A recent recipient of the Moortidevi Award given
by the Bharatiya Jnanpith as well as the Sitara-e-Imtiaz given by the
Government of Pakistan, Prof Gopichand Narang is no stranger to awards
and honours. In a long and illustrious career as a teacher of Urdu, a writer
and critic of depth and gravitas, an engaging and eloquent speaker, a tireless
organiser of seminars, symposiums and academic interventions, an indefatigable
champion of the cause of Urdu, Narang sahab has single-handedly done more for
the cause of Urdu in India than many anjumans and associations. His list of
publications is formidable, and so is his command over the intricacies of
linguistic theory and cultural praxis. What is most heartening, however, is his
lifelong belief in the innate ability of Urdu to build bridges, to forge
interfaith harmony and emerge as the pre-eminent symbol of composite culture.
Tell us, how does it feel to receive this honour
from the Govt. of Pakistan?
I was
surprised. Of course it was
overwhelming. One does not work for
awards but if your work is recognized and especially by another country, it is
extremely heartening. I am grateful to the Government of Pakistan and the people
of Pakistan for the honour.
From your
birthplace, Dukki in Balochistan to your present home in Delhi, does it feel
like a long journey? Briefly, could you pick out a few important milestones
along the way?
Traveling down memory lane is a painful journey; to be
uprooted, to go through all that suffering and tragedy which was on both side
of the divide, and to get settled in Delhi was not easy. My father had opted for Baluchistan Revenue Service,
my mother with nine young children migrated.
My love for Urdu took me to the historic Delhi College at Ajmeri Gate,
where once Maulavi Abdul Haq used to teach.
From there to a temporary teaching position in St. Stephen’s College and
then Delhi University and eventually to the University of Wisconsin, each
milestone is marked with a deep sense of commitment and struggle.
The Doomsdayers have been predicting the ‘death of
Urdu’ for a long time now, in fact for almost a century or more. What is your
take on this? Do you believe that Urdu is dead or dying in India?
My sense of historical linguistics led me to believe
that Urdu is at the heart of India’s lingua franca, structurally being akin to
Hindi and Hindustani, my faith in the composite cultural genius of Urdu never
faltered. Unfortunately, Urdu had been the victim of politicization and
communalization. This has created
difficulties for Urdu in India, but Urdu being a dynamic language has been
coping rather well with the changing reality.
I have never believed with the doomsdayers. Urdu is a living entity in India but its
place in the three-language formula and equal status with other regional
languages in the school system especially in the North Indian States still
needs to be guaranteed. Hindi lovers and
our policy makers have to realize that even today Urdu is a great source of
strength to Hindi, and it is in the interest of Hindi to protect Urdu in plural
India, because if Urdu is strengthened Hindi is strengthened. Further, if Urdu
is strengthened our democratic-secular structure is also strengthened.
Has music, especially light classical such as the ghazal, helped?
Undoubtedly the Gazal-Gayeki
has helped. The fact is that Bollywood movies, satellite TV serials etc. have played
a historical role in sustaining the currency of Urdu. But it is a dialectical process; Urdu being
at the heart of the lingua franca in South Asia, plays its role in reaching out
to the people, and in the process Urdu itself has benefited too. Urdu’s
greatest strength is its power to connect; its appeal lies in its closeness to
the medium of aam aadmi. The
electronic entertainment industry has made liberal use of Hindustani, which is
close to Urdu. But lately the ground is shifting; regional dialectal idiom is
coming in more and more for innovative purposes and to meet the demands of
ethnicity and grass roots identity.
Tell us, as a critic, theorist and literary historian, what, in your
opinion, is the single most important quality for a language to not merely
flourish but evolve? By that yardstick, would you say Urdu is an evolving
language or a static one in India?
Had Urdu being a static language, it would have died
long ago. It is a dynamic language; it
has been changing right from the times of Khusro and Kabir. Anis and Dabir’s
Urdu is not the same as that of Ghalib. Similarly, it has travelled a long
distance from Premchand and Firaq and Josh to Faiz Ahmad Faiz and Ahmad Faraz.
Today Javed Akhtar's Urdu is different from Gulzar's and Nida Fazli's. It is an
evolving language flowing like a river, changing its banks at times to meet the
social demands. The present situation in both India and Pakistan is complex and
the challenges are of different nature.
