Thursday, February 27, 2014
Sunday, February 9, 2014
Toba Tek Singh short video
Meditation One
Katie Miller
Kaustav Mukherjee
World Literature
February 9, 2014
Toba Tek Singh, a powerful satire on the relationship of India and Pakistan
was written by Saadat Hasan Manto. The story takes place after the 1947
Partition act, when the government of India and Pakistan decided to exchange
their prisoners with one another. This
story depicts the struggles that the prisoners had to go through during the
exchange process. These prisoners had to deal with unjust and unfair treatment
because of this transition.
The inmates were called lunatics which means they were not
given the respect of even being referred to as a patient or another human.
Because they were not respected, they were always left in the dark as to where
currently located and where they were going to be transferred to. Often times
they would ask whether they were in India or Pakistan and they were given
minimal information or answers or answers that would cause them more confusion.
Many of the prisoners had previous ties to their land and
wanted to make sure they were going to be transferred to their loved ones. One
man became depressed because he believed he was going to be taken away from his
beloved; however, upon finding out he was indeed going to be transferred to
India where his beloved reside, he opted out expressing the need to say in
Lahore. Many of the men became confused whether or not they wanted to leave
Lahore or stay. This confusion caused an up rise of men going mad.
Some of the men went mad because they were not given answers.
They never knew if they where they were located nor did they have a choice. Men
were forced into either India or Pakistan but some men did not want to choose
either locations. One inmate went as far as climbing a tree and refused to get
down stating that he wished to live in the tree and not India nor Pakistan. It
was symbolic that he was in the tree because it declared that he was not a part
of Pakistan or India so he was above the conflict.
Bishan Singh, a Sikh inmate of the asylum, shared the
inmate’s distress between living in either India or Pakistan. Guards tried to
force him into India, however, he refused to move. After fifteen years of
standing, he fell on a small patch of land between India and Pakistan known as
Toba Tek Singh. His refusal to move proved that he belonged to no country or
flag. Bishan Singh refused to be controlled and he asserted his independence.
Most of the inmates fell under unjust treatment. They were
constantly in fear for they did not know where they were, or where they were
going. The confusion led to some of the inmates going mad. The asylum stripped
away their independence. They were controlled and told where they would belong.
Bishan Singh broke away from getting his independence stripped by lying in a no
man’s land. He lived fifteen years in the asylum and was left in the dark, but
was a free man, free from injustice and corruptness when he asserted his
independence back when he chose to lie in Toba Tek Singh.
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