So these are interviews I did for Mid-day, The New Indian Express and Firstpost. But for those who still have questions, its all covered in this transcript of the most longish interview ever!
1)
Firstly, really
well-written book. Was keen on knowing what drew your interest in Rani
Padmavati’s story?
Thanks ever so much, Jane. So glad you enjoyed it.
Working on this book has been a lovely experience and I am so grateful for the
chance to tell Rani Padmavati’s story.
I read about
Padmavati in Amar Chitra Katha as a kid and remember being absolutely gutted
that the ‘good guys’ lost the war and the ladies led by their Rani threw
themselves into the flames. It disturbed me quite a bit that unlike the fairy
tales this story did not have a happy ending and it stayed with me as a
harrowing reminder that things don’t always
work out even if you work hard and live right. At the time, I was angry
with the men for winding up on the losing side of a war and dragging their
women folk down with them. So perhaps, the idea was to someday live the story
and make sense of it all and I am fortunate that it happened for me.
It is thanks to the editorial team at Juggernaut that
this book panned out. We were discussing ideas for a book and my editor
suggested Padmavati. I fell in love with the idea immediately, since I am a
huge history buff and had just finished writing a book on Prithviraj Chauhan.
That had been a massive high and I was suffering withdrawal pangs when this
idea took hold. Needless to say, I jumped at the chance to get up close and
personal with the incredibly brave Queen who continues to hold a special place
in the hearts of Indians everywhere. It was also a chance for me to tell the
story in a manner that would empower young girls plus all the women out there
forced to deal with hellish situations that are not of their own making and
perhaps even convince the male of the species that there are ways to settle
disputes and win conflicts without shedding rivers of blood.
2)
There is no denying
that the book is releasing in the thick of controversy, following Bhansali’s
film. There is also a lot of curiosity around who Padmavati, alias Padmini,
really was. Could you tell us what you thought of Rani Padmavati and why she
stood out among her contemporaries?
People have been asking me if I am scared about the fate
of my book on account of the relentless controversy plaguing Bhansali’s film
and some wanted to know why I am courting trouble. All I can say is that I am
not frightened in the least, simply because this is my country and it is well
within my rights to tell a beautiful story that has special significance not
just for me but my Indian brothers and sisters everywhere. I refuse to allow
anybody to make me feel afraid in this land which is my home. What is happening
to the movie based on Padmavati is a crying shame but I am confident that
despite everything, we will do the right thing by our citizens and not deny
them the freedom to express themselves.
The curiosity surrounding Padmavati and the interest in
unearthing her true story is heartening, because in my opinion, it is only when
we take the trouble to remember the heroes and heroines from our past that
their memories stay alive and the lessons they have imparted serve to light the
way as we head into a troubled future. Rani Padmavati stood out among her contemporaries
mostly because in an age where women were treated as little more than
broodmares and ornamental pieces in overflowing seraglios, she made her voice
heard and took a firm stand, defying her husband and his council as well as the
Conqueror who bayed for blood outside their doors to determine her own fate. It
is a much needed reminder that a woman’s resilience is no small thing and will
prevail no matter what the odds.
3)
Again, this book
draws from Malik Jayasi’s epic 16th century poem, which is also
said to have inspired the Bhansali’s film, while making a marked departure from
the original material. That poem itself used a lot of fantasy and imagination.
Did you try to stay true to the poem, or imbue this book with your own research
or work?
I liked the outrageous creative liberties Jayasi took
with this source material. Ironically, enough, the poetic license he took
cemented Padmavati’s position among the immortals of history, myth and legend
whereas Bhansali is in hot water for purported liberties he may or may not have
taken, despite insisting repeatedly that he has done nothing to hurt
sentiments. For my part, I used Jayasi’s idea as a springboard in the sense
that a lively imagination and elements of fantasy came into play but I decided
to forge my own path based on the research which I undertook. Where there were
gaps in the narrative due to a paucity of accurate information, a little
creativity, educated guessing and personal touches have been used to good
effect.
Based on my reading, Rani Padmavati’s story deserved to
be a unique version that is entirely unlike anything that came before, simply
because I took care to present the main players as flesh and blood human beings
as opposed to a flawless Goddess, her spineless, gullible weakling husband who
needed his wife to light a fire under his backside to fight for his people and
an evil monster without a single redeeming quality who blinded by lust claimed
countless lives. In my books on mythology, I have always refused to treat the
Gods with grovelling reverence or the demons with unqualified hatred and I saw
no reason to do the same with historical figures like Padmavati, Ratan Singh
and Alauddin Khalji. Hence the book is imbued with the essence of very real
people whom the modern reader can empathise with, and they are certainly not
black and white caricatures.
4)
What kind of
research did you do for this book? How long did it take to put it all together?
