"Under the nuclear shadow"
Arundhati Roy, Booker prize-winning author, looks at the conflict over
Kashmir from her home in New Delhi
This week as diplomats' families and tourists quickly disappeared,
journalists from Europe and America arrived in droves. Most of them stay at
the Imperial Hotel in Delhi. Many of them call me. Why are you still here,
they ask, why haven't you left the city? Isn't nuclear war a real
possibility? It is, but where shall I go? If I go away and everything and
every one, every friend, every tree, every home, every dog, squirrel and
bird that I have known and loved is incinerated, how shall I live on? Who
shall I love, and who will love me back? Which society will welcome me and
allow me to be the hooligan I am, here, at home?
We've decided we're all staying. We've huddled together, we realise how much
we love each other and we think what a shame it would be to die now. Life's
normal, only because the macabre has become normal. While we wait for rain,
for football, for justice, on TV the old generals and the eager boy anchors
talk of first strike and second strike capability, as though they're
discussing a family board game. My friends and I discuss Prophecy, the film
of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the dead bodies choking the river,
the living stripped of their skin and hair, we remember especially the man
who just melted into the steps of the building and we imagine ourselves like
that, as stains on staircases.
My husband's writing a book about trees. He has a section on how figs are
pollinated, each fig by its own specialised fig wasp. There are nearly 1,000
different species of fig wasps. All the fig wasps will be nuked, and my
husband and his book.
A dear friend, who is an activist in the anti-dam movement in the Narmanda
Valley, is on indefinite hunger strike. Today is the twelfth day of her
fast. She and the others fasting with her are weakening quickly. They are
protesting because the government is bulldozing schools, felling forests,
uprooting handpumps, forcing people from their villages. What an act of
faith and hope. But to a government comfortable with the notion of a wasted
world, what's a wasted value?
Terrorists have the power to trigger a nuclear war. Non-violence is treated
with contempt. Displacement, dispossession, starvation, poverty, disease,
these are all just funny comic strip items now. Meanwhile, emissaries of the
coalition against terror come and go preaching restraint. Tony Blair arrives
to preach peace - and on the side, to sell weapons to both India and
Pakistan. The last question every visiting journalist always asks me: 'Are
you writing another book?'
That question mocks me. Another book? Right now when it looks as though all
the music, the art, the architecture, the literature, the whole of human
civilisation means nothing to the monsters who run the world. What kind of
book should I write? For now, just for now, for just a while pointlessness
is my biggest enemy. That's what nuclear bombs do, whether they're used or
not. They violate everything that is humane, they alter the meaning of life.
Why do we tolerate them? Why do we tolerate the men who use nuclear weapons
to blackmail the entire human race?
The Observer, June 2, 2002
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