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August 04, 2006

Khushwant Singh's Journalism: The Illustrated Weekly of IndiaLiterature

Khushwant Singh was someone I naturally gravitated towards as a young literature scholar, as he was one of the very few modern, secular Sikh writers with an international profile. (Now we have Brit-Asians like Nirpal Dhaliwal — though judging from this, I’m not really sure that represents progress.) khushwant singh editors page small.jpg But while I did read everything I could find by Khushwant Singh early in graduate school, I ended up not writing about him, barring one seminar paper that my professor at the time didn’t particularly like.

The truth is, from a literary perspective Khushwant Singh’s novels really aren’t that great. They aren’t as adventurous as G.V. Desani’s All About H. Hatterr, and not quite as carefully controlled as the novels written by his contemporaries in the 1950s — i.e., R.K. Narayan. Train to Pakistan (1956) sold very well in the west, and was in print for years and years. It isn’t bad — it’s actually a well-plotted, suspenseful partition novel — but it’s just somewhat unremarkable. I Shall Not Hear the Nightingale and Delhi, by contrast, aren’t very readable at all.

After the 1950s, Khushwant Singh focused less on creative writing and more on journalism, which is where, I think, he’s made his greatest contribution. Between 1969 and 1978 he was the head editor of The Illustrated Weekly of India, an ancient institution that lasted for more than 100 years, and was, until the 1980s, the biggest English-language news-magazine in India (perhaps in all of Asia). Under the British, it was effectively a colonial society magazine, and it didn’t change much under its first two Indian editors. Khushwant Singh was the third Indian editor, and he turned the ethos of the magazine on its head.

He describes his approach in the preface to a collection of columns called Khushwant Singh’s Editor’s Page (1981):

Under its first two Indian editors [The Illustrated Weekly] became a vehicle of Indian culture devoting most of its pages to art, sculpture, classical dance and pretty pictures of flowers, birds, and dencing belles. It did not touch controversial subjects, was strictly apolitical and asexual (save occasional blurred reproductions of Khajuraho or Konarak). It earned a well-deserved reputation for dull respectability. I changed all that. What was a four-wheeled victoria taking well-draped ladies out to eat the Indian air I made a noisy rumbustious, jet-propelled vehicle of information, controversy and amusement. I tore up the unwritten norms of gentility, both visual and linguistic… . And slowly the circulation built up, till the Illustrated did become a weekly habit of the English-reading pseudo-elite of the country. It became the most widely read journal in Asia (barring Japan) because it reflected all the contending points of view on every conceivable subject: politics, economics, religion, and the arts.

I’ve spent some time looking at the magazine before, during, and after the Khushwant Singh years (1969-1978), and what he says above rings true. The earlier editors were very “respectable,” with relatively safe short stories (often with a ‘village’ theme), and relatively bland features that mostly just synthesized the news. (In the 1960s, the magazine had a special section for “Women and Children,” which says a lot about how it conceived of its readership.) Most English-speaking and reading middle-class Indians in the 1960s hadn’t really remiagined themselves in a way that challenged the dominance of English norms. Given how limited the use of the English was at the time demographically, it’s not hard to see how a continued dependence on England and Englishness could occur. (Several issues gave lavish coverage of Queen Elizabeth II’s tour of India in 1967, for instance.)

Khushwant Singh has always written in English, and he was in every sense a contemporary of the “transitional” colonials: at the time of independence, he was already thirty-two, and had spent several years studying Law in Cambridge and at the Inner Temple, London. But as a journalist I think he broke the stranglehold of Anglophiliaby taking the United States as his English-language reference point rather than England. As an editor, it was wild, sometimes trashy American culture in and after the 1960s that Khushwant brought into the pages of The Illustrated Weekly: rock n’ roll, the Vietnam war protests, and the counter-culture (including the signficiant component of barefoot, Enlightenment-seeking hippies who ended up in India). Admittedly, some of the pictures of bikini-clad free-love kids in Goa splashed on the pages of The Illustrated Weekly were rather more like tabloid sensationalism than serious journalism, but there’s no doubt that these images had an effect on how Indians saw themselves in that era.

I admire Khushwant Singh’s secularism, which for me is always best represented by the Mario cartoon he used on his “Editor’s Page” in The Illustrated Weekly: a caricature of himself, sitting next to a pile of books, a bottle of scotch, and a girlie magazine. This is the basis for the familiar Khushwant Singh slogan, “sex, scotch, and scholarship,” which is also the title of one of his later books of essays. Much has been made of the “sex” and “scotch,” which is ironic since testimony from people who know him has confirmed that he’s neither a womanizer nor a heavy drinker. “Sex, scotch, and scholarship” isn’t literally Khushwant Singh’s lifestyle (nor does it accurately represent his attitude towards women); it’s rather a slogan for his fiercely independent ethos. It’s something India still has need of: a willingness to publicly be something other than “respectable” and “respectful,” to tell the truth rather than wrap the world in mysticism or one or another political ideology.

That’s not to say that Khushwant Singh didn’t make mistakes from time to time. His support for Indira Gandhi during the Emergency now looks extremely questionable, in that Christopher Hitchens-has-he-lost-his-mind? sort of way. And he probably should never have gotten involved with politics (though it could probably be argued that a Rajya Sabha seat isn’t really a “political” post), though at least he knew when it was time (i.e., after 1984) to walk away.

