Skip to player
Skip to main content
Skip to footer
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
Like
Comments
Bookmark
Share
Add to Playlist
Report
On 35th Anniversary Of The Anti Sikh Riots, Radhika Oberoi Speaks On Her Novel 'Stillborn Season'
OutlookIndia
Follow
8/10/2023
On 35th Anniversary Of The Anti-Sikh Riots, Radhika Oberoi Speaks On Her Novel Stillborn Season
#1984AntiSikhRiots #OutlookBibliofile #OutlookMagazine #OutlookGroup
Follow this story and more: https://www.outlookindia.com/
Category
đ
News
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
Hello and welcome to Outlook Bibliophile. Today marks the 35 years of the 1984 anti-Sikh
00:09
riots that had broken out immediately after Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated
00:14
by her Sikh bodyguards. We have with us today Radhika Oberoi, who's done a book, her debut
00:23
novel called Stillborn Season, which is a fictional account of what transpired, what
00:33
happened as the riots broke out, the fears, the apprehensions of people back then. It's
00:44
a fictional account but you can get glimpses of what people must have felt, those who were
00:50
directly affected by it, those who were indirectly affected by it. And then there's a other part
00:56
of the book, the second part of the book, which is more recent in terms of dealing with
01:04
the reminiscences of that period. It makes for a very interesting reading because there
01:11
are different kinds of narratives that come into play. It doesn't have a single viewpoint,
01:17
it doesn't push an agenda, it does not follow only one protagonist as most books do, but
01:25
has multiple narratives and brings together different viewpoints of the riots. We thought
01:32
this would be a good discussion to observe the 35 years that have passed since the riots.
01:42
Radhika, welcome to Outlook Bibliophile. Thank you very much. It's an unusual idea
01:53
for a debut novel. What made you choose the '84 Sikh riots, anti-Sikh riots? Well, the
02:04
book isn't entirely about the 1984 anti-Sikh riots. It's a story of this little girl called
02:10
Amrit who grows up in a neighbourhood which is relatively peaceful. And then the peace
02:16
of her childhood is broken by this riot that creeps in suddenly. So the book begins by
02:23
capturing a lot of childhood snapshots of children playing in parks, old people walking
02:30
around, a very peaceful colony that is suddenly there's news that the Prime Minister has been
02:35
assassinated and absolute chaos breaks out in the city. The second half is of course
02:41
about Amrit growing up and becoming a reporter herself and then deciding to investigate what
02:47
happens. By then a lot of very seasoned reporters have already reported on the '84 riots and
02:53
she feels that her stories perhaps may not resonate with the kind of reality that she
02:59
hopes for. But it captures her despair and it captures the fact that there is no one
03:06
truth, no one truth emerges. Hence the multiple perspectives. A challenge particularly dealing
03:17
with something like this and something that's also part of our history is that one often
03:26
tends to follow a particular narrative, a particular propaganda or a particular viewpoint.
03:33
In that sense your book is different because it deals with various people, a person, a
03:38
beggar, a taxi driver. It deals with, as you mentioned, Amrit who grows up, who's a survivor
03:46
of the riots in a way and then grows up to be a journalist. So multiple narratives. Was
03:53
it a conscious decision to treat the book that way or is it something that while you
03:59
were researching for it you thought that this was a better approach?
04:03
Yeah, well, you know, one starts off by imagining a linear narrative but as one begins to write
04:09
and as one begins to research you begin to understand that all narratives around the
04:14
riots are unpredictable and are unreliable. Hence the need to get multiple perspectives.
04:20
So there is this one chapter called 'Rioter' which is actually a sympathetic view of the
04:25
kind of people who were recruited during the riots and he was actually someone who was
04:32
clueless about who the Prime Minister of the country is and why she was assassinated. He
04:36
just sort of wanted his daily meal. He just wanted to sleep on a full stomach that particular
04:43
night and that's why he decided to use the riots as a means to earn his money.
04:49
Hence, I mean it does not sympathise obviously with the rioters or with those who perpetrated
04:55
the violence but it tries to delve into realities from all sides. Hence you have these stories
05:02
which actually work independently as well and then are stitched together to form this
05:07
one fictive universe of comics.
05:10
What I particularly like about this book is the way it ends. There's a kind of fictional
05:19
interview naturally that she ends the book with where Amrit, one of the protagonists
05:26
of the book, is interviewing the Prime Minister, the dead Prime Minister. How did that idea
05:36
come about?
