Friday, October 11, 2013

Shantaram

Shantaram literally means a man of peace. The protagonist of the book is rechristened as Shantaram.
It’s ironic considering the fact that the protagonist happens to be a heroin addict who robs stores at gun point to feed his addiction. He gets caught and is sentenced to 19 years of imprisonment in Australia. He escapes and flees to New Zealand and using a fake passport eventually lands in Mumbai, India where most of the story is based.
All of this is exactly what happened in the author’s life in reality.
And so Shantaram is considered an autobiography and the author’s narration does reinforce this belief. However, that is not the case. All of the characters in the book are fictional. And so are the events, except the major ones. For example, the author was actually renamed as Shantaram in a remote Indian village for coexisting peacefully with the villagers for 5 months as if he was one of them.
And therein lays the beauty of the book- in irony, in contrast, in antithesis.
The story begins with the protagonist “Lin” landing in Mumbai and hiring a tour guide “Prabhaker”. As the plot progresses Lin befriends Prabhaker and goes to stay with him in his village Sunder where he is christened as Shantaram by Prabhaker’s mother. On their way back to Mumbai, they are robbed and Lin, having lost all his possessions, is forced to live in the Mumbai slums due to his poverty. In the slum, he sets up a free clinic. The fact that the only medical knowledge Lin has is from his first aid training in Australia just describes the condition of the slum dwellers and yet, Lin adapts to the community and even learns the local language. He also falls in love with Karla and gets involved with the local mafia which gets him in trouble with the local police and he is thrown in Arthur road jail. In prison he almost dies of torture but is released, again due to influence of the mafia. His sense of loyalty to the mafia takes him to Afghanistan to help the Mujahideen. Upon his return, he realizes he has become everything that he loathes and decides to build an honest life.
For those of you not familiar with Mumbai, the city is characterized by its rains, population and its slums. And they don’t exactly make the city pleasant. Its proximity to the sea combined with the Indian sun and pollution makes it a permanent sauna and leaves a person leaving perennially sweaty and sticky. The slum houses the poorest in the city where people are crowded in huts and live without proper water and power supply or even basic sanitation facilities.
And yet, the author finds beauty and happiness in this very city. His narration is such that he leaves the reader with a craving to visit the city. He captures the reader’s attention and imagination with his opening line (insert opening line) and he holds it throughout the 900 page narrative. 900 pages of a story which seems as fantastic as it seems real. And the author weaves this magic with contrast in events, in ideas and in people. A most wanted fugitive runs a free clinic for the poor, a mafia Don uses arguments and theories of physics to debate morality, the poorest people are the happiest, true freedom is experienced in a prison and the most disgusting and annoying features of the city actually make it beautiful.
And this is just the beginning. The narrative has lots of subplots which give interesting insights into the working of mafia and the insides of the Indian film industry and the life of the richest and also the poorest. The author has truly captured the essence of the city.
The book forces a person to broaden their view points and to think beyond just right and wrong. It makes the readers realize that there is a fine grey area which exists between black and white and a person cannot be judged as just good or bad based solely on his actions. And this is exactly why it makes for such an interesting read.
If you still don’t want to read a 900 page book, just wait for the Hollywood movie-






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