The research for a project of this nature is always an
arduous and extremely painstaking process that can be hard on the nerves and
induce the occasional panic attack. Somehow there is an ocean of information to
wade through but precious little of what you are searching for. It is
notoriously difficult but despite all that, I thoroughly enjoyed the research
work even if it took forever and involved sleepless nights wading through heavy
tomes and taking copious hand written notes. It felt like strapping myself into
a time machine and taking off many centuries back into the past. To a simpler
yet impossibly hard age where war was a sport played with terrifyingly high
stakes.
I loved the feeling of actually being in a very intimate
relationship with the awe – inspiring Padmavati, Ratan Singh whose best efforts
were never going to be enough or Alauddin Khalji with his steely determination
and savage ruthlessness as well as the important people in their lives who
however temporarily became a part of my world too. With the Rani, I could sense
the vulnerability of a young bride in the first flush of love who needs to
believe that the world will never go to hell even when confronted with
impending doom. As for Ratan Singh, it was not possible for me to look down on
him simply because in all likelihood he was a regular, even nice guy who did
not really excel in bloodletting and making war. Even Alauddin Khalji in my
book is not a complete beast though he was guilty of heinous crimes against
humanity. He had his own rigid sense of right and wrong and in his own
inimitable way, he did have honour. Ultimately, they were all victims of a
harsher age where too many were caught up in a killing frenzy and an unbroken
cycle of violence, driven mad by their lust for treasure, land and power. We
are fortunate that we live in a relatively clement age where it is not external
circumstances but the foibles within that contribute to the miseries of the
human condition.
Getting to know Rani Padmavati and the others has been an
amazing journey that has convinced me that the spirits of all who have passed
on from this ancient land live on in the very fabric of its history and
culture, which itself is reason enough for all of us to be nicer to each other
and turn away from the divisive forces and hatred that seek to tear us apart.
5)
How accurate and truthful
should writers be when revisiting events and characters from the past? And, how
close do you think this book comes to that effect?
It is my most fervent belief that there ought to be no
rules where art is concerned. That said, I also think that when it comes to
reinventing events and characters from the past it doesn’t hurt if the writer
has the superhuman skills of a tightrope worker because a balanced perspective
is crucial when it comes to writing on such explosive subject matter and dicey
issues. It is important to build a strong foundation based on thorough research
but the author also has to remain flexible enough to incorporate fresh ideas
and exercise the imagination in order to help the story grow and take flight
not just in the present but well into the future as well.
There was a certain vision in my mind regarding this book
and I am happy with the way it turned out. My allegiance was entirely to the
trio of Padmavati, Ratan Singh and Alauddin Khalji and I am confident that I
did justice to them. If they were to peruse the contents of my books, in my
opinion none of them will have any cause for complaint. On a not entirely
unrelated note, I keep fantasizing about Rani Padmavati declaring that I am her
BFF and she loves my version of her story while the Rawal and Shah keep
showering me with gold coins for my efforts!
6)
Would you say there
is a lot of myth surrounding Rani Padmavati’s life? Did you find any glaring
discrepancies in fact and fiction around the many retellings of Padmavati?
Truth be told, the story of Rani Padmavati has been so
successfully hijacked into the realm of myth that serious historians are
convinced that she is a figment of a poet’s runaway imagination and with good
reason. There is very little information about her that can be counted as hard
fact and historians from her time have been annoyingly silent where she is
concerned. It sucks that for someone who is such a legendary figure, we know
precisely nothing about where she came from, who her parents were and what she did
before she was married to the Rawal. In these parts, we have always followed an
oral tradition with the result that scholarly material is scant which in turn
results in a complete lack of agreement regarding key historical figures. There
will always be more questions than answers and it is hard piecing together key
events from the lives of folks from a bygone period.
Hence it bugs me no end, when people who may have heard a
few stories from grandma back in the day and are unwilling to go the whole hog
when it comes to the backbreaking labour involved in shedding light on these
ancient stories nevertheless seek to silence those who have struggled to
uncover the truth or as much of it as it is possible to recover. However, these
discrepancies notwithstanding, it is important that these stories get told even
at their most provocative or subversive. And it would be even better if long
buried stories are helped to the surface without the aid of unnecessarily
manufactured controversy. For this is the only way for our children’s children
and their great – grandchildren to stay in touch with a golden past that
deserves to be preserved.
7)
There is also the
charge of glamorising Sati. Did you feel that you were toeing a very thin line
when revisiting this event in the Jauhar chapter?