The Sikh community has been somewhat ambivalent about Khushwant Singh over the years. Earlier, he was seen as too close to Indira Gandhi, despite his public rebuke of Operation Blue Star. During the years of militancy in Punjab, his strong opposition to the secesionist movement made things dangerous for him (I believe there was a price on his head for awhile). And even separate from these specific political questions, of course, Khushwant’s aforementioned secularism — his preference for scotch (Sikhs, remember, aren’t supposed to drink alcohol), his crude humor, and his public declaration that he has no personal religious faith, have all eroded support for him from devout Sikhs. Despite that ambivalence, it’s widely recognized that Khushwant Singh’s History of the Sikhs is still a benchmark as a written introduction to the Sikh tradition. (Patwant Singh’s recent book hasn’t really caught on.) And he has, after all, retained the turban and beard that are so important to Sikh cultural identity. In short, despite everything, for most people, Khushwant Singh is still the same old Sardar.

To wrap up. In my view, Khushwant Singh’s talent has lain not in deep or revolutionary thinking, but in the writing of his weekly columns and in a keen sense of what is timely, interesting, and important to talk about. He started doing this in the 1960s, and kept it up for thirty or more years, leaving a sizeable body of work. In a sense, this nurturing of the individualized, independent public voice is quite on par with what we bloggers ourselves do. Writing for The Illustrated Weekly or The Hindustan Times (which he took up in 1980), his voice perhaps had more authority than the average blogger’s, but his consistent egalitarianism and irreverent tone gives me every reason to believe that Khushwant Singh would have a blog if he were fifty (or indeed, seventy) years younger. But who knows: the guy is still at it — he might start one one of these days.


A final note. Khushwant Singh, at the age of 92, is still out and about. This summer he has been doing public lectures in Delhi on the history of the city (his father had a hand in the building of Edward Lutyens’ New Delhi in the 1910s and 20s). He’s also been publishing essays and books pretty regularly, though they aren’t really of quite the same quality as some of his work from the 1970s.

amardeep on August 4, 2006 12:29 PM in Literature · T·r·a·c·k·b·a·c·k address · Direct link · Email post



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¤ DesiPundit said: Khushwant Singh’s Journalism: The Illustrated Weekly of India

In my view, Khushwant Singh’s talent has lain not in deep or revolutionary thinking, but in the writing of his weekly columns and in a keen sense of what is timely, interesting, and important to talk about. He started doing this in the 1960s, and kep...
August 4, 2006 07:54 PM

86 comments

 1 · Kush Tandon on August 4, 2006 12:46 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Amardeep,

I grew up on Khushwant Singh.

About 6 months ago, India Today had an anniversary issue where they discussed the most influential Indians. There was great write up on him. Did you read it?

If you know him, tell him about blogging.


 2 · Amitabh on August 4, 2006 12:53 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

His 'History of the Sikhs' is remarkably well done. Although his own biases and interpretation of events clearly comes through, he combed through what seems like thousands of medieval and more recent documents to give substance to his work. Volume One in particular is excellent.


 3 · Sahej on August 4, 2006 12:55 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

from the angle of Kushwant Singh in the Sikh community, I appreciate he provided an alternate way to be a Sikh. Its interesting to consider his History of the Sikhs from that angle. What did it mean for him to write that book? its a real resource for Sikhs as a somewhat impartial history that nevertheless is sympathic to the general Sikh world-view of its history. History in the Sikh community is always present, but a lot of times we don't really seem to know too much about it. I would say it would have sucked if harm had come to him in the ocho's.

not that i have anything relevent to say about the rest, other than i thought Train to Pakistan was pretty decent, and one of the only books i personally know of that deals with Partition that's written in english. that and Punjabi Century by Tandon


 4 · Masale.Wallah on August 4, 2006 12:55 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Great post,Dr.Singh. This brought back many found memories. I still feel that The Illustrated Weekly was ahead of its times. And to say that "his father had a hand in the building of Edward Lutyens’ New Delhi in the 1910s and 20s" would be an understatement! He (Sir Shobha Singh) was the main contractor for what came to be known as New Delhi and was at one point known as "adhi dilli da maalik," given the amount of property he owned in the city. Even now by some accounts, huge portions of Connaught Place, among other prominent addresses, remain in the family.


 5 · Vikram on August 4, 2006 12:56 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Amazing ! 92 and still going strong. Khushwant Singh & Mario Miranda are icons of a time I remember so well growing up. Some of Mario's cartoons here.


 6 · Amitabh on August 4, 2006 12:56 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

He's got a whole series of corny joke books (submitted by readers, not Khushwant's own jokes) that you can buy from street vendors in Delhi. There was also a paperback called Introduction to India or something that was a decent read, sort of a primer on Indian history, religion, and culture for those who knew nothing about it but were curious.


 7 · desitude on August 4, 2006 01:03 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Amardeep, isn't Kushwant Singh an atheist? Thats the impression I got reading a few of his essays. I fondly recall one essay where he turned up in 1970s New York and had an interesting evening in what was then the red-light district of Times Square.


 8 · Masale.Wallah on August 4, 2006 01:09 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I forgot to mention that Khushwant Singh still writes a column every Saturday for the Hindustan Times, which carries among other things, a couple of his famous jokes.


 9 · desitude on August 4, 2006 01:10 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Never mind :) I see where you write he has no personal religious faith...


 10 · Jai on August 4, 2006 01:16 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Desitude,

Never mind :) I see where you write he has no personal religious faith...

Unless I'm mistaken, I remember Khushwant Singh referring to himself as a "cultural Sikh" rather than a religious one.


 11 · Kritic on August 4, 2006 01:18 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Amardeep -


"Khushwant Singh was someone I naturally gravitated towards as a young literature scholar, as he was one of the very few modern, secular Sikh writers with an international profile."

Why did you naturally gravitate towards Khushwant Singh?


 12 · Amardeep on August 4, 2006 01:18 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Masale.Wallah, thanks for the reminder -- I somehow thought he'd finally retired. But no, here's July 21, and here's July 29. Wow. Still at it!

I wish the HT would make it a little easier to find his stuff -- perhaps by making a dedicated page of some kind. But oh well, Google works.