05:37
Well, I spent a lot of time at Indira Gandhi's memorial on Safsajung Road and I actually
05:43
stood around staring at those artefacts and it really humanises the Prime Minister. You
05:47
get a view into her life, you get to see her bedroom, her dining room and there are these
05:53
little plaques that explain how she invited guests, the kind of guests that were there.
05:59
So I decided to use that to create this stream of consciousness if you like. If you want
06:04
to call it that, you could but it is an absolutely imaginary account of a journalist standing
06:10
within those lawns imagining what would have happened had the dead Prime Minister been
06:15
alive and what would that interview have sounded like. When we launched the book we did a dramatised
06:21
reading of it and Sonam Kalra actually dramatised the dead Prime Minister. She was extremely
06:27
passionate and it was an absolutely beautiful reading in that sense. I'd also like to point
06:33
out that the book begins and ends with a garden. The prologue begins with Peter Ustinov actually
06:41
waiting for the interview, for the appointment and then he hears these shots ringing out
06:47
and it is of course just before Diwali and so somebody says it's firecrackers but it
06:52
isn't and it ends with an incomplete interview. The prologue ends there and then the epilogue
06:59
ends with an imaginary interview between a journalist and the dead Prime Minister.
07:06
Now it's been 35 years as we keep mentioning since the riots. This is one of the accounts
07:20
that is a fictional account but based on the riots. Multiple books, research material,
07:29
everything has come out on the riots. But people who were directly affected by the riots
07:36
and I believe you spent a lot of time, four years, researching the book and you met a
07:42
lot of these people who were directly hit by the riots. You researched with widows and
07:49
there is no sense of closure in this case. What is it that struck you the most when you
07:57
met the survivors, the people who were affected by the riots?
08:02
Well there is a lot of apathy to begin with and there is a lot of cynicism if you are
08:07
walking around as a journalist with a little notepad or a camera and you want to interview
08:12
them. They don't treat you very well. They don't welcome you into their homes and they
08:17
don't say that come let me tell you my sob stories because so many years have gone by
08:23
and it does seem to be this endless struggle for justice and we have seen in the recent
08:27
past that things have reached some sort of conclusion in terms of what has happened recently.
08:36
But when you speak with them you understand that their lives have been extremely difficult
08:39
for the past 35 years. Their children have grown up without fathers. They are mostly
08:44
derelict or they have turned to drug addiction and alcohol and you can see empty bottles
08:49
lying around. Several governments have come and promised all kinds of things but done
08:54
nothing. So they live in these little matchbox sized apartments in Tilak Vihar which are
08:59
riddled with all sorts of problems. And of course I wanted to capture all of that with
09:05
a lot of empathy and humour which I hope I have done because there is this one character
09:08
called Nirmal Kaur who wants to send this journalist off and she says that if she wants
09:13
to hear a sob story I could fake a few tears and show her my scars and say that this is
09:17
what happened but she prefers not to do that.
09:22
The other thing with not just the 84 riots but any riots or any kind of social churning
09:32
is we tend to focus while writing on the disaster, the carnage, the pogrom. What very few people
09:45
deal with is how while all of this is going on there is also the society which is removed
09:58
from the politics of the entire episode and how people irrespective of their religion,
10:05
their social status come together in these trying times. And that is something that this
10:12
book captures, the people at large. Radhika what was the motivation or the trigger because
10:26
for your book the sense that I got while reading it was that the central character is not one
10:31
or two different people but it's largely a community. What made you approach it in that
10:43
manner?
10:46
The fact that it was a community that was impacted, the Sikh community was impacted
10:52
but there were Hindus and Muslims that came together to protect their Sikh brethren and
10:59
that is captured in a chapter titled Tenants. In Tenants there is this young couple that
11:06
live in a barsati of this huge house and the husband is a young Sikh boy who decides to
11:13
go for a jog every morning in his vest and in his shirt and he is told that the riots
11:19
are going on and that you should stay indoors or cut your hair and he refuses to do that.
