The Asian Age

Islamic love novels set hearts aflutter in Bangla

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Dhaka, April 26: Kasem bin Abubakar was told nobody would buy his chaste romance novels about devout young Muslims finding love within the strict moral confines of Bangladesh­i society.

And yet his tales of lovers whispering sweet nothings between calls to prayer sold millions in the 1980s and proved a huge hit among young girls from Bangladesh’s rural, conservati­ve heartland.

Now his work is undergoing something of a renaissanc­e as Bangladesh slides from the moderate Islam worshipped for generation­s to a more conservati­ve interpreta­tion of the scriptures.

“Girls write me love letters with ink dipped in their own blood. Some were desperate to marry me” Abubakar said, recounting his surprise at young women making a traditiona­l gesture of intense devotion to a greying author.

His debut novel Futonto Golap (Blossomed Rose), written more than three decades ago, has spawned an entire genre of fiction tinged with Islamic values.

Abubakar was inspired to take up the pen in the late 1970s, when as a bookseller he lamented that most novels obsessed with the cosmopolit­an lifestyles of modern, elite Bangladesh­is.

These secular tales were a world removed from the largely rural and pious village existence lived by the majority of Bangladesh’s 160 million people, and Abubakar sensed a gap in the market ripe for his fiction.

“He tapped into a new readership that nobody thought existed before,” said Bangladesh­i journalist Qadaruddin Shishir.

“In rural villages, Abubakar’s novels are the best gift a young lover can give to his fiancee.”

Abubakar wrote The Blossomed Rose — a story about two mismatched young Muslims seeking consent for marriage from their families — by hand in 1978, but it took almost a decade for a publisher to even look at it. “They told me ‘mullah novels’ don’t sell,” he said.

Eventually, he sold the copyright to a publisher for a mere $12.50, and became an overnight sensation.

 ?? — AFP ?? A file photo shows novelist Kasem bin Abubakar signing an autograph for a relative at his book shop in Dhaka.
— AFP A file photo shows novelist Kasem bin Abubakar signing an autograph for a relative at his book shop in Dhaka.

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