 13 · Kritic on August 4, 2006 01:20 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Amardeep -

I should clarify - Why Khushwant, when there were many other secular south asian writers of equal of higher caliber?


 14 · Amardeep on August 4, 2006 01:23 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Kritic, I think the sentence you quoted answers your question. As a Sikh growing up in the U.S., I was looking for "role models."

From a purely rational, unsentimental perspective, that kind of need to have someone who looks like yourself seems a little silly. (Indeed, why not James Joyce or Salman Rushdie? They're better novelists.) But I think a lot of people go through some version of this on their way to figuring out who they are and what they stand for.


 15 · Jai on August 4, 2006 01:28 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Amardeep,

But I think a lot of people go through some version of this on their way to figuring out who they are and what they stand for.

You stand for "sex, scotch, and scholarship" ?

Dr Amardeep Singh is turning out to be a more intriguing guy than I originally imagined. Not so sidha-sadha, eh paaji ? ;)


 16 · Amardeep on August 4, 2006 01:35 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Arre, Jai -- you're going to get me in trouble. I think you know what I mean!


 17 · Jai on August 4, 2006 01:45 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Amardeep, I'm sure hanging out with nefarious types like Anna and Abhi is already getting you into more trouble than I can possibly imagine.


 18 · Neale on August 4, 2006 01:57 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

And who can forget the hawkers at godforsaken train stations crying out -- "Ishtrid vikly,Ishtrid vikly"?


 19 · Jeet on August 4, 2006 02:09 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
I forgot to mention that Khushwant Singh still writes a column every Saturday for the Hindustan Times, which carries among other things, a couple of his famous jokes.

I read his columns every now and then. Heard so much about Train to Pakistan, I'll be sure to pick it up


 20 · thekingsingh on August 4, 2006 02:24 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
Dr Amardeep Singh is turning out to be a more intriguing guy than I originally imagined. Not so sidha-sadha, eh paaji ? ;)

I agree, Jai! Did you count the number of times Amardeep used the word "porn" in his previous post?


 21 · Bongo P'o'ndit on August 4, 2006 02:27 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Nice post. I grew up reading Illustrated Weekly and Khushwant Singh's column "With Malice Towards one and All" (used to appear in The Telegraph with the Mario cartoon and all).

Singh has often crossed paths with Bengali intellectuals over some uncharitable remarks over Rabindranath Tagore - I think he said that we would not rate Rabindranath's short stories or novels highly while admitting that he hadn't even read them carefully.

Regarding the point about the tabloid tendencies of Illustrated Weekly - I still remember an issue they did in early 90s on 'Kissing in Hindi films' complete with full-blown gratuituous pictures of then-rare kissing scenes in Bollywood and actresses in various stages of undress. Copies of that edition found its way to every dorm-room in boys-hostels over the country !

Also, who can forget Pritish Nandy shaving his head when IW came out with a new look.


 22 · Kush Tandon on August 4, 2006 02:47 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Amardeep,

You probably know this:

1) A few years ago, Khushwant Singh gently kissed the Pakistan's High Commissioner's daughter on the check. God, the whole Pakistani establishment bonkers. Some crazy stuff.

2) He once said, "We've Had So Many Donkeys as PM". Only he can say that so lucidly. He always speaks his mind clearly and loudly.

PS: Do read the interview I linked. It is hilarious. Excerpt:

What's the secret of your, well, vitality and long life?
The only secret is to acquire long-lived parents. My father died at 90 holding a glass of Scotch and my mother at 94 had one last request: her voice was feeble but she said whisky. The doctor said chalo give it. She took it and then threw it up.


 23 · technophobicgeek on August 4, 2006 02:58 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I grew up in my conservative middle-class family hearing about Kushwant Singh as the "dirty guy" every good Indian boy should stay away from. Naturally, in college I found a book by him and read it, and became a fan. The book was his historical fiction novel 'Delhi'. I was impressed by the erudition of the man.

About Dhaliwal's article, I was happy about the article until towards the end, where he stopped arguing and started bragging.


 24 · Kush Tandon on August 4, 2006 02:59 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Correction: I meant "daughter on the cheek"


 25 · tef on August 4, 2006 03:03 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I read Train to Pakistan is a bit light weight. When I first read it years ago I thought it was a brave little book that flouted (or must have flouted ) Indian sensibilities of the time. There is sex and communism far more racier than Narayan’s novels anyway. But trying to reread as an adult (and with a better understanding of India) I realize how superficial it is. Perhaps that’s a bit unfair, the Partition is such great material, that one would have thought he would have produced a novel with more depth. It’s a bit filmi (more Hollywood than Bollywood), I am surprised no one has thought of making a film.

I also a ready a small selection of his reportage from the 60’s, I think mostly done for foreign newspapers. I think he covers the 1965 war. And he is casually dismissive of upper-middle class Punjabis. I think of he makes fun of their use of “Auntyji”, “mummyji”. He sees them as arrivistes. Isn’t Khushwant Singh’s family super rich or something, I believe they owned half of Delhi.


 26 · Amardeep on August 4, 2006 03:05 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Thanks, Kush. It was indeed funny. And it's interesting to hear his statements on Sanjay Gandhi, Vajpayee, and Manmohan Singh.


 27 · tef on August 4, 2006 03:10 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Ouch, I really should proofread before I post. My first sentence should read "I read Train to Pakistan and it is a bit light weight...

And my apologies for not correcting the numerous other mistakes in my post above.


 28 · Amitabh on August 4, 2006 03:33 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I think writing a good, yet ACCURATE novel about Partition, or making a good, yet TRUTHFUL film about Partition, would be very tough because it will (if it's going to be accurate and truthful) be seen as an anti-Muslim endeavor. Part of the reason most of the creative efforts regarding Partition have been so horrible overall is because they have tried to be absolutely neutral, at the expense of exploring what really happened. Atrocities were committed by all sides but if you try to decide who's FAULT was it, and who started it, the answers will be very unpalatable to a lot of people.


