At 98, Khushwant Singh counts himself
lucky that he still enjoys his evening drink and relishes tasty food, but feels
sad that he has always been a bit of a lecher and looked at women as objects of
lust.
In Khushwantnama:
The Lessons of My Life, the country's most prolific writer and columnist
reflects on a life lived fully and the lessons it has taught him. He writes on
subjects as diverse as old age and the fear of death; on the joy of sex, the
pleasures of poetry and the importance of laughter; on how to cope with
retirement and live a long, happy and healthy life.
He also airs his views on politics,
politicians and the future of India; on what it takes to be a writer; and on
what religion means to him.
"In my 98th year, I have little
left to look forward to, but lots to reminisce about. I draw a balance sheet of
my achievements and failures.
"On the credit side I have over 80
books: novels, collections of short stories, biographies, histories,
translations from Punjabi and Urdu, and many essays. On the debit side is my
character...," Singh writes in the book, published by Penguin India.
He regrets that he committed many
"evil deeds" in his early years like killing sparrows, doves and rock
pigeons.
"I have also come to the sad
conclusion that I have always been a bit of a lecher. From the tender age of
four, right to the present when I have completed 97, it has been lechery that
has been uppermost in my mind.
"I have never been able to conform
to the Indian ideal of regarding women as my mothers, sisters or daughters.
Whatever their age, to me they were, and are, objects of lust," he writes.
"At 98, I count myself lucky that
I still enjoy my single malt whiskey at seven every evening. I relish tasty
food, and look forward to hearing the latest gossip and scandal," Singh,
who was a member of Parliament from 1980 to 1986, says.
But Kushwant Singh says he has slowed
down considerably in the past year or so.
"I tire more easily, and have
grown quite deaf."
Singh, founder-editor of Yojana and editor
of the Illustrated Weekly of India, the National Herald and the Hindustan Times
besides author of classics such as Train
to Pakistan, I Shall Not
Hear the Nightingale and Delhi, says his life had its
ups and downs but he has lived it fully.
He feels he wasted precious time in
"pointless rituals" and "socialising" and spending years of
his working life as a lawyer and then a diplomat, until he took to writing.
"I wasted many years studying and
practising law which I hated. I also regret the years spent serving the
government abroad and at home, and the years with UNESCO in Paris.
"Although I saw places and enjoyed
life, and, having little to do, started writing. I could have done a lot more
of what I was best at. I could have started my writing career much
sooner."
His biggest worry today is the intolerance he sees in the country.
"We are a cowardly lot that burns
books we don't like, exiles artists and vandalises their paintings. We take
liberties and distort history textbooks to conform to our ideas and ideals; we
ban films and beat up journalists who write against us. We are responsible for
this growing intolerance, and we are party to it if we don't do anything to
prevent or stop it."
By the kind courtesy of Rediffmail.com
By the kind courtesy of Rediffmail.com
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