Stranger to History: A Son's Journey Through Islamic Lands
Stranger to History: A Son's Journey Through Islamic Lands book cover

Stranger to History: A Son's Journey Through Islamic Lands

Hardcover – International Edition, February 17, 2009

Price
$18.00
Format
Hardcover
Pages
336
Publisher
McClelland & Stewart
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0771084256
Dimensions
5.72 x 1.02 x 8.79 inches
Weight
1.2 pounds

Description

A subtle and poignant work by a young writer to watch."— V.S. Naipaul" Stranger to History is an amazing narrative: a kind of Muslim Odyssey which unfolds before the reader's eyes, bringing revelations, sometimes painful perhaps, but always intensely compelling."—xa0 Antonia Fraser"Darts deftly between physical journey and childhood memoir. The paternal relationship he never had becomes the backbone of the book, which is all the better for it. . . .gripping . . ."— Literary Review "The writing is elegant and fluent throughout, the characters skilfully drawn. . . . Stranger to History shines . . ." — The Guardian "Vivid descriptions of physical settings and insightful interviews . . . outline the challenges of reconciling centuries-old religion and the modern world."— Winnipeg Free Press Aatish Taseer was born in 1980 and educated at Amherst College in Massachusetts. He worked as a reporter at Time magazine and has written frequently for Time , The Sunday Times , and Prospect Magazine . He speaks five languages andxa0currently lives between London (England) and New Delhi. This is his first book. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Pilgrim’s Prelude Once the car had driven away, and we were half-naked specks on the marble plaza, Hani said, ‘I’ll read and you repeat after me.’ His dark, strong face concentrated on the page and the Arabic words flowed out.Kareem, pale with light eyes, and handsome, also muttered the words. We stood close to each other in our pilgrims’ clothes – two white towels, one round the waist, the other across the torso, leaving the right shoulder bare.‘I seek refuge in Allah the Great, in His Honourable Face and His Ancient Authority from the accursed Satan. Allah, open for me the doors of Your Mercy.’It was a clear, mild night and we were standing outside the Grand Mosque in Mecca. The plaza was vast, open and powerfully floodlit. The pilgrims were piebald dots, gliding across its marble surface. The congested city, the Mecca of hotels and dormitories, lay behind us.The mosque’s slim-pillared entrance, with frilled arches and two great minarets, lay ahead. It was made of an ashen stone with streaks of white; its balustrades, its minarets and its lights were white. A layer of white light hung over the entire complex.Towers, some unfinished with overhanging cranes, vanished into an inky night sky.We paused, taking in the plaza’s scale.*I was mid-point in a much longer journey. I had set out six months earlier in the hope of understanding my deep estrangement from my father: what had seemed personal at first had since shown itself to contain deeper religious and historical currents. And it was to discover their meaning that I travelled from Istanbul, on one edge of the Islamic world, through Syria, to Mecca at the centre and the Grand Mosque itself. The remaining half of my journey was to take me through Iran and, finally, into Pakistan, my father’s country.We walked on like tiny figures in an architect’s drawing towards the mosque. The plaza’s white dazzle and my awe at its scale had made me lose the prayer’s thread. Hani now repeated it for me slowly, and I returned the unfamiliar words one by one. My two Saudi companions, experienced in the rituals we were to perform, took seriously their role as guides. They seemed to become solemn and protective as we neared the mosque’s entrance. Hani took charge, briefing me on the rites and leading the way. Kareem would sometimes further clarify the meaning of an Arabic word, sometimes slip in a joke. ‘Now, no flatscreen TVs and electronics,’ he warned, of the prayer we would say inside the sanctum.We were channelled into a steady stream near the entrance. The pilgrims, who had been sparse on the plaza, gathered close together as we entered. The women were not in the seamless clothes required of the men, but fully covered in white and black robes. Inside, the mosque felt like a stadium. There were metal detectors, signs in foreign languages, others with letters and numbers on them. Large, low lanterns hung from the ceilings, casting a bright, artificial light over the passage. On our left and right, there were row after row of colonnades, a warren of wraparound prayer galleries. The mosque was not filled to even a fraction of its capacity, and its scale and emptiness made it feel deserted. Then, Hani whispered to me the prayer that was to be said around the Kaba. The Kaba! I had forgotten about it. It hovered now, black and cuboid, at the end of the passage. And once again, confronted with an arresting vision, Hani’s whispered prayer was lost on me.The Kaba’s black stone was concave, set in what looked like a silver casque, and embedded in one corner of the building. It had been given by the angel Gabriel to Ishmael, the progenitor of the Arab race, when he was building the Kaba with his father, Abraham. Many queued to touch it and kiss its smooth dark surface. We saluted it and began the first of seven circumambulations. Hani read as we walked and I repeated after him. After every cycle, we saluted the stone, and said, ‘God is Great.’The pilgrims immediately in front of us were three young men in a mild ecstasy. They had their arms round each other and skipped through their circuits. The language they spoke gave them away as south Indians. They overlapped us many times and their joy at being in Mecca was infectious. Behind us, a man who seemed Pakistani moved at a much slower pace, pushing his old mother in a wheelchair round the Kaba. She was frail and listless, her eyes vacant: she had saved their fading light for the sacred house in Mecca. Then another overlapper hurried past in an effeminate manner, flashed us a bitter smile, and hastened on.The vast array of humanity at the mosque, their long journeys encoded in the languages they spoke and the races they represented, brought a domiciliary aspect to the mosque’s courtyard. People napped, sat in groups with their families, prayed and read the Book. The hour was late, but no one seemed to notice; this, after all, was the destination of destinations.When we had circled the Kaba seven times, we moved out of the path of orbiting pilgrims and prayed together. Behind the double-storey colonnades and their many domes, there were brightly lit minarets and skyscrapers. I felt as if I was in a park in the middle of a heaving modern city.. . .At one point on the run [part of the last rite], which was long and exhausting, I caught sight of the Kaba in its courtyard. It possessed the place. Thousands stood in tight circles around it, but they seemed hardly to fill the giant courtyard. I tried to gauge the building’s size, but it defied assessment. And this was part of its mystery, like the near invisible, black-on-black calligraphy, woven into the silk covering its solid masonry.The Kaba could not disappoint because it was nothing. Its utter poverty expressed cosmic contempt for the things of the world. It was solid, mute, no triumph of architecture and virtually impenetrable, more like a rent in the sky than a monument. So silent and unrevealing a sanctum was this, that it implied faith, rewarding the believer with nothing, as if faith itself was the reward, and mosaic ceilings and tiled domes, mere trifles.This thought of faith seemed to lead into what happened next. A fellow pilgrim approached us at the end of our run. He was dark, with a pointed face and a curt manner. He addressed me in Arabic. I didn’t understand so he turned to Hani and Kareem. They nodded and walked on without a word.‘What did he say?’‘He said, “This is the House of God. You will receive divine merit if you make him take those off,”’ Hani explained, pointing to the religious strings round my neck and wrists.I couldn’t even remember where the strings were from. Some were from temples, others from Muslim shrines. ‘Tell him they’re from a Sufi shrine,’ I said defensively.‘Don’t say that.’ Hani smiled. ‘That’s even worse. The Wahhabis hate Sufis.’Faith was the reward at the sacred house, and faith would have answered the objection the pilgrim had raised, but I had come faithless to Mecca. And justly, I was found out. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • As a child, all Aatish Taseer ever had of his father was his photograph in a browning silver frame. Raised by his Sikh mother in Delhi, his Pakistani father remained a distant figure, almost a figment of his imagination, until Aatish crossed the border when he was twenty-one to finally meet him. In
  • the years that followed, the relationship between father and son revived, then fell apart. For Aatish, their tension had not just to do with the tensions of a son rediscovering his absent father — they were intensified by the fact that Aatish was Indian, his father Pakistani and Muslim. It had complicated his parents’ relationship
  • ;
  • now it complicated his.The relationship forced Aatish to ask larger questions: Why did being Muslim mean that your allegiances went out to other Muslims before the citizens of your own country? Why did his father, despite claiming to be irreligious, describe himself as a ‘cultural Muslim’? Why did Muslims see modernity as a threat? What made Islam a trump identity?
  • Stranger to History
  • is the story of the journey Aatish made to answer these questions — starting from Istanbul, Islam’s once greatest city, to Mecca, its most holy, and then home, through Iran and Pakistan. Ending in Lahore, at his estranged father’s home, on the night Benazir Bhutto was killed, it is also the story of Aatish’s own divided family over the past fifty years. Part memoir, part travelogue, probing, stylish and troubling,
  • Stranger to History
  • is an outstanding debut.‘
  • I had sought out my father because I couldn't live with the darkness of not knowing him. If I hadn't, all my life I would have had to cover it up with some idea of him taken from my mother on faith. I felt it would have limited me. History should never be taken on faith.’