 29 · Pun-jabber on August 4, 2006 04:05 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

That's easy -- it's all the fault of the Punjabis.


 30 · razib_the_browngali on August 4, 2006 04:13 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

That's easy -- it's all the fault of the Punjabis.

well, what wut were the number of deaths in punjab vs. bengal? i mean, what happened in punjab? i recall it wasn't even muslim league dominated (bengal was). not that there weren't incidents of violence in bengal, but east and west bengali were not "cleansed" of minority religions.


 31 · Al beruni on August 4, 2006 05:14 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Great article, Amardeep. i am a big fan of khushwant singh. His main contribution is that he is a totally "normal" person (wants a drink, thinks about women, likes good food and jokes) yet is an intellectual and extremely well informed about (at least) north indian culture. This is ground-breaking in the indian context of the 60s and 70s where a certain reserve was considered an essential part of being a public intellectual. Not to speak of a certain level of hypocrisy and pretense at being far above kama, krodha, etc!!!

What I find most stimulating about Khushwant's cultural commentary is its precision. He provides careful translation and descriptions of the meaning of sikh, hindu and muslim rituals, prayers and traditions. He is also equally skeptical and outraged at all forms of religio-political fundamentalism - hindu, sikh and islamic.


 32 · P. G. Wodehouse on August 4, 2006 05:31 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

If memory serves correctly, Rajiv Gandhi's government asked Khushwant Singh to read Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses and recommed whether the book needed to banned. Khushwant Singh read the book and recommended its ban. Accepting this recommendation, Rajiv Gandhi's government banned the book. Ayatollah Khomeini heard about the ban, then issued the fatwa. I am relying on my memory of events here. However, I found this link, the last paragraph of which at least suggests Khushwant Singh had some kind of role.


 33 · Amitabh on August 4, 2006 05:38 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Razib (#30):

The difference is that when Bengali Muslims attacked Bengali Hindus, the Hindus rarely if ever fought back (although Bihari Hindus committed large-scale atrocities against Bihari Muslims in response to events in Bengal); when Punjabi Muslims attacked Punjabi Sikhs, the Sikhs fought back and then some. And things spiralled out of control.


 34 · Kush Tandon on August 4, 2006 05:42 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Ayatollah Khomeini heard about the ban, then issued the fatwa. I am relying on my memory of events here.

Dude, it is more complicated. Some clerics from UK visited Khomeini personally.

What I know is the Khushwant Singh talked about the riots that Satanic Verses might cause to Penguin India. That is not off the mark. His own words:

My advising Viking-Penguin (India) not to publish the novel in India was
in pursuance of my duty as an advisor. I warned them that it would
invite trouble, including violence, on its head. I am totally against
banning books or films for any reason whatsoever and was against banning
The Satanic Verses. People who don't want to read a book don't have to
read it. But what is one to do with religious frenzy and fanaticism? If
Penguin (India) had published the novel its offices would have been
wrecked and its staff manhandled. I saved them from taking that risk.

That what he said.


 35 · Amardeep on August 4, 2006 05:59 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Thanks again, Kush.


 36 · RC on August 4, 2006 06:00 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Kush,
That interview was great !!! This guy is a true maverick. Openly criticizing Bhinderanwale during the height of those days isnt for the faint hearted. I was intrigued by him saying that he had rejected religion at age of 25, but being Sikh is something meant a lot to him.
I dont know if he was behind the ban on Satanic Verses as P.G.Woodhouse suggests, but if he was that another intriguing aspect of his career.


 37 · Al beruni on August 4, 2006 06:06 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

RC

Khushwant Singh lived with an armed encampment outside his home (not just a body guard!) for 10 years after his remarks on the khalistan movement. Lately he has been equally blunt about the VHP-Bajrang Dal types.


 38 · dipanjan on August 4, 2006 06:10 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
It’s a bit filmi (more Hollywood than Bollywood), I am surprised no one has thought of making a film.
There is film directed by Pamela Rooks. It is not that well-known though. I remember it mainly because it ran into some trouble with the censor board.

 39 · Kritic on August 4, 2006 07:40 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Kush,
He could have easily excused himself from reviewing the book, esp, since the sole purpose was to ban or not to ban.
Why are we so reluctant to call it like it is - Khushwant supported the Satanic Verses ban to stay good with the powers that be.

Either he is for free speech or he is not. No excuses.


 40 · Al Mujahid for debauchery on August 4, 2006 07:53 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

The difference is that when Bengali Muslims attacked Bengali Hindus, the Hindus rarely if ever fought back (although Bihari Hindus committed large-scale atrocities against Bihari Muslims in response to events in Bengal);when Punjabi Muslims attacked Punjabi Sikhs, the Sikhs fought back and then some

Yes because the Sikhs are such a martial race compared to lily-livered Bengali Hindus.


 41 · razib_the_browngali on August 4, 2006 07:56 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

AMJ,

no, a true bhadrolok responds to the immaturity of those beneath themselves :)

i don't know enough about partition to pipe it, but it is striking that east pakistan was still 25% hindu in 1950, and west bengal 20% muslim.


 42 · Kush Tandon on August 4, 2006 07:56 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Either he is for free speech or he is not. No excuses.

If you see that way, then he definitely erred in even telling Penguin India not to publish. I agree with you. He himself spoke for free speech in Lolita, Playboy, Peter Seller's movie Party controversy.

But in his own words, he was only warning/ alerting Penguin India of dangers.

I do not think in 1987-88, he was particularly close to the *powers to be*. He was his own man.


 43 · Kush Tandon on August 4, 2006 08:07 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Amitabh,

There were huge butchery even in Bengal with all of them involved.

Some of it was tempered by Gandhi himself fasting to almost death in Calcutta.

