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ALMS IN THE NAME OF A BLIND HORSE
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Alms in the Name of a Blind
Horse (Anhe Ghore Da Daan) is a modern classic that derives its title from an
ancient myth associated with the Churning of the Ocean, in which Lord Vishnu
had been less than fair in his dispensation to the Asuras, supposedly the
progenitors of latter-day Dalits. Through this novel, Gurdial Singh
emphasizes that just as the Asuras had to depend upon the arbitrary
dispensation of the Lord, in the same way the modern Dalits have to depend on
the mercy and compassion of the village overlords. On the day of the lunar
and solar eclipse, they still go around asking for the alms in the name of
the blind horse. The events of this novel are confined to one such day of
lunar eclipse in the lives of its characters. Often it is believed that poor,
landless and marginalized characters such as Melu, his bapu, his Chacha
Partapa, etc. lead banal and uneventful lives, which are not even worthy of a
description, let alone artistic treatment. Exploding this myth, Gurdial Singh
has created this ‘whirlpool of a novella’ around unending spate of events
that enmesh hapless lives of its characters, all in course of a single day.
Alms in the Name of a Blind
Horse (Anhe Ghore Da Daan) is a modern classic that derives its title from an
ancient myth associated with the Churning of the Ocean, in which Lord Vishnu
had been less than fair in his dispensation to the Asuras, supposedly the
progenitors of latter-day Dalits. Through this novel, Gurdial Singh
emphasizes that just as the Asuras had to depend upon the arbitrary
dispensation of the Lord, in the same way the modern Dalits have to depend on
the mercy and compassion of the village overlords. On the day of the lunar
and solar eclipse, they still go around asking for the alms in the name of
the blind horse. The events of this novel are confined to one such day of
lunar eclipse in the lives of its characters. Often it is believed that poor,
landless and marginalized characters such as Melu, his bapu, his Chacha
Partapa, etc. lead banal and uneventful lives, which are not even worthy of a
description, let alone artistic treatment. Exploding this myth, Gurdial Singh
has created this ‘whirlpool of a novella’ around unending spate of events
that enmesh hapless lives of its characters, all in course of a single day.
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