試す 金 - 無料
'Places Live in Our Bones'
The Morning Standard
|August 08, 2025
Zara Chowdhary's memoir on surviving the 2002 Gujarat carnage has recently won the 2025 Shakti Bhatt Prize. She tells TMS that though there are braver testimonies, her book provides a framework for the world to understand authoritarianism.
Twelve years after her father's death, 32-year-old Zara Chowdhury wrote a poem, not addressed to her Papa, but about him. More of a rattling of chains and less of a cry against 'the men who trouble papa at work' and thereby put their home in a state of perennial crisis, she writes of Zaheer Chowdhary, a Gujarat government employee in Ahmedabad, a believer "in the system" even as it failed him, and whose impotent rage spilled at the dining table almost daily and devoured his family. This was a family already bleeding and aflame, when a train caught fire 128 kilometers from their city in 2002.
Gujarat, 2002, brings to mind the burning train at Godhra full of karsevaks returning home from Ayodhya. It also brings to mind the burnt flesh of Ahsan Jafri, a former parliamentarian, among the 35 other residents of Gulbarg Society killed in an act of hate in a pogrom, not too far from Jasmine apartments, where the Chowdharys lived. After 2002, Chowdhary left Ahmedabad and made Chennai her home; she now lives in the US with her family. Her memoir,
このストーリーは、The Morning Standard の August 08, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Morning Standard からのその他のストーリー
The Morning Standard
Royal Reboot
The Chevalier Collection is a legacy of lineage and valour, reimagined through modern design
1 min
February 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
AI, Me, Therapist
When 31-year-old Rhea Sharma, was going through a rough patch at work, she downloaded a chatbot for help.
1 mins
February 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
Fear the Illusion, Not the Illusionist
The fear of a mechanical god is as old as the stories of the asuras creating mayavi—illusions—objects or scenes so convincing that even the gods were momentarily deceived.
3 mins
February 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
The National Sport of Blaming the Dead: Gen Z Edition
'Indian politics has a strange hobby. Some leaders become statues with pigeon problems. Some become boring exam answers.
3 mins
February 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
The Yoga of Love
Age is similar to love; it cannot be hidden. A loving person is like the moon shedding its cool light.
2 mins
February 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
AI in Education: Bridging Technophilia and Technophobia
By the time this article hits the stands, India AI Impact Summit would have come to a close with thousands returning with millions of ideas to disrupt the lifestyle of billions using silicon agents working in tandem with synaptic naturals.
3 mins
February 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
4 SC QUESTIONS TO FRAME RULING ON MENSTRUAL HYGIENE IN SCHOOLS
A girl's education should not stop because of her periods.
4 mins
February 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
Bagging the Best
After decades of dressing cinema and couture, Manish Malhotra turns storytellerin-chief to handbags, where glamour, craft, and drama are carried, not worn
1 mins
February 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
INDIA'S AI POWER PLAY
CAN THE NATION BUILD INTELLIGENCE ON ITS OWN TERMS?
6 mins
February 22, 2026
The Morning Standard
PIO lawyer argued against tariffs, celebrates 'victory'
AT the centre of the landmark US Supreme Court verdict striking down President Donald Trump's sweeping global tariffs is an Indian-origin lawyer who argued before America's highest court about the illegality of the levies.
1 min
February 22, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
