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‘The shadow of 1947 lingers over us’

- SUKANT DEEPAK

NAVDEEP Suri believes that while we celebrate the many achievemen­ts of India in the 75 years since independen­ce, it is also worth pausing for a moment to reflect on the terrible price that was paid to get there.

“The Partition of Punjab and Bengal were among the bloodiest chapters in our history. Millions died and many more were uprooted from their ancestral homes. The shadow of 1947 lingers over us until today and it is important to understand and remember that history,” said Suri, translator, Distinguis­hed Fellow at ORF (Observer Research Foundation) and former Indian Foreign Service (IFS) officer.

Suri, who has recently translated his grandfathe­r, legendary Punjabi writer Nanak Singh’s Khoon de Sohile written 75 years ago as Hymns in Blood (HarperColl­ins Publishers India) coinciding with the country’s 75th year of Independen­ce Day, insists that the book is as relevant today as when it was written.

Hymns in Blood recounts the horrors of the Partition and the exodus of Hindu and Sikh communitie­s from a village near Rawalpindi that they had inhabited for generation­s. It is unsparing in its narrative of the trauma of violence and pillage but also encompasse­s many layers that help to understand the dynamics.

“Through the storyline and the characters, this novel pushes the message that commitment to humanity is more important than religion itself. And it has an enduring message for these times: Beware of leaders who rouse religious passions and try to divide the nation on communal lines. Beware the inferno that communal passions can unleash. Because once it begins, it leaves a trail of destructio­n in which there are no winners. Just mourning communitie­s …

“Also, some of the strongest characters in the book are Muslims who stand by their Hindu and Sikh neighbours, willing to sacrifice their own lives to protect them,” said Suri, whose last translatio­n was Khooni Vaisakhi by Nanak Singh.

Singh has to his credit 59 books, including 38 novels, each talking about social change and boasting powerful narratives.

Singh wrote Khooni Vaisakhi post the Jallianwal­a Bagh massacre. Its translatio­n was published to coincide with the centenary of the massacre in 2019.

Thrilled that major works from across Indian languages are being translated into English, thus inviting a universal readership, Suri smiles and recalls that

his grandmothe­r would always say that Nanak Singh would have been a celebrity if he had been writing in a language other than Punjabi.

“My endeavour is to bring his works – and his message – to a wider audience through the medium of translatio­n. This is a golden moment for translatio­n and the fact that Geetanjali Shree’s Tombs of Sand – a translatio­n from the original in Hindi – has won the Internatio­nal Booker Prize, speaks volumes.”

He feels that the state government in Punjab can play an important role when it comes to translatin­g Punjabi literature into English and other languages.

“To start with, they must realise that translatio­ns of classic works of Punjabi literature are an element of soft power when they promote and project Punjabi culture to a wider audience and help in building an understand­ing of the state. Besides, that also expands our literary heritage. Some states take this aspect quite seriously and it is time that Punjab also supports such endeavours.”

Considerin­g he translates the works of his grandfathe­r, Suri said he felt pressure while working on Pavitra Paapi (The Watchmaker).

“I was a bit hesitant about how members of our own extended family and others would view it. Now I am confident that I can do justice to at least some of his novels,” he adds.

Currently working on Singh’s Agg di Khed, the sequel to Hymns in Blood, he may also translate works including Ik Myan do Talwaran, the author’s classic on Kartar Singh Sarabha and the Ghadar movement.

Suri says that the pandemic-induced lockdowns gave him the time and space to concentrat­e on translatin­g Hymns in Blood. “But of course, it was heart-rending to see the plight of those who were less fortunate than us,” he said. |

 ?? ?? Navdeep Suri
Navdeep Suri

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