In west, larger regions were at stake, more wealth to be looted and reclaimed.

Watch Khamoshi Pani, or Bhisham Sahni's Tamas, or Amrita Pritam's work.


 44 · Floridian on August 4, 2006 09:00 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Amardeep:
You mention DELHI in the same breath as I SHALL NOT... DELHI is perhaps the most inventive piece of fiction written in the English language, in my humble opinion. It seamlessly weaves delirium with the factual history of "Dilli," the highbrow with the low, the glory of a historical city with its street culture of centuries past. It is the quintessential work on a city I love.

Anyway, I do agree with you that Singh is more a commentator of our times than a pure novelist. He reminds me of people like H. L. Mencken in the US and Dr. Samuel Johnson in 18th century England - forceful thinkers and astute observers of their respective societies.

Did anybody mention AND MALICE FOR ALL, Khushwant Singh's autobiography?


 45 · Kritic on August 4, 2006 09:32 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Since you guys are discussing the partition -

We all have seen movies, read tomes, watched plays on the horrors of seperation on the Punjab border.
What of the Benagali saga? Why the lack of narrative?
Does it have soemthing to do with the influence of communism in the state?


 46 · hairy_d on August 4, 2006 09:56 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
Why are we so reluctant to call it like it is - Khushwant supported the Satanic Verses ban to stay good with the powers that be. Either he is for free speech or he is not. No excuses.
ive disagreed before on this subject.
Surely society requests and, in some cases, asserts restraint on speech in order to protect the few from the few. Movie ratings are an example. Cigarette advertisements are another. The ban on protests within a specific distance from military funerals is another. Can we burn the flag (D.C.)? Can we piss on war memorials (Ottawa)? In an incendiary environment like in India, can we allow some fool to publish inflammatory comments on religious relations, or 'how to make a bomb' or 'how to do the next terrorist strike'? Given that the printed word is highly revered in India and the general population is not cynical as with out West, it may actually be prudent to exercise content control over an unregulated medium.

a few more words. free speech is hate speech if used with malice, and if it draws blood, then exercising control in its usage is to be recommended - and so we turn to experts in the field to provide their opinion on managing speech.

i cant begin to guess what rushdie was aiming for - may be he just wanted to tell a fantastic story - but that story had the potential for great harm in india. heck, this is a country where (so a tipster tells me) some guy killed himself over bolly-cinema (or maybe he was just appalled by the story line). then, ... mein kampf, if memory serves me right, is still banned in germany. the canadian publishing industry had a self-imposed ban on printing the danish cartoons. heck, i mean, if you look to the west for precedents and protector of 'free speech', well, think again mon frere.

basically, i am not a fan of the "either you are with us, or against us" type of argument. I find it quite fatuous.


 47 · Ponniyin Selvan on August 4, 2006 10:07 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
heck, this is a country where (so a tipster tells me) some guy killed himself over bolly-cinema (or maybe he was just appalled by the story line).

Yeah that's right. So ban everything that might make a few people angry and violent..


 48 · Ponniyin Selvan on August 4, 2006 10:17 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)


We all have seen movies, read tomes, watched plays on the horrors of seperation on the Punjab border.
What of the Benagali saga? Why the lack of narrative?
Does it have soemthing to do with the influence of communism in the state?

I think the whole stuff started in Calcutta in Aug 1946 (Direct Acion Day)..

This is from a Bengali Hindu perspective link It is equally bad as in Punjab..

Check out the resignation letter of Jogindranath Mandal, a Dalit and the first law minister of Pakistan (surprised??)
FULL TEXT OF THE LETTER OF RESIGNATION DATED 8TH OCTOBER 1950 OF

JOGENDRA NATH MANDAL,

MINISTER FOR LAW AND LABOUR, GOVERNMENT OF PAKISTAN, ADDRESSED TO LIAQUAT ALI KHAN, PRIME MINISTER OF PAKISTAN


 49 · Kush Tandon on August 4, 2006 11:18 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Razib,

Wikipedia gives me a slighly different twist to demographics of partition:

Massive population exchanges occurred between the two newly-formed nations in the months immediately following Partition. Once the lines were established, about 14.5 million people crossed the borders to what they hoped was the relative safety of religious majority. Based on 1951 Census of displaced persons, 7.226 million Muslims went to Pakistan from India while 7.249 million Hindus and Sikhs moved to India from Pakistan immediately after partition. About 11.2 million or 78% of the population transfer was on the west, with Punjab accounting for most of it; 5.3 million Muslims moved from India to West Punjab in Pakistan, 3.4 million Hindus and Sikhs moved from Pakistan to East Punjab in India; elsewhere in the west 1.2 million moved in each direction to and from Sind. The initial population transfer on the east involved 3.5 million Hindus moving from East Bengal to India and only 0.7 million Muslims moving the other way.

Well, they do state that East Pakistan/ Bangladesh had significant minorities during the Partition and even now.

Also, there is a link to art and literature from Partition experience.


 50 · Kush Tandon on August 4, 2006 11:46 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Razib,

Your figures of about 25% minorities (Hindus) in East Pakistan around 1947 is correct, I checked.


 51 · Jai on August 5, 2006 05:57 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
I read Train to Pakistan.....It’s a bit filmi (more Hollywood than Bollywood), I am surprised no one has thought of making a film.

A film of the novel was indeed made back in 1998, starring Nirmal Pandey and a couple of other familiar faces (Divya Dutta etc).

I thought it was quite well made. Has some nice music too.