The chapter on Jauhar called for some delicate handling
on my part and there were times when I thought very strongly of rewriting it or
doing away with it entirely, because I did not want to glorify either Sati or
Jauhar or anything at all, that involved women burning thanks to patriarchal
notions of honour and womanly virtue. However, it was important that I take a
few deep breaths and acknowledge that in Padmavati’s case, it was a personal
choice made for reasons she chose to believe in. We need to respect her
decision and not condemn it with the benefit of hindsight and our own modern
concepts of right and wrong which no doubt will be most appalling when viewed
by our great – grandchildren or even ancestors who are no doubt rolling in their
graves over our new – fangled ideas pertaining to morality and ethics.
Still, over the course of my research I was not at all
surprised to discover that too many girl children and young brides were coerced
into performing Sati or Jauhar and were even drugged when they resisted with
doses of opiates and other intoxicants like kushumba.
Consequently, you will find that in my version the Jauhar has been treated in
an entirely unconventional manner which makes it raw, visceral and
heart-breaking, since it tracks the hitherto unknown events of treachery,
baleful influences and spite that lead to the Rani’s terrifying decision and it
will not be something the reader can anticipate if he or she has been
visualizing gorgeously clad women, weighed down with tons of jewellery with
artfully arranged hair striding into the flames to the strains of mournful
music.
8)
Clearly, for all the
protests around the film, your book doesn’t provide any fodder for romance
between Khalji and Padmavati. What we do see is a beautiful love story between
Padmavati and the Rawal. Do you think history and master storytellers forgot to
focus on this part of Padmavati’s life?
Unlike Padmavati, there is abundant information on the
life and times of Alauddin Khalji. From what is known of him, it seems not only
highly improbable but downright laughable that he made his decision to capture
Chittor on the strength of his supposedly inflamed passion for or desire to
possess Rani Padmavati. He was an ambitious man who lived for gold, land and
more of the same. In fact, some scholars have insinuated that his tastes in the
boudoir tended not to be directed towards the fairer sex. He did have a
reputation for demanding that his fallen foes wed their daughters to him but it
was seldom about desire and mostly it was to establish his authority over them.
Even Kamala Devi, the wife of Rai Karan of Gujarat shunned her odious husband
and chose to marry Alauddin. Apart from this there is nothing to indicate that
he coveted the wives of other men. Hence, my take on this famous forbidden
passion is again different and more in keeping with historical facts.
As for the love story between Padmavati and her husband,
I think historians and storytellers have been most remiss in leaving out this
aspect of their lives, so intent are they on portraying her as a larger than
life paragon of virtue as opposed to a young girl with silly dreams of
everlasting love. It is obviously not a perfect romance, not the least because
Padmavati was the Rawal’s second wife and there were plenty of other women of
comparable beauty vying for his affections. It couldn’t have been easy for the
Rani to share her husband with not just her rivals but the demands of running a
Kingdom on the brink of war as well. I wanted to take a closer look at the
potential relationship they are likely to have had.
What was interesting was the capacity they both had for
unconditional love and mutual respect even though they had to have been under
tremendous pressure because she had not borne him children as well as the
machinations of those who nursed a grudge against Padmavati and sort to cause
problems between them. It also saddens me that the Rawal is often portrayed as
a loser or coward when it is more likely that he was a rare kind of man, who
was more of a pacifist of moderate ambition, given to choosing love and a
gentle wife’s embrace over warmongering and an avaricious need to conquer and
enslave a nation. It is not right that we traditionally hold the nice guys in
contempt while looking up to the bad boys of history, despite the atrocities
they perpetuated while engaged in the selfish pursuit of personal
aggrandizement. Small wonder that the world has more than its fair share of
brutes whereas true gentlemen are fast becoming an endangered species.
9)
If there was one
aspect about Padmini’s life that you found empowering, what do you think it
would be? Also, do you think the Rani was a feminist?
It is obvious to me that good looks were not all Rani
Padmavati had going for her. She clearly was brave and had a quick mind. Given
the high regard in which her people held her it is apparent that she did not
spend all her time holed up in the harem, gossiping, dolling up and playing
dress up. Instead it is certain that she moved out from the suffocating women’s
quarters to a miniature palace the Rawal built for her own use and spent
considerable time and expended a whole lot of effort as well as monetary funds
towards caring for the downtrodden among the populace. Even with her rivals, who
must have resented the Rawal’s love for her, Padmavati chose to rise above
petty jealousy and insecurity choosing instead to take the high road and
responded to even he worstr detractors with typical dignity and grace. This
makes her a feminist in the truest sense of the term.
The most inspiring thing about her is not the manner of
her death but the way she chose to make her life count in the too brief span
that was allotted to her. It is why she will never be forgotten and there will
always be those who are willing to retell her story even it means taking on
formidable odds and pushing the limits of courage in order to be worthy of the
legendary Queen.
And I mentioned excerpts right? These are excerpts from Rani Padmavati which appeared in The New Indian Express and Scroll.
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