Or like the one about an Italian by the name of Faletti who was so badly smitten by the beauty of a dancing girl that he decided against returning to Naples and instead built a hotel in Lahore. The stories are probably apocryphal, but they make jolly good reading and add to the mystique of those Mughal-style havelis that housed some of the most beautiful girls in India.
In a puritanical and misogynistic society like that of Pakistan, which enjoys the dubious reputation of being the most testosterone-fuelled place in the world, a book about a red-light area might raise a few eyebrows and have the older portlier generation of male chauvinists chortling with pleasure. However, anybody who reads Hira Mandi, by the French journalist and author Claudine Le Tourneur d’Ison, flawlessly translated into English by Priyanka Jhijaria, will be sorely disappointed. The narrative was never designed to titillate the jaded appetites of middle-aged men. It is a serious account of an institution that houses the inmates of the world’s oldest profession. It is also a remarkable work, beautifully crafted, the chronicle of a passion written with great sensitivity, warmth and understanding by a globe-trotting author of 12 books. The accounts of life in Hira Mandi, Shahi Mohalla and Tibbi Gali, with its pimps and prostitutes, its beggars and drug peddlers, its gin-sodden drunks and coughing consumptives, its wisps of mogra and motia alternating with the stench of excrement, its crumbling dry rot structures and stygian gloom is etched with profound insight and perception.
Inspired by real characters, Hira Mandi is a fictional account of the life of the son of a courtesan of the area. The reader is taken on an eventful journey through the horrors of Partition, the boy’s adolescence, his closeness to his attractive mother, his longing for the Hindu girl he loved and the defloration of his beautiful sister by the very man who assaulted his mother. The reader learns of his addiction to opium, his incestuous relationship with his sister and her subsequent death at the hands of a nobleman who subsequently commits suicide, his desperate attempts to escape the life of an Untermensch, his inability to find a job, and his year in jail for trying to rescue his mother from the clutches of a violent and abusive client. This is followed by his mother’s attempted suicide, the young man’s endeavour to give the inmates of the red-light area equal rights under the law, the serendipitous discovery of his talent for painting, his subsequent fame as an artist which made him rich and his appointment as a professor of art. It will make a useful addition to the library of a discerning reader, for if ever there was a labour of love it was this.
Published in The Express Tribune, February 29th, 2012.
COMMENTS (9)
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@TightChuddi: Doubt very much if that would solve the problem. What about giving them alternate sources of income and an education?
This is excellent, Anwer.
@Antebellum
haha you are funny.
Slavery by any other name. Funny how the liberals, secularists, feminists and women-rights-activists conveniently turn a blind eye. How convenient!
When PTI government comes, these women, and their children, will be given freedom from slavery to this shameful and humiliating life by providing them with Shelter, Food, Education, Decent work and the RESPECT that every human being deserves!
Well written, as usual, Mr Mooraj...although I still miss those wonderfully witty, nostalgia-soaked pieces you wrote in the DAWN magazine about Karachi of the 60s and 70s many years ago. This one sounds like Iqbal Hussain's biography. About time someone brought his struggle at the fore.
Nicely written except for the really long sentences with so many commas. Leaves the mind reeling. Otherwise, nice touches.
Hira mandi should be razed to ground. It has no place in ghairatmand Pakistan
Can't wait to buy the book. Where can I get it? any idea, anyone?