 52 · Ujjwal on August 5, 2006 06:47 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Great post. I think you're right on the money when you say that he's good but not great. I just finished reading "City Improbable" which is a collection of pieces about Delhi edited by Khushwant Singh (some even translated by him). Would recommend it even though the quality of pieces is somewhat uneven. It has pieces by Timur Lane, Ibn Batuta, Manjula Padmanabhan and Khushwant singh himself.
BTW amardeep, Edwin Lutyens, surely?
cheers
Ujjwal


 53 · Hen on August 5, 2006 07:47 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I remember being 15 and on vacation in India with my family, and walking into a bookstore and seeing his books, one of which had him on the cover. Being, like Amardeep, a young Sikh who wanted another Sikh role model, I bought all the books by him at that bookstore(I think there were about 6 or 7 of them). The one I first read was Not a Nice Man to Know which I think was a collection of his essays. I remember being mildly shocked at his confession of leering at women and enjoying a good Scotch, but I think that years later, what spoke to me most was his honesty.


 54 · risible on August 5, 2006 08:42 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I didn't know Sikhs were forbidden to take whiskey!


 55 · kaveetaa kaul on August 5, 2006 09:32 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

A true blue blooded liberal..He used to write a column "With malice towards one and all". The title intrinsically suggests the irreverence of the contents. Bold and brazen. A pioneer, in that sense..quite a lovable old fella..its funny..one always remembers him as 'old' (not many of us have seen him young I guess) and incorrigible. Would have made a fascinating blogger.


 56 · KinkyPatel on August 5, 2006 11:05 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

KS has a very kinky side to him as well. I bet he could beat any of our esteemed Mutineers in a horndawg contest.


 57 · Jai on August 5, 2006 01:43 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
I didn't know Sikhs were forbidden to take whiskey!

It is recommended for devout Sikhs to refrain from drinking alcohol, smoking/ingesting tobacco, along with a couple of other activities.

However, overall the faith places much greater emphasis on certain other behaviours and attitudes in comparison to the above (eg. one's own conduct and treatment of others), except in the case of Amritdhari/baptised Sikhs, for whom the above is absolutely mandatory.


 58 · Kritic on August 5, 2006 03:06 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Thanks, Pooniyin

Very interesting link.


 59 · phanto363 on August 6, 2006 10:36 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

khushwant singh's weekly was a breath of fresh air in an otherwise moribund world of desi english journalism. he did a series of profiling some of the various communities of india. he brought chemmeen to indian audiences through serials. also another noted writer of tamil, t.janakiraman. his editorials were a delight. the weekly quickly sunk to its old dead roots soon after dr.k left. too bad he did not do any good succession planning.


 60 · Ponniyin Selvan on August 6, 2006 11:42 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Kritic, you are welcome..

To add, JOGENDRA NATH MANDAL later migrated back to India.


 61 · Panini Pothoharvi on August 6, 2006 09:03 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

At 92, Khushwant is a bit like my great grandfather. Much as I want, I cannot afford to be as irreverent as Khushwant himself would want me to be. For, all his life, KS has lived by a strategically created contradictions around his own persona and it is this quality - nearly unique among Indian authors - that has made him so endearingly enigmatic. However, there are two major faux pas in which this veneer of intrepid complexity begins to crumble. His uncritical and at one time quite cearly sycophantic relationship with Indira and Sanjay Gandhi which involved his unpardonable support to the Emergency was one such. The other, though less noticed and not quite as reprehensible, is his History of the Sikhs where he comes across more of a Sikh - even a devout Sikh - than a historian. It is not as if he has not pored over facts and archival material. It is that his writing of history is simply not convincing as credible history writing. His translations of Sikh scriptures are similarly handicapped by the lack of a credible knowledge of either the Punjabi language or the Gurumukhi script. But, of course, he remains highly extolled. And one cannot fight with such statured eminence. In his relationship with women authors, Amrita Pritam and Ajeet Caur being two prime examples, he has invariably assumed a tumultuosly ironic schism: 'I love you. I even love your dog. But don't stop me from saying outrageously unsavoury things about you and your books!' Bravo KS!

I would hesitate to venture an opinion on his merit as a writer of consequence on Punjab and the partition for fear of being 'encouraged' to air such musty views on my own blog. However, those who have read Laxman Tandon,s Punjabi Century, Bhisham Sahni's Mayyadas ki Mari and Tamas, Chaman Nahal's Azadi, Krishna Sobti's Zindaginaama, Mohan Rakesh's Malbe Ka Malik or Manto's Toba Tek Singh etc. would already know how and where to place him.

One of the biggest disservices rendered by him to the Sikhs is perpetuating the stereotype of the Sikh scholars as more of accidental village intellectuals rather than serious commentators on contemporary cutural formations. With a turban on your head in India, you have not even an outside chance to succeed in India to find pan-Indian acceptance as a scholar of consequence. If you have a turban on your head, you have to have residual traces of buffonery which is symptomatically injurious to genuine scholarship. How else does one explain the glaring absence of Sikhs from the field of cultural studies from Indian Universities? Even the most liberal, democratic and left-oriented intellectuals and experts have known to have turned down the Sikhs as possible professors in the various departments of arts and aesthetics. Not one in Delhi University, not one in Jawaharlal Nehru University, not one in Bombay, Calcutta or Jadhavpur (don't forget Partha Chatterjee began from the Guru Nanak University of Amritsar!) Bangalore in the last 60 years. There is either something wrong with the Sikhs or us?


 62 · Kush Tandon on August 6, 2006 09:48 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Not one in Delhi University, not one in Jawaharlal Nehru University, not one in Bombay, Calcutta or Jadhavpur (don't forget Partha Chatterjee began from the Guru Nanak University of Amritsar!) Bangalore in the last 60 years.

Some serious hype there.

Manmohan Singh (himself considered a serious economist) daughter is a faculty at St. Stephen's College, Delhi University. Manmohan Singh himself was a Profesor in Punjab Univeristy, and then Delhi School of Economics.

Dr. Montek Singh Ahluwalia is currently Dy. Chairman, Planning Commission, India. He worked for IMF too, and his wife is a judge.

