Topic:
The Fakeer of Jungheera as a love story
Paper:
4
Paper
name: Indian writing in English
Name:
Bhatt Urvi P.
Roll
no.: 35
Class:
sem-1
Year:
2013-14
Submitted
to: MKBU
Q- The Fakeer
of Jungheera as a Love story:
A-
· Introduction:
The Fakeer of Jungheera by Henry Louis
Vivian Derozio. He was born on 18 April, 1809 and living only 22 years. He died
on 1831. He was a teacher and a poet.
Derozeo was an Indian poet and
assistant headmaster of Hindu College, Kolkata, a radical thinker and one of
the first Indian educators to disseminate Western learning science among the young
men of Bengal.
Long after
his death due to Cholera, his influence lived on among his former students. Who
came to be knows as young Bengal and many of whom became prominent in social
reform, law and journalism.
Derozio wrote wonderful poems in English. ‘The
Fakeer of Jungheera ‘ is one of the most significant landmark in the history of
patriotic poetry in India. In his days Bengal faced many problems of caste and
creed. The reassessment and inclusion of Derozio in the canon of Indian writing
in English has to do with many factors. Like communism, religious aspects,
colonial aspects.
In ‘The Fakeer
of Jungheera ‘ Derozio mixed the tantric, Hindu, mythological, Islamic and
Christian tradition. He got the idea about writing the poem of spiritual love
from Baital Pachisi. As the story goes, if king Vikram remains steadfast in his
love for his queen, he can resurrect her and once more both can find happiness
together. The dauntless fortitude and courage that the king exemplifies by
passing through the horrible ordeal in the graveyard leading to his triumph,
inspires conclusion to the tragic death of the Fakeer in the arms of his
beloved Nuleeni. If the Nuleeni can gain be resurrected in the arms of the
Fakeer if she can pass through the horrors and temptation of life.
Fakeer and Nuleeni
are star-crossed lover’s life Romeo and Juliet. In Shakespeare’s Romeo and
Juliet were the children of two enemies whose love brought the tragic end.
Here, in ‘The Fakeer of Jungheera ‘, Fakeer is the follower of Islam. Fakeer
means saint- a person who has renounced the world but here he loves a lady Nuleeni,
who is married and also an upper caste female. Nuleeni was married to a
Brahmin. Her husband dies in an early youth.
Nuleeni, the
beloved of Fakeer never loved her husband. In the day of Henry Derozio, Indian
subcontinent was caught by many evils like ‘Sati- pratha ’, killing girl child
by boiling the still born baby in the hot pot of milk etc. Nuleeni belonged to
a conservative Hindu society in the nineteenth century. She pure and beautiful.
She doesn't want to end her life behind a person whom she never loved.
Nuleeni was
brought to be the spot where her husband is to be cremated. Women were singing
songs praising sati. They sang of going to die on the funeral pyre of her
husband and escapes with the bandit Fakeer to his cave in Jungheera to a life
from death. She escaped death but she starts a life of forbidden love though
frightened by violent social norms. She believes that her lover’s courage and
her unfailing love will finally, make them victorious. Her fair and beautiful
face brightens the dark social setting of the poem and mitigates the bold
audacity of the Fakeer who snatches her from the midst of a group of mourning
upper caste Hindu at the funeral.
“O! For the speed of swiftest
hound
At once into her arms to bound!
O! for the speed of sunny beam,
Or eagle’s wing, or airy dream,
Or lightning glance of rapid eye
From younger rocky height to fly.”
In the intense bond of love Nuleeni’s
lover comes and takes her to his abode. They forgot their caste discrimination.
Fakeer fought that the people at funeral and took Nuleeni with him. Nuleeni
left all the relations of behind and got united with her lover. They did not
know that they were challenging the ancient and so called norms of the society.
They took the risk to escape and elope with each other rejecting the social
order. Fakeer with great courage snatched his beloved from the people of upper
class. The upper class people had the authority in Bengal. How can they bear
the insult? How can they tolerate the weaker sect running away in this way?
Henry Derozio
here, through this poem is opposing the evils of the Bengal’s society. Indian
society was divided into upper and lower caste religious division caste and
creed and many superstitious beliefs. The people were orthodox. Derozio wanted
them to come up leaving the dark sides of the characteristics aside. He was
criticized due to his preaching. The youth supported whereas superstitious
people tried to block them.
