
That
is why, when this book of memoirs (''A prattler's tale: Bengal, Marxism,
Governance'', Samya, Kolkata 2007) by Ashok Mitra, came into my hands,
I was at first reluctant to write about it. But the author was and is
so much more than the recipient of my private affection: he is one of
the more remarkable personalities of independent India, who has been involved
and even deeply enmeshed in some of the most significant events and socio-economic
processes of the past six decades and more, and whose acquaintance spans
a fascinating cross-section of our societal mosaic.
Ashok Mitra may be in the public eye as one of the more eminent Left economists
of India, who has written several valuable books in the subject, served
in important positions in the central government and been Finance Minister
of West Bengal as well as a member of the Rajya Sabha. But many others
will know of him through his prolific columns on current affairs in several
journals (notably Economic and Political Weekly) and newspapers, in a
journalistic parallel career that has spanned more than half a century
and showed his passionate commitment to progressive causes. And still
others will have engaged with his more approachable literary pieces, in
both English and Bengali, and discovered at least in part a kindred spirit.
Contradictions are inherent in all of us. Even so, the life and personality
of Ashok Mitra has over the years distilled the very essence of the term:
at once vociferously public and intensely private; devastatingly cynical
and endearingly romantic; angry and affectionate; stubborn and sensitive;
puritanical yet generous to a fault; belligerent with his friends but
also fiercely loyal to them; strongly political while remaining at heart
a sentimentalist lover of poetry; worshipping idealistic principles but
enjoying above all a good gossip; railing against the times, but very
much a part of them.
All these attributes, combined with his indisputable literary flair and
prodigious memory, are what make this book so absorbing and so much fun
to read. The Bengali original of this book ''Apila Chapila'' (Ananda Publishers,
Kolkata, 2004) generated much enthusiasm and also much controversy when
it was first published, in a way that has been typical of the author's
life. The English version captures most of the flavour of the original,
even if it is sometimes more circumspect.
It is an utterly charming book as well. From the start, a dizzying array
of personalities fills the pages. There are countless anecdotes, some
humorous and some poignant, and all quite fascinating. There are quirky
and effective pen portraits of the abundant profusion of his friends,
acquaintances, colleagues.
Of course, there are times when the cast seems perhaps too lengthy, and
the kaleidoscope of characters too intricate for the reader to retain.
Many of the people flitting across the pages are not only well known in
different ways but also part of the elite of India, in different spheres
ranging from the literary and artistic to the academic and scholarly to
the political and ruling groups.
Yet there are also some notable silences. For example, there is scarcely
any mention of his wife Gouri - even though her graceful dignity, quiet
efficiency and unswerving loyalty must have made her presence the central
stabilising factor of his life. Like the quintessential Bengali gentleman
that he has often declared he detests, Ashok Mitra steers clear of the
truly intimate, perhaps assuming that those who are deeply close are not
to be trafficked in words.
The opening chapters are wonderfully evocative of childhood and youth
in Dhaka in the 1930s and early 1940s, and the sheer exhilaration of student
life in Kolkata in the period just before Independence is also effectively
captured, along with whiffs of the momentous times in which these were
experienced. Indeed, the entire book is suffused with the vibrancy and
excitement of particular moments. And since Ashok Mitra was so closely
involved with so many events of national significance, these memoirs also
offer a panoramic glimpse into some of these broader processes and events.
The heady days of central planning with Mahalanobis in Delhi; the creation
of the Economic and Political Weekly; the social and political atmosphere
of Indira Gandhi's ''left-leaning'' phase in the early 1970s; the bloody
emergence of Bangladesh as a independent nation; the violent attempt at
destroying the Left in West Bengal over the same period; the grim days
of the Emergency; the extraordinary political transformation as the Congress
lost the national elections and paved the way for the era of coalition
politics; the electoral victory of the Left Front in West Bengal in the
late 1970s; the battle over Centre-State fiscal relations; the rising
hegemony of neo-liberal economic policy form the early 1990s – all these
form more than just a backdrop, as they are inextricably intertwined with
the dramatis personae of this account.
Some of Mitra's ruminations about the difficulties of progressive change
in only one state within a federal system and the internal systemic threats
emerging even within disciplined Marxist parties that are pushed by varying
forces when in power, deserve more attention. Even where one disagrees,
there is no contesting that he raises critical and thought-provoking questions,
and that his reflections are informed by continuing commitment.
It is true that the final sections of the book do carry perhaps too much
of the perception that everything – even progressive politics and literature
– was better in the past. In this sense some of Mitra's later reflections
do indeed fit in with the stereotypical attitudes of those who have been
around for longer, who tend to assume that the newer trends and changes
are generally adverse. Nostalgia can certainly colour one's attitudes
to the present, but it should not lead to privileging a past which was
probably as complicated and contradictory as the present.
The disarming thing is that the author would probably be the first to
admit this, as he would be to agree with anyone who brands him as difficult.
Yet the impression on reading this book is not one of a difficult man,
rather of an incurable romantic. It is a book full of people, full of
little stories about them and full of the emotion that only caring deeply
about people can bring. So this idiosyncratic memoir is in some ways a
love poem to many of the people he has ever known. This may then be the
longest and most successful poem of the would-be poet.
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