I can personally vouch that Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Roorkee have sikh male faculties. Sure, it is a technical University. I do not keep track of liberal arts faculty in India, but I have a feeling neither do you.


 63 · Panini Pothoharvi on August 6, 2006 10:32 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Mr Kush in your enthusiasm to feel euphoric, you have chosen to ignore the crucial comment which pertains to cultural studies. Not economics. And for God's sake do not cite names of lecturers or Assistant Professors. I know there are many lecturers but even there not one in the field of cultural studiesM/b> which would include popular culture, literature, film studies. As for the Professors it would take another 50 years maybe.


 64 · Panini Pothoharvi on August 6, 2006 10:47 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Also, understand clearly the semiotics of the look. Your case becomes a lot easier if you do not have a turban on your head or if you are a woman. By the way Montek Singh Ahluwalia's wife - she with a lovely bob-cut - Ishar Ahluwalia is not a judge but an economist. Do you know that the first ever Ph.D in film studies in India is a regular surd and that while he was engaged in doing his Ph.D he was not allowed or shall we say encouraged to make use the services the National Film Archives at Pune? That he is languishing as a marginal lecturer in an inconsequential college in Delhi University even as he nears retirement? That in the past 20 years he has never once been invited to lecture on cinema or film related subjects?


 65 · superbee on August 7, 2006 10:08 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Also in the genre of partition literature is Azadi by Chaman Nahal

Winner of the Sahitya Akademi prize several years ago, it was also translated into Tamil by Prema Nandakumar as Viduthalai.


 66 · Panini Pothoharvi on August 7, 2006 11:51 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I notice that Mr Kush Tandon mentions Sabiha Sumar's Khamosh Pani and Bhisham Sahni's Tamas, the surd lecturer I mentioned in my earlier mail has earned name as a music composer and singer and the music of Khamosh Pani is in fact done by him. He has also done a film on Bhisham Sahni for India's Sahitya Akademi. Recently, he composed music for another film on partition, Beyond Partition, by the London-based film scholar Lalit Joshi. He also wrote the well-know film on the great Bengali filmmaker, Ritwik Ghatak, called Ekti Nadir Naam and another one on the legendary classical musician, Mallikarjun Mansoor, called Rasayatra. Moral of the story is that you cannot stop genuine talent and scholarship. I cannot resist mentioning that I am a proud student of his.


 67 · hairy_d on August 8, 2006 01:23 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
Do you know that the first ever Ph.D in film studies in India is a regular surd ... he is languishing as a marginal lecturer in an inconsequential college
oy! panini. well can you blame them if your prof is as hard to work with as you suggest. it's really hardworking with such complex unresolved surds, not with that radical gear the guy has on top.

 68 · Panini Pothoharvi on August 8, 2006 04:17 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Hairy_D you speak about how 'hard it is to work with complex unresolved surds' and that there is no problem whatsoever with "that radical gear the guy has on top". If that indeed be the case, how come our great country has failed to acknowledge even one 'cultural studies' scholar from the sikh community "with that radical gear on top" in the last 60 years or so? A


 69 · Panini Pothoharvi on August 8, 2006 10:39 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Hairy_d ji, I have finally been able to locate one professor of pan-Indian eminence from the field of humanities - political science to be precise which has little to do with cultural studies. He succeeded(?) despite the "radical gear on the top". His name, as you may possibly know, is Professor Randhir Singh. Poor chap had to sell off his house and eventually settle down in Chandigarh after the riots. But of course you would probably have noticed he is nowhere near as well-known as his student, Prof Rajiv Bhargava - scion of the rich and famous Rajkamal Prakashan and Chinar Exports. By the way my teacher is not a 'prof' as mentioned by you. He is just a college lecturer.


 70 · Panini Pothoharvi on August 9, 2006 10:58 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

This bit will probably interest both Kush and Hairy. The former (and by now conclusively indicted by an inquiry commission for his proactive intervention in Iraq's 'food for oil' programme) Minister for External Affairs in the Manmohan Singh Government, Kunwar Natwar Singh, declared in a press conference yesterday that he was going to write to the Guinness Book of Records aboutout PM with a "radical gear on the top" as the only PM in world's history to have been so chosen even without winning a municipal election. I just thought to myself how truly extraordinary such luminaries would be to have risen this high without the mediation of the electoral process. I do not agree - not even ever so slightly - with Manmohan-Montek economics but heaping ridicule upon them merely because they have been perceived to be human beings of exceptional calibre and chosen to lead the country without the elections seemed to me to be quite predictably in keeping with the "wise-but-undeserving-buffoon" image of the Sikhs which as I had said earlier Khushwant helped promote. And what about these Kunwars and Rajas and Maharajas - did they not also graduate from petty highway robberies to reach where they have? I wonder if KS has ever written about the acquisition of wealth by some of these highly privileged members of society - including, if anyone remembers, his own father, Sir Sobha Singh


 71 · Floridian on August 10, 2006 11:50 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Panini:
I never found KS's sikh humor politically incorrect. If anything, I though he was having the last laugh. Similarly, I have known quite a few sikhs who are experts at telling sardar jokes.


