Essayer OR - Gratuit
In whom can women really put their faith?
Mint Mumbai
|April 19, 2025
Shortlisted for the International Booker Prize 2025, Banu Mushtaq's stories are full of dark humour and unpredictable pain
What is a wife to her husband? How should she describe him? Maybe he is her "home person"; but he is the one who leaves every day, while she stays at home. Is he her "yajamana" then, her owner, and she a servant with a degree? Banu Mushtaq's short story collection Heart Lamp opens with this scorching exercise in definitions. Zeenat, a recently married woman, tries to find the right word to describe her new life with a man in a town where she has no friends. When the newlyweds are invited to the home of an older couple, Zeenat finds a companion in the woman of the house, Shaista. They drink tea and lament the struggle to educate daughters in a culture that reserves its money for sons.
During this same afternoon, the women and their husbands stumble into a conversation about love. Shaista's husband declares that if he were an emperor, he'd have built her a palace that would put the Taj Mahal to shame. Zeenat's husband, though, is dismissive. To him, the Taj Mahal is no more than a grave, an apologia from an emperor who had countless other women at his disposal. But Zeenat quietly wishes her husband, too, would shower her with a love as passionate as the one she believes Shaista receives.
Towards the end of the story, Shaista dies unexpectedly after childbirth. Her husband doesn't build her a Taj Mahal. Instead, he marries another woman. "I need someone to look after the children," he tells Zeenat, who runs out of the building, distraught.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition April 19, 2025 de Mint Mumbai.
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