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Book Review
'Baune' : The underbelly of life
'Baune' is the third collection of
B.S.Bir's short stories. Like his earlier collections, these stories
also contain meaningful insight into life and if what we see are the
dark secrets of life then so be it. All the stories are sensitive
portrayals of the ironies of life and the reader would be richer for it.
Literature is the mirror of life. But
this can not remain passive when it looks at the social conditions
bordering on moral chaos and lack of balance. To present the reality
alone is not to the aim of literary creation but the writer moves beyond
it while trying to wish life all the best.
'Baune' the third volume of short
stories by B.S Bir appears to be a milestone of his literary voyage. His
previous volume of stories ' Pauna Admi' reflected his creative and at
the same time appeared to be pregnant with possibilities of higher
achievement, of which the present volume bears a testimony. In these
stories, Bir has employed the weapon of irony and satire at a large
scale and the victim of his satire is our contemporary society. Short
story ' Baune' appears to be the epicenter of his art of satirization,
which also happens to be the concluding story of this volume. In this
story, he brings out the smallness which marks the five-star and
glittering culture of contemporary life in which we have given a go-bye
to all the values of life an even to those who value it. Gyan Peeth
Awardee Kalidasa and his wife leave the party unrecognized and
unhonoured and this becomes the high point of the story as well as the
central thrust of this volume.
Looking at the variety of characters
and situations, one becomes aware of the huge store of experiences which
becomes the backdrops in Bir's creative effort. Bir's creative eye can
locate extraordinary truths even in ordinary situations. His stories, 'Chhutti',
'Pul', Shah-Sawar', 'Partapi', 'Darna' and Akharili Pandtani' deal with
the corporate world of which he himself forms a part. 'Partapi Da Partap'
satirizes the dalits using surnames belonging to 'Jatts' with their
names. Story ' Akhrili Panditani' depicts with great subtlety the
mindset of officers belonging to lower castes who had to suffer
injustice in their early life. The hero of this story is a P.C.S
officers who gives jobs only to pandits and every women frome pandit
family who comes into contact with him becomes the victim of his lust.
But all the evil of his mind forces us to re-think when in the end it
becomes clear that when he was five years old, a Brahmin had raped his
mother before his eyes, when she had gone to sweep the house. After
learning this fact, the hero of this story appears to be pathetic
character, a tragic figure rather than a villain who got back, though in
a wrong way on society. Story 'Shah Swar' presents the unsavory truth of
contemporary life. If a man can enjoy women outside the wedlock, why not
his wife? 'Chutti' and 'Namard' also belong to this category whereas
short story 'Pul' presents the tragedy of feminism, which, in the name
of women's lib, brings the family at the brink of disaster. 'Ahalaya
Mook Kyon Hai', is the story of a woman who suffered rape and the cold
behavior of Prof. Kulshristha, her husband, becomes and object of deep
questioning. What was her fault for which she was being punished? And
who was Prof. Kulshristha ro punish her? Questions like this start
brewing in the mind. 'Bedaawa' is a very sensitive story which brings
into focus the mental anguish of Punjabi Sikhs who have to cut off their
hair in order to settle in foreign countries. The story 'Senior Citizen'
depicts the sad condition of old couples whom their own sons and
daughter exploit when they take them to foreign countries.
It can be said that in this volume of
short stories, a concerted attempt has been made to enter into a
dialogue with grim realities of contemporary life. Sexual relations have
been discussed in a loud voice perhaps that is the reality of loife
today. With this volume, Bir has taken a long leap into the world of
creative writing and tried the gap between the reader and the reality in
which he appears to be quite successful.
Dr. J.S Anand |