 72 · Panini Pothoharvi on August 10, 2006 11:19 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

'It is better to laugh at yourself than be laughed at by others.' This is the self-defence mechanism which is meant to save others from the ignominy of being labelled, to put it mildly, as proto-racists. Sikhs be praised for that! Or, did I speak out too soon? The ability to laugh at oneself is indeed laudable but even that should not degenerate into a naturalized talent, as is so blatantly the case with KS, to project and promote communal stereotypes. It sounds strange but some of the brightest minds I came across during my undergraduate and postgraduate studies happened to be Sikhs - of course, there were others as well - but it is even more strange that their intellectual potential has remained largely hidden from the public domain for reasons not always rationally explanable. Only such of my teachers who discarded their tubans and openly smoked bidis - teachers such as JPS Uberoi (sociology), Harjit Gill (linguistics) - could manage a semblance - only a semblance nothing more - of pan-Indian recognition. This argument is regrettably extendible to creative writing as well. For instance, some of the finest poets of the 20th century happened to be both Punjabis and Sardars - poets such as Puran Singh, Mohan Singh, Harbhajan Singh, Harnam, Amarjit Chandan etc - but their poetry remained largely unrecognised unrepresented even when Adil Jussawala came out with his highly partisan anthologies of Indian Poetry. These poets are comparable to the best of Bengali poets such as Jibnanand Das, Shakti Chattopadhyay, Sankho Ghosh or even Tagore and I would make bold to say that their poetic charge is far more emotionally saturated than their Bengali counterparts. But who has ever heard of them in India?


 73 · Jai on August 11, 2006 05:01 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)
Similarly, I have known quite a few sikhs who are experts at telling sardar jokes.

An analogy would be Chris Rock or a similar African-American comedian telling jokes about black people, to a predominantly black audience, and using the "n" word, compared to a white or non-black person attempting the same thing.

There is a difference between the two situations I've just described. The same thing applies to Sikhs telling sardar jokes compared to non-Sikhs doing the same, especially if the latter is targetted towards a predominantly non-Sikh audience or even deliberately aimed at a Sikh (or a couple of Sikhs) who may be numerically in the minority in any given social situation.


 74 · sarban malhans on August 29, 2006 09:38 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I just wish to correct an impression created by Panini. He mentions JPS Uberoi and HS Gill in the same breath as smokers. Yes, Uberoi did smoke publicly before 1984; it was the time when he did not wear a turban. At present, Uberoi wears a turban and smokes no more, at least not in public. As far as I know, Gill never smoked - privately or publicly. Out of the two, only Uberoi can be regarded as an outstanding scholar, who has made solid contributions to a variety of subfields within sociology and anthropology. Gill is good but not first-rate. I also disagee that Amarjit Chandan and Harnam are great poets or that they are of the same calibre as Puran Singh and Mohan Singh.
Sarban Malhans


 75 · Rida on September 8, 2006 08:55 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I was just searching for Khushwant Singh on yahoo and came across this website.I am an avid reader and I just finished reading Truth, Love and a Little Malice. This was the first piece of writing by Khushwant Singh that I came across but mentioned very often his brilliance and honesty applealed to me immensly.If possible I would really appreciate if someone could send me a list of the books written by him;I know of a few but not all.Thank you.
Rida
ridaaf@hotmail.com


 76 · Velu Manoharan on December 11, 2006 11:13 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I realy appreciate the great journalist and writer Mr.Khushwant Singh for all the great work in the magazine, The Illustrated Weekly of India. I thank him him for the good teaching the public to achive good education and know-how.

Mano_tractors


 77 · Velu Manoharan on December 11, 2006 11:14 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I realy appreciate the great journalist and writer Mr.Khushwant Singh for all the great work in the magazine, The Illustrated Weekly of India. I thank him for the good teaching the public to achive good education and know-how.

Mano_tractors


 78 · Vijay Kumar on December 17, 2006 05:16 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Does anybody have some old issues of Illustrated Weekly when Khushwant Singh was editor? I am willing to pay for it. Particularly, I am looking for issues dealing with Kayasthas and regarding Indian education but I am interested in other issues as well.

Vijay Kumar


 79 · Navin Khetar Pal on January 11, 2007 10:08 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

My composition on Mother

Mother
Mother in your womb you nursed me
Never in your life you cursed me
Under your warmth of affection
I spent my entire childhood
All this became possible because
You were infact to me very good
Oh my mother I am not praising you
Infront of anyone I am not raising you
Mother I had a chequered past
With depression still to last
With your tears you made my stand up
Not only this was last of it
You went on to share my mental agony
You are the only one perfect
Of the millions and millions of people many
Nobody can just count your affection
And for this I firmly believe
That you will lead me into perfection

Navin Khetar Pal
100B,GH-10,Sunder Apartments, Outer Ring Road
Paschim Vihar, New Delhi-110087


 80 · Cliff on January 11, 2007 02:48 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

@78
Vijay- did you get any responses? If I can get a copy of Illustrated weekly of India, I will keep it for ever. I am specially looking for one with the comic strip- "Inspector Azad". he was my hero growing up along with The Phantom ( Ghost who walks) and Inspector Vikram. All three appeared in Illustrated weekly in the 70's.

thanks

Cliffy


 81 · Bala on January 13, 2007 12:24 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

I recently read his autobiography Truth, love & a little malice. I must say KS has not lost his wits. An excellant read.
I too grew up getting the illustrated weekly along with other comics which my father ordered, but couldn't really make any sense at that time.
Is there any archive where one can read those articles in the present context?


 82 · Vijay Kumar on February 24, 2007 09:09 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Hi Cliffy

I didn't get any responses. I too liked the comic strips mentioned by you.

Regards,

Vijay


 83 · Hiru B.Naik on June 11, 2007 03:02 PM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

someone tell me about Rajika Kripalani who used to write in Illustrated Weekly of India when Khushwant Singh was Editor?Where is she now and what is she doing?I tried so many searches.Finally I found Rajika Kripalani Young Journalist Awards.


 84 · Hiru B.Naik on November 1, 2007 10:01 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

Can someone tell me exact whereabouts of Rajika Kripalani please?


 85 · nikita on June 13, 2008 04:03 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

he is a great writer


 86 · Rishi on August 20, 2008 04:50 AM · Direct link · “Quote”(?)

there is no mention at all o Khuswant's extraordinarily brilliant articles "Delhi You do not know" in Illustrated Weekly of yesteryears. How does one get hold of them???


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