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Most Helpful Reviews

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An Intelligent Journey through Islam

Aatish Taseer has a mixed family background, his mother (Tavleen Singh) being a Sikh Indian, and his father (Salmaan Taseer) being a Muslim Pakistani. This offers him a unique position to observe and understand the changes taking place in Islamic countries.

This first book, is part a travelogue through Muslim lands, and part a journey of self-discovery, as he struggles to understand his own roots, and his relationship with his estranged father. the journey begins as an argument with his father over the 'Pakistan ethos', and takes him through Turkey, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Iran and finally Pakistan.

He devotes considerable time and effort to Pakistan, and offers some fresh insights into Pakistani 'ethos', and its troubles. The most valuable, to me personally, was the one related to the loss of the middle class at the time of Partition. This may have have resulted in Pakistan's elitist governance structure, and lack of modernisation of the economy. The people he meets are mostly non-intellectuals, and this may explain why many of them come across as rather simple, groping for outward symbols of his Islamicness. Their fascination with the string and steel bangle on Mr. Taseer's wrist is remarkable - I have also experienced this kind of curiosity from my Pakistani friends. It is particularly remarkable because no one talks to you about your religious beliefs in India.

He intersperses old and fresh history with his own personal story, which makes an interesting combination. The content has the studied neutrality of Mr. V.S. Naipaul and the socio-historical touch of Mr. Amitav Ghosh. Yet it is also quite different from either of these authors, particularly because this book is very personal as well.

Mr. Taseer writes well, having worked for a long time with Time magazine. This is a good, insightful book, and is full of nuggets that I have missed out, such as the siege of the Grand Mosque in Mecca. He also seems to mix up some facts, such as the reference to 1992 Hindu-Muslim riots in Delhi. I was very much there, and I don't remember any rioters running around checking whether a person had been circumcised or not. At another place, while talking about the Danish Cartoon controversy, he lauds the West for being a place 'that considered it an achievement for religion to be able to take a joke'. He fails to consider the blasphemy laws in several Western countries, including Denmark. He also ignores the existence of laws in West which punish people for denying the Holocaust, which to my mind, is another form of politico-religious censorship.

Nevertheless, Mr. Taseer is an intelligent writer and I have enjoyed this book immensely. The hard-bound edition that I am reading was published by Picador India, and cost Rs.495 ($10). The paper and the printing is quite good, with decent typeface. The paper absorbs ink, however.

Highly recommended for people who are worried about the problems that Pakistan is facing presently.
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