Sam” — a satire expressing his dissent on the nefarious alliance of the clergy and the USA against the communist movements in South Asia.
“Unfortunately, we haven’t yet taken his letters seriously,” Naeem remarked.
He then went on to read excerpts from “Allah ka Barra Fazal Hai” and described it as a satire which in the given circumstances could not be written again.
Naeem lamented that the work of Manto had been caged in stereotypes.
“We have restricted his work on sex and partition. Manto had a broader political understanding which is still relevant today,” he said.
In the second session of the event, Naeem looked into the writings of the Krishan Chander.
According to him, Chander — who in his extensive work of 30 collections of short stories and around 5,000 novels — had put more work on paper than all of the combined literature of Manto and Ismat Chughtai.
However, he said, literary circles had unjustifiably recognised him solely on his pre-partition work. Born on November 13, 1914, Chander, unlike Manto, was not a rebellious person by nature. “But with writing, he also spent a considerable part of his life as a political activist. He was a writer who believed in classless societies and he was an activist who was at the forefront in street protests against the arrival of Sir John Simon,” Naeem said.
Chander’s work on streams of consciousness in his story “Do Farlaang Lambi Sarak” expanded on the impact of the English justice system in the subcontinent.
Naeem said the diversity of Chander`s work was remarkable since from the Korean war to Kashmir, his pieces covered all the pertinent developments. “He wrote on the issues still relevant in today`s day and age,” he said.
Naeem also read in his distinguished style one of Chander`s stories, “Aik Tawaif Ka Khat Jinnah aur Nehru Ka Naam”.
Naeem ended the discussion with the thought that given the day-to-day news of communal polarisation, if Chander were present today he would have been present to fight against the “cultural chauvinism” through his pen. “The troubled times in which we are going through, demands from us to remember and read them,” he concluded.