The brave
rebellion of the lover draws our attention towards the inequality of Indian
subcontinent. One can say that this poems marks an important steep in the use
of social themes in literary texts endorsing a syncretistic tradition quite
popular in the nineteenth century Bengal. Instead of belaboring upon the misery
of slavery, Henry Derozio embarked upon a mission of resolving some of the
inherent evils of Hindu society especially the practice of widow sitting alive
on the pyre.
Derozio opens
the first canto with the wind wandering gently like young spirits.
“The sun lit steam in dimples
breaks,
As when a child from slumber wakes,
Sweet smiling on its mother-there,
Like heavenly hope o’er mortal care”
Second stanza the sad theme
is established where a woman has to become sati.
In fifth stanza
a group of people protected by soldiers is depicted. In the next one Hindu women
sing songs of sacrifice as Nuleeni is to die but later on we come to know that
she runs away with Fakeer. Up to stanza 14 we are not told the name of our
heroine. In stanza 14 Derozio juxtaposed against the Christian image of an
external soul highlight the syncretism aspect of the poet’s imagination. In the
next stanza the poet prophesies the tragic future of two lover and weave images
of angles.
“And this good angels weaves
for me,
The wreath of immorality!”
Here, the poet
mixes Hindu and Christian religion.
In stanza 25,
we are introduced to Nuleeni’s lover, Fakeer who looks as if is a warrior:
“His dusky brow, his raven
hari,
His limbs or strength, his mortial air.”
Nuleeni dreamt him and one is in
his embrace-
“I dread and now before my
view,
My dream, my golden dream is true!”
She worships him
as deity and to him she is him she is his goddess.
“Henceforth I turn my willing
knee
From Alla, Prophet, heaven to
thee!”
Derozio sees
love between a Hindu and a Muslim as transcending religious categories in
colonial Bengal lays the ground for the inevitable conflict that ensues in
second canto.
The second
canto begins with the soft gurgling of fountains like the flute of Krishna as sumps
are lit in mosques. In the second stanza the poet introduces the popular belief
that loves for woman can lead a god-fearing young person away from worship.
There are many mythical examples of saints who were distracted by ‘Apsaras’
from heaven.
Stanza 7 reveals
the affronted father of Nuleeni who wants to avenge the insult on Fakeer. The
father requests Shah Shuja may be the ruler or landlord of the place to supply
him force to teach a lesson to Fakeer.
“A thousand of his bravest
band,
The stars of Muslim Chivalry,
At princely Shoojah”s high
command,
As though it were some god’s decree,
Attend Nuleeni’s injured size
With all the vault of martial
fire.”
Now the poet takes
twist. He talks about the ups and down of life. He talks about how man proposes
but god disposes-
“Life moves inconstant,
Like the rippling rill,
Hope’s and the moon’s rays,
quiver o’er them still!”
The army arrives at
the abode of Fakeer and Nuleeni Instead of running away he decides to fight
back-
“A drawing conquest must my
band achieve,
And’ is my promise, ere other
chiefs,
Shall be selected for thy
love’s relief,
Once more lead them to their
prey alone,
Then quit for ever, and be all thins
own.”
Nuleeni’s fear comes true and Fakeer’s life
is lost while fighting Nuleeni cradles him in her arms and dies together with
him.
“An unseen hand with a
glittering lance,
Checked the chieftain’s fierce
advance,
And forth the blood from his bosom
streamed,
And quenched hope’s latest ray
as it beamed!”
And thus comes
the end of the tragic love story Nuleeni dies with the person whom she loved.
She becomes a free agent to choose her destiny. In ancient time, in our
country, women were allowed to choose their life partners on their own. We have
the example s from our great books as Rukmani, Parvati, Draupadi, Kunti,
Gandhari, Sanyagita. These women chose their husbands on their own. Our ancient
culture was glorious but the invasions Foreign ruined our past culture.
The
secular and universal ideas that Derozio exposes in his poetry do not go well
with the separatist and divisional politics of modern India. These are some of
the revisionist consequences of modernity. However, the ‘modes of social life
that emerged in the early nineteenth century in response to modernity in India
now take us beyond modernity’ into the information age. If India must shine it
must do so within its own traditions and Derozio occupies a central place in
it. The poet through the impossible and bold story of love-affairs between
Hindu upper class widow and a Muslim lower class. Fakeer reflected and
criticized the evils of Indian society.