How do you think Urdu has coped in India and Pakistan
in the post-1947 period?
In Pakistan Urdu is not the language of the soil. The
natural speeches are Punjabi, Sindhi, Pushto and Bulochi. Urdu is a cultural-political
necessity, and the link role it can play no other language can play. Both in
India and Pakistan Urdu’s greatest asset is its highly cultivated idiom which
is akin to the genius of common man’s speech.
Its (a) power of communication, (b) poetical idiom, (c) adaptability,
and (d) aesthetic charm are its main characteristics and the main reason for its
survival.
Would you agree that an enforced, almost cosmetic,
Persianisation has done it harm rather than good? Has accessibility not become
a casualty as language, especially of literary discourse, has become dense and
opaque?
Persianisation of Urdu has always co-existed with the
process of indigenization the nation. Technically, for different disciplines any
language has to have a particular register. But if it has to serve the needs of
the grass roots it has to be simple and close to the everyday speech of the
people. The present problem is not only Persianisation but enforced Arabicisation
for political reasons. Language is a social entity; whenever vested political
interests try to interfere, things get distorted. It is not a service but disservice to
language.
Your work on structuralism and post-structuralism (sakhtiyat and pas-sakhtiyat) is considered your seminal contribution to Urdu
criticism. In simple words, is meaning subservient to the act of creativity? Is
there an inevitable and unbridgeable chasm between the intended and perceived
meaning of any creative work?
The greatest contribution of the theory is the awareness
that meaning is in flux. There is nothing given in meaning, essentially it is a
socio-cultural ‘construct’. The meaning of every given word is another word and
so on and so forth. It is the product of the differential value which is as
much present, as much as it is absent, i.e. the meaning is not only produced by
‘difference’ but it is also ‘deferred’. There is no chasm between the intended
and perceived meaning, but meaning by itself is differential. The creativity
which is basically innovation plays on this difference. But actually it is the
reader that causes the meaning to exist. Since the socio-historical context is
infinite there can never be a finite or a fixed meaning. The author creates;
the reader makes it exist. The beauty of poetry or art is that the play of the intended
and perceived meaning goes on. If literature means the same thing to all
readers at all times, then it is no literature.
What are you working on at the moment?
There are a couple of things which always go on.
Presently, I am finishing a book on Ghalib, the greatest of Mughal Indian minds;
I am trying to present a fresh, close reading, maybe raising questions about
preconceived notions.
Finally, tell us what you make of the movement in
India to make Urdu texts available in Devnagri? Can we splice a language from
its script and expect it to live? Or, on the other hand, kya yeh waqt ka taqaza hai? In order to reach out to younger,
fresher audiences, must Urdu agree to be written in Devnagri?
As you know, Urdu books are in great demand in Devanagri.
This testifies to the plurality and the charm of Urdu fiction and poetry. We certainly cannot splice a language from its
script. At the same time, the phenomenal popularity of Urdu texts in Hindi is driven
by the market; evidently, it is a matter of demand and supply. The commercial
value is the driving force. We the Urduwallas must read and teach Urdu in the
Urdu script. Our own script is self-sufficient and inevitable for us. Our
school and college education is run in the Urdu script. We are not changing it,
nor should we want to change it. Nonetheless, the fact of the matter is that
this goes to establish that the structures of both these languages are the same
and Urdu can be read in Devanagri and vice-versa. You can’t read Bengali or
Tamil in Devanagri.
If the readership of Urdu is enlarging and if the
younger, fresher audiences are hungry for Urdu books available in Devanagri,
then for reasons purely lingual, can we stop the march of times, or the force
of the market dynamics? The moot question is to take it as a plus point or a
minus point? What we Urduwallas must do is further consolidate and modernize our
Urdu education in the schools, colleges and universities in the Urdu script and
take pride in our own heritage as this script links us not only with our
immediate neighbour Pakistan but culturally links us with the whole of the
Middle East. Our scripts are the signature of our plurality. The South Asian cultural
situation has always been for multi-lingualism and diversity. Further, Urdu
script, especially the Nastaliq and Naskh form are developed over centuries and
are so beautiful to look at. Our calligraphies are part of the beautiful Mughal
and Rajput miniature painting traditions.