Showing posts with label Paraja By Gopinath Mohanty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paraja By Gopinath Mohanty. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 May 2019

Analyse the role of Sukru Jani in Paraja.

Analyse the role of Sukru Jani in Paraja. 


 [Dec-2013, Q.No.-8]

Ans. In the novel Paraja, Sukru lani and his family are . taken as Sukru representative of the 'Paraja tribe. The novel begins by situating Sukru Jani and his family in a village inhabited by the'Paraja' who live in thatche huts on Paraja' street, while in the next street live the Domes. Their needs are simple and their desires are limited to a bowl of mandia gruel every morning and again in the evening, a piece of land to cultivate, and a pieces of cloth to cover their body. Sukru Jani's wife Sombari is dead, killed by a man-eating tiger and since then he has lived with his sons Mandi and Tikra, and his daughters Jili and Bili. Sukru Jani is the natural protagonist of the novel as the story of the novel revolves around his destiny, elations and mourning’s. He played a vital role as a patriarch of the 'Paraja' tribe by killing the cruel landowner Ram Bisoi. Sukru Jani universalizes not only his the tribe 'Paraja only but he also represents many other tribes like 'Paraja' who prefer to stay in their limited world but are being infringed upon by materialistic civilization to achieve their goals with the help of power. He is now old but not senile or debilitated. He is hard working, honest, conscientious and loves his children. A typical 'Paraja' tribesman with an intense love for the  land and a sense of humor, he is unable to deal with the machinations of the the outsiders especially when they come armed with the powers of the states such as guards.The story of Sukru Janis life is in a way story of the elite of the Parajas, the whole tribe. The writer emphatically points at the  unscrupulous means adopted by non-tribals to usurp tribal land through unfair methods.

Sukru Jani has in his dreams a future, when he will play with his grandchildren and great grandchildren, and he has a deep faith in the kind and benevolent' spirits which have endowed his life with a sense of peace and repose. He plans to build separate houses for his sons when they  get married as according to Paraja custom, married sons cannot live with  their parents. All his thoughts and dreams were exploited by a landowner , named Ram Bisoi, who not only exploited him financially, but also ruined his family. Thus, the novel depicts the exploitation of tribal groups through the protagonist Sukru Jani.

Discuss Paraja as a "Subaltern Novel" Or Can tribals be categorised as Subaltern in the novel Paraja? Support your answer.

 Discuss Paraja as a "Subaltern Novel" Or Can tribals be categorised as Subaltern in the novel Paraja? Support your answer.

                                                                                                              June-2012



Watch the summary at Student Help 

Ans. The term Subaltern means'of inferior rank, a term adopted by Antonio Gramsci to refer to those groups in society who are subject of the ruling classes.
 Hegemonic notions help the ruling forces to dominate suppressed classes by couching and cushioning their imperial power the in words like social order, stability and advancement.
 Some of the hegemonic central methods are social discriminations, racial prejudices gender biases, cultural differences and a split in humanistic values they have  Subaltern groups are fragmented and marginalized because little or no access to the means of control both in social and cultural institutions.
Their dissent or resistance is crushed and their voice remains either unheard .
The subaltern is a standard term designating a subject that has been constructed, colonised and internalised by the authoritative forces .
The marginalised person does try to resist and rebel, but to what extent is questionable and debatable In the novel Paraja, we witness the 'Paraja' tribals as the subalterns who are manipulated by the ruling feudal forces operative in that area.
 They are the marginalized peoplewho are unable to raise fist or voice and even if they try, their fate is as of Sukru Jani. They are doomed forever.
Their resistance is meaningless. They are devoid of the basic facilities required by a human being.
 Sukru Jani an illiterate is roped into the nexus of moneylenders and officials for no fault of his. He asks for permission from the Forest Guard to clear a patch of land in the forest for agricultural purposes, which is duly given, but verbally.
Let us not forget that in tribal customs the oral word carries more weight. Oral tradition and orature is part and parcel of their lives.