11:22
And then eventually when the action picks up they are rescued by their Hindu neighbours
11:29
and they seek shelter in one of the homes within that very neighbourhood. So a lot of
11:34
it is also inspired by my own childhood because where I grew up it was rather safe but there
11:43
was a lot of news that was filtering in and so as I mentioned the riot creeps into this
11:47
utopian world that children create for themselves and so there are memories of adults talking
11:52
in hushed tones, birthday parties that are cancelled, schools that are closed and hence
11:59
I have tried to capture that. So the first half really is about a childhood that is interrupted
12:04
by a riot. There is this one story called The Novice which is really about a convent
12:07
school that reopens after a few weeks of rioting.
12:14
Thanks Radhika a lot for your time. Do catch a copy of this book and I am sure you will
12:23
enjoy reading this. Thank you.
12:26
[Music]
Recommended
13:18
|
Up next
Outlook Bibliofile: Heritage Walk with Author & Historian Rana Safvi | Red Fort | Old Delhi
OutlookIndia
8/10/2023
14:09
Outlook Bibliofile: In Conversation With Iranian Poet Rosa Jamali At RAZA Utsav
OutlookIndia
8/10/2023
16:39
Outlook Bibliofile: Dr. Prannoy Roy and Dorab R Sopariwala on their book The Verdict
OutlookIndia
8/10/2023
0:52
WATCH | Jadavpur Students Join Nationwide Labour Strike Against New Labour Codes | Ground Report from Kolkata
OutlookIndia
3 days ago
3:52
WATCH | From Bihar to IPL Stardom: The Unbelievable Rise of Vaibhav Suryavanshi
OutlookIndia
6 days ago
2:58
WATCH | Amarnath Yatra 2025: 12-Hour Wait, Lathi Charge at Srinagar Transit Camp | Ground Report
OutlookIndia
7/2/2025
1:32
WATCH | Delhi Demolitions: 1,800+ Families Homeless in Bhoomiheen Camp | Jahan Jhuggi Wahan Makaan?
OutlookIndia
7/2/2025
4:37
WATCH | Bihar's Women Voters Reject Election Handouts, Demand Sustainable Employment
OutlookIndia
6/30/2025
2:37
WATCH | Inside Kolkata Maidan
OutlookIndia
6/29/2025
25:30
WATCH | Joseph Maximilliam Dunnigan On How Censorship Of Books Exists Across The World, From The US To China
OutlookIndia
6/29/2025
4:17
WATCH | Who is Zohran Mamdani?
OutlookIndia
6/27/2025
3:54
Kolhapuri Chappals By Prada: Inspiration Or Appropriation?
OutlookIndia
6/26/2025
42:18
Divam Sharma Explains How Shariah Fund Aligns Profit with Purpose | Bulls & Bazaar
OutlookIndia
6/25/2025
39:38
Abhinav Singh on Reducing Amazonâs Carbon Footprints and Shaping a Sustainable Future
OutlookIndia
6/25/2025
12:28
WATCH | Taniya Chatterjee on Her Viral Paparazzi Moment, Fashion, and Journey
OutlookIndia
6/24/2025
3:25
WATCH | Muzaffarpur Rape Sparks Outrage: Will India Finally Confront Caste and Gender Violence?
OutlookIndia
6/24/2025
2:32
Operation Sindhu: Indian Students Recall Bombings, Fear And Evacuation From Iran
OutlookIndia
6/23/2025
16:46
Khushi Mukherjee on Trolling, Fashion, and Staying Bold in the Public Eye
OutlookIndia
6/21/2025
3:30
Pentagon Pizza Orders Spiked Before Israel-Iran Conflict | The Viral âPizza Intelligence Indexâ
OutlookIndia
6/20/2025
21:25
Strategies For Equity Investors
OutlookIndia
6/18/2025
7:11
Vishal Kapoor, CEO, Bandhan Mutual Fund In Conversation With Nidhi Sinha, Editor, Outlook Money
OutlookIndia
6/18/2025
25:14
The Insurance Wakeup Call Sumit Madan, Chief Distribution Officer, Axis Max Life Insurance
OutlookIndia
6/18/2025
21:39
Role of Debt in Asset Allocation Mahendra Kumar Jajoo, CIO, Mirae Asset Investment Managers
OutlookIndia
6/18/2025
5:19
How Protests Are Shaping Global Resistance
OutlookIndia
6/17/2025
1:43
Ahmedabad Crash Update: DNA Test Delays Add to Familiesâ Agony
OutlookIndia
6/15/2025