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HomeTop StoriesRaag Bindas: The Story of the Sea of ​​Pain: Kuch Zindagiyan Aisi Bhi

Raag Bindas: The Story of the Sea of ​​Pain: Kuch Zindagiyan Aisi Bhi

Titles: True Art, True Speak. (Chelvani) A big star of Bollywood was in deep depression. That star constantly felt that despite having everything in life, there was nothing. Then director and part-time philosopher elder Mahesh Bhatt advised: 'You write down your thoughts, your state of mind, everything you feel. 'Writing' is also therapy.' Really? If the 'one who has everything' is cured by writing, what will the 'one who has nothing' do? One who has struggled to feed his stomach… has seen his mother's body being traded by his father, who has seen his mother being sold to his younger brother for money… can he also write a document of pain? yes yes There are writers all over the world who have named poverty, sorrows, tragedies and helplessness. Marathi writer Laxman Gaikwad, small animals like rats, lived by eating roots and leaves of trees. Sometimes living only on water for weeks. In life, no food, no clothes, no books… just continuous insults and full of beatings and kept on writing. Shailesh Matiani, a prolific Hindi writer, lived on the pavements of Mumbai for almost his entire life. Wandering in lines for free food, in Gurudwara langars or temple repositories. They found only Anthwad or Avhel on the footpath. As a stray child in his childhood, when the police caught him, Shaileshji thought that he would get to sleep in jail and eat two tons! Shaileshji washed dishes at the rink or dhaba, worked as a porter at the station. His first story was published in a prestigious Hindi magazine, Shailesh was a waiter at a tea stall on the footpath right in front of the magazine's office! Shailesh Matiani, who wrote memorable novels like 'Naukar Ki Kameez', is immortal in Hindi literature, but life was tough. Similarly right now, writer Dhanujakumari from Kerala, a cleaner in 'Harith Karmasena' i.e. 'Waste Management Account', lives in 'Chengalchula Slum' in Thiruvananthapuram. Chengalchula is a 'Badnam Basti' for squalor, filth, crime, prostitution, drugs, murder. When Dhanuja wrote stories about slums 10 years ago, he never dreamed that one day his book would be taught as a textbook in 'Calicut University'! Where does that poor dream come from? If you fall asleep in a smelly room with a hungry stomach? Dhanuja's book has gone through five editions in 10 years. Dhanuja, has now become the hallmark of Chengalchula slums. Earlier people used to run away from that infamous basti, but now due to Dhanuja's books, they have come to understand the harsh reality and helpless society there. When a journalist asked for an autograph on Dhanuja's book 'My Life in Chengalchula', he wrote, 'Though he arrived, not in search of 'Pratikaal' (criminals) but 'Pratibhakaal' (genius)…' Here in two sentences, cruel life and blood. Continuity is the essence of writing. Where does it come from in the pleasant social or suspense novels, in the ongoing contemplation or in the rosy poems? Interval: Our Sufferings, Thousands of Years Old, Kaleja Chirati Pawaati Um Fear Stories (Meghani) Seven-eight-year-old Shuang, the son of factory worker parents in Shenyang, China. One day suddenly, parents stopped going to work. Then had to leave the big house and live in a deserted factory warehouse. Shuang left school. A row of tea started on the parents' road. Little Shuang thought only one thing until he realized that what calamity had suddenly befallen his parents? Because the city of Shenyang where Shuang grew up was a prosperous industrial city. It had sprawling factories, schools-colleges, hospitals, cinema theaters. So what happened suddenly? Indeed, something like this happened to millions of people in northeastern China in the 1990s. The then Chinese government made sudden economic changes and Chinese leaders began privatizing state-owned enterprises. Then the city of Shenyang crumbled like a house of cards. Millions of people were robbed of their bread overnight. All around poverty and theft, terror of looting. Then any neighbor or relatives or friends would suddenly disappear! Those people would either commit suicide or run away with huge debts. Little Shuang grew up in the midst of such horrors, graduating and then taking a job at a bank, but quickly grew bored there. The directionless Shuang, then, began to write brutal, bitter, poignant but true stories of the mass unemployment and devastation of the city of Shenyang. Shuang, now 40, is currently the most successful author in China. The characters in his stories, like childhood neighbors, suddenly disappear without saying 'come'…or commit suicide or murder! This is – the crime of being ripped off! Today, there is a series of economic recession in China again, so the stories of unemployment and poverty of the year 2000 in Shenyang city, even the young readers of 2024 feel their own words or suffering. A poignant tale of a faded city like Shenyang, called 'faded factory town' in Chinese. V. The serial is very long. That's why Chinese filmmakers are now making movies with big star casts based on Shuang's stories. Often times the glitz of glamorous cinema, the burning stories of suffering can be more touching than stock market deals or land sales. But yes, if you don't have fat on your senses. End-Titles: Adam: Have you ever felt pain? Eve: After meeting you? }

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Image Credit: (Divya-Bhaskar): Images/graphics belong to (Divya-Bhaskar).

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