 Later when Sukru Jani's daughter Jili refus advances of the Forest Guard, he (Sukru Jani) is harassed ted by the nexus of officials including the people of the village.He  and his son become bonded labouresrd ;his son is caught brewing liquor illegally and to pay off his fine, he too has to surrender his services to the moneylender. The suffering does not end here. Jili is sexually exploited by the moneylender Ram Bisoi and whenever Sukru Jani raises his voice in protest either for land or money, he is suppressed and with the passage of time he neither has land, nor money nor a family. Sukru Jani is a representative of many such people who are faced with similar problems at times suffer more than him. When Sukru Jani knocks on the door of the court, here too, because of his being uneducated and unaware of the law, he is at the losing end. Money changes hands and once again, he is defeated and feels horribly cheated. The constant oppression and enslavement enforced by the rich and the socially higher ups results in the apparent action of his sons when they hack the moneylender to pieces And at a sub-conscious level, they make people hear their voices. Lenin had said that 'the proletariat has nothing to lose and nothing to gain' Sukru Jani is a figure who has nothing to lose in life and he is aware that there is nothing much that he can achieve or gain either. So he becomes a rebel. The voice of the subaltern is in rebellion. The speech of the marginalised is in his/her actions. The fighting spirit of these peripheral people of society is their stand against oppression. 

Q4. "Gotis, Tikra! From today we are gotis, slaves! Discuss the importance of this observation in Paraja. [Dec-2011][June 2014]

Q4. "Gotis, Tikra! From today we are gotis, slaves! Discuss the  importance of this observation in Paraja. [Dec-2011][June 2014]



View the summary on our channel at Student Help

 Ans. The events in the novel Paraja begin in winter and trace th misfortunes of Sukru Jani and his family through a span of a full year ti next December. In the novel, we are introduced with the knowledge about the life o the 'Paraja' tribe inclusive of their food habits, their clothes and their residential accommodations and all description spells out their simplicity. We are introduced to the protagonist Sukru Jani and his family who have been living in peace. Their needs are simple and their desires are limited Sukru Jani's wife Sombari is dead. A man-eating tiger had carried her away and thereafter the husband Sukru Jani has been living with his two sons- Mandia and Tikra, and his two daughters-Jili and Bili. Further, the story broadens our vision about the life style of the Paraja. If men worked in the fields and forests, then the women of the house took care of the daily household chores, whether it was cooking washing or other household works. Then, the story gives a clear vision to the destruction of poor, ignorant and illiterate people in the hands of the cunning and powerful people, and it is how the misery of the family is described in the novel. The People of the village advise Sukru Jani to raise a loan from the moneylender Ram Bisoi and in exchange become a debt bound goti or a bonded labourer. Sukru Jani is not ready to exchange his shelter and freedom as he has never questioned the legality of his actions, and has not realized that he is not the owner of the land he has been tilling as his own. Now, Sukru Jani was trapped in the despair and misery. The past nd present visions merge in front of his eyes. But by the next day, he is are that he has no choice except to go to the moneylender The tragic drama that will unfold as a result of his decision to borrow money mortgaging himself as a goti or a bonded labourer to Sahukar Ramchandra Bisoi starts and continues in this novel. The tribal folk seek loans from him for the bride price that the Paraja men have to pay and for buying grain, etc. In Sukru Jani's case, a loan of fifty rupees is raised, an agreement signed and smeared with thumb impressions; a deed of which Sukru Jani does not understand a word. And that day spells doomsday for Sukru Jani's family. From today we are gotis, my son; we have signed the agreement and from today we are gotis! 'His eyes filled with tears and his chest heaved with great sighs. The ageing father threw his arms round his son, broke into sobs and said Gotis, Tikra! From today we are gotis, slaves! The cloud that passes over Sukru Jani's family brings tears, sorrow and unhappiness. Sukru Jani and Tikra have to work as gotis for the moneylender Ram Bisoi who lives eight miles away from Sarsupadar. For a debt bound labourer, each day is of hard labour and the days are never ending. Thus, the given statement describes about the miserable condition of Sukru and his family in the village. He was financially destroyed.

Paraja By Gopinath Mohanty.

Paraja an Introduction.



Watch summary at Student Help
 Paraja is a novel of modern Indian fiction, which was originally written in Oriya in 1945 and later translated into English by Bikram K Das in 1987 tells on an epic scale, the story of a tribal patriarch and his family in the mountainous jungles of Orissa.

 The slow decline in the fortunes of this family om the quiet prosperity of a subsistence livelihood towards bondage to the moneylender is both poignantly individualized as well as symbolic of  erosion of a whole way of life within peasant communities.
 The novel 'Paraja' is all about a tribe in Koraput district of Orissa.
 It manifests the geographical details, feudal background, the economic and naterial resources and the unremarkable bond between man and nature with social customs, rituals and rites.

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