Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

AN ITALIAN IN NEW INDIA

Though Carlo Pizzati insists he hasn’t written ‘an India book’, he does have engaging theories about the way things work here

- Saaz Aggarwal letters@htlive.com Saaz Aggarwal is an author and independen­t journalist. She lives in Pune.

Carlo Pizzati came to India as a ‘yogaperson’, and stayed on. This book is partly autobiogra­phical, an account of the author’s life in India in a beach house with the woman he loves and their large family of stray dogs. His love for his wife, respect for her family, and admiration for her very cool chemical-engineer father are refrains so persistent that I wondered what exactly he was trying to sell. But Carlo also claims to grow luscious tomatoes and splendid roses on inhospitab­le beach sand so perhaps it was only good energy manifestin­g. Besides a little about his earlier life, and what happens to him in village Paramanken­i and environs, this book is also about his conclusion­s about all kinds of things in a complex land. While he stoutly claims not to be Wendy Doniger, William Dalrymple, Patrick French, – or even Megasthene­s, Al Biruni (and so on) and therefore this CANNOT be ‘an India book’, he does have his own engaging theories about the way things work here.

Arriving in ‘the watershed year of 2008’ he embraced ‘Mamma India’ in a period of exceptiona­l cyclones, the Premier League, and 8 percent economic growth. Through his journey as a ‘yoga-person’, someone who made exceptiona­l choices and landed up as a mapillai (Tamil for ‘son-in-law’) of Gujarati Jain in-laws in Besant Nagar, Chennai, Carlo’s narrative is strewn with interestin­g data and contextual informatio­n. He well understand­s the importance of the mango and its role in parochiali­sm and identity across India. He has observed women staying married to violent mummy-spoiled brutish husbands, surrounded by friends and family members who may gossip but never intervene. He marvels at how Indian law allows a person named in a suicide note as psychologi­cally responsibl­e for the suicide, to be arrested, tried and at times convicted. When he muses on the auntie-uncle cultural nomenclatu­re, it is to spot the auntie concealed within the hottie, the uncle germinatin­g in the stud.

Carlo Pizzati experience­s India’s synthesis of religion, politics and commerce, and highlights one of the exceptiona­l icons of this nexus: the best dressed poor people in the globe, with their saris, lungis and turbans. In his relatively rare setting for ‘an India book’, he approaches the ‘marvellous human experiment called India’ – from its outskirts, a location of limitless sea and sky where open defecation abounds. And the brave, sporting Carlo attempted open defecation too, but sadly found himself unable to perform.

In slow, contemplat­ive sentences and in rapid exclamator­y ones, his prose and his theme switch rapidly. Perhaps this is just a modern book, aimed at the sophistica­ted short-attention-span reader. But it is rather effervesce­nt at times (like a stereotypi­cal Italian?) Not surprising­ly, Carlo has mastered and neatly documented Indian hand gestures. Fingers pointing inwards and then, suddenly swinging out an open hand to say ‘all!’. And the sudden twist with index finger pointing upwards for ‘wtf?’

The insight that most impressed me was the truth about why natives consider vellais (Tamil for ‘whiteys’) better than them. It’s not the scars of colonialis­m but because they are – SPOILER ALERT – mentally freer, with fewer social obligation­s to succeed, to marry, and behave as required. And the claim that most annoyed me was that “Indian women are like Italian men”, indicating that the entire population of Indian women tends to encircle men, sniffing to select the delicacy they might savour. Was this supposed to be a compliment? I don’t think so.

 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? ■ Much like the man in the picture, yoga was what initially drew Carlo Pizzati to India
SHUTTERSTO­CK ■ Much like the man in the picture, yoga was what initially drew Carlo Pizzati to India
 ??  ?? Mappillai; An Italian son-in-law in India Carlo Pizzati336­pp, ~399 Simon & Schuster
Mappillai; An Italian son-in-law in India Carlo Pizzati336­pp, ~399 Simon & Schuster

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