Monday, July 21, 2008

Sita's Silence


Dedicated to the strongest-willed woman who walked this planet-Sita


I disappear. And everything is silenced. The accusations, the taunts, the weariness. The living down of a sin I had never committed. I disappear and you bind me in temples forever as a goddess and forget the living vital woman that I was. I disappear. And all of you women, who come after me, in villages and cities, suffer trying to live up to my name. None of you question, none of you try to reason. I disappeared, suffering, chaste Sita, into the bowels of the earth. And all of you are the victims of my silence.

The purest, most loving woman who was ever born. Princess and queen. The most devoted wife on earth, the wife who never rebelled. You believed all that? You, women yourselves, believed so many lies?

Of course, I loved my husband. When I came to Ayodhya as a bride I was as much in love as the books tell you, as the songs sung at dusk in the temple courtyards. I look back at myself, in those innocent days at the palace, and smile. I can still smile at it all.

And then palace intrigue and banishment to the forests. Even then I was happy. A sheltered princess, having the great adventure in the deep woods of the great forests. That was possibly the last time that we were so content. Rama and I. The very complicated, intensely insecure man that I had married. Blithely. Without knowing of the deep vagaries of human nature.

Moving out with her husband. That was the best move for a woman in love. But I didn’t think of it as a move in the game then. I didn’t even realize that it was a game. I wonder now. Wounds. Violence. There’re many forms. You don’t have to be physically cruel to a woman to destroy her.

And then the hullabaloo of being kidnapped by Ravana. The rescue. The hope, the joy when I saw my husband again. And I was met with accusations. You cannot be chaste if you had been in another man’s house for so many months.

He couldn’t cast me off then and I came back to Ayodhya . And then. Unexpectedly. Suddenly. “Was he kind to you?” “Yes..” for Ravana had been kind to me. The Ayodhya brothers. Most of their victories had been against women. Taraka, Shoorpanakha, Tara-the monkey queen….Kaikeyi, the queen mother and finally, oh yes, finally…Sita.

I was kidnapped by Ravana who was a ruthless man. But he had been kind to me. Even when his brothers were dying, even when Indrajit, his most beloved son, was killed by Lakshaman, he never once sought to harm me. I came back, unscathed. But my husband didn’t believe that. Or in me.

It was the King I encountered. Not the boy that I once knew.

And finally exile. Pregnant and banished again into the deep forest that I now knew, better than the vast, cruel halls of palace. I did not protest. The laughing princess of Mithila had become a frightened queen.

Could I have changed all that? Yes, if I had been the silent, subservient Sita that you all think of me to be. Yes, if I had realized that loving someone was not enough. Yes, if I had told Rama that I was terrified of Ravana. But I could stand up to him. That was unforgivable.

And then because I had my sons, the twin heirs of Ayodhya, I was summoned back to that bleak kingdom. Did I imagine the joy in my husband’s eyes when he saw me? That fleeting brief gleam of happiness? Perhaps. For again in the open courtyard of the palace, I was faced with the same accusations, the same taunts. And I left.

The earth didn’t open to cradle me in her arms. That is what legends and myths say. Reality is different. I left. My children and my husband. I walked out of the city and into my own life. Sita was no more.

Was the cause of destruction of my marriage Ravana? No. For one day, Rama would probably have been suspicious of somebody else. For I always answered back and suffered. I could never keep quiet. Sita was never silent. If she had been, she’d have remained Ayodhya’s Queen.

I did not say that I never loved my husband. Only that he never did..or trusted enough..or believed enough.

And sometimes in the cool shades of a monsoon evening, when the rain twinkles through the leaves, I catch the glimpse of a golden deer.. I remember Rama..and am glad that Sita vanished.



33 did the drill!:

Divya said...

excellent!!!!! very very well written... i loved it!! really :)

tushkidon said...

Brilliant!

niki said...

@swati OMG!!!..awesome..trust trust trust!! key for a relationship to flourish..and if I may say You Can WRITE!!! :)

The Soul: said...

@divya
danku :D

The Soul: said...

@ bhai
phew!! you finally leave a comment
thanku thanku thankuuuuuuuuu :)

The Soul: said...

@niki
accidents happen :)
thank you :)

have blogrolled you!

niki said...

@swati-accidents, I dont believe I believe that everything has a reason-remember Serendipity :)

thanks I'm deeply honoured :)

shilpa said...

Your best.Loved it.....this time wat impressed me was the way you handled the senstivity of the subject.Keep it up!!!

The Soul: said...

@niki
Serendipity-God works in strange ways :)

The Soul: said...

@shil
danku danku :D :D :D

cherubic_chipmunk said...
This post has been removed by the author.
cherubic_chipmunk said...

Speechless! Outta adjectives! u jus brought out my atrophied brain which i presumed 2 've died...
I'd wanna discuss de premises u'd made while writin dis but aint able 2...suffice 2 say dis is a mindblowin piece...
Sita's character never ceases 2 amaze me...cant help wonderin why there aint many stories told abt sita's perspective...is it jus cuz v live in a patriarchal society?or prolly cuz very few understood her-pretty understandable considering even her husband dint!

The Soul: said...

@arvind
thanks :)
what triggered me into writing this..well had been contemplating for a long time..during one of our deluxe bakwas discussion sessions, i had told div once, abt my friend's domestic help and how her husband had left her while she was still pregnant. 23yrs later, this guy resurfaces at his son's marriage!! surprisingly the woman didnt scream at him, instead treated him equal to other guests. Its takes a lot of courage to forgive.
Takes more courage to be a woman..and hence the post :)

god this sounds like another post in itself! :P

have blogrolled you!!

peace

Amit Agarwal said...

Brilliant !!!

P.S. - As promised ;)

*~*{Sameera}*~* said...

You have so beautifully written about this unfair deed of Rama.Sita's plight is something which many modern day women can relate to.

You have a great blog!Thanks for dropping by mine :)

The Soul: said...

@amit
thanks! :)

The Soul: said...

@sameera
no rpoblem :)
n hey..its sita's courage that i wanted to potray..not her plight :)

peace

Think Tank said...

purrrrrrrrrrrrrfffffeeeeecttttt...left me speechless.

Trinaa said...

sheer brilliance..totally in love with ur writing..
thanks 4 visiting my blog :))
ps:u have been blogrolled!

The Soul: said...

@think tank/farah
thank you for dropping by :)

The Soul: said...

@trinaa
thanks a million :)
blogrolled you too :D

Anindita said...

I loved it! It is written so well! :)

The Soul: said...

@anindita
thanks a ton! :)
u've been blogrolled!

Karan said...

awesome awesome awesome!!
why why why in the world did u opt engineering??!!!!!!!

love
karan

Solitaire said...

WOW!! This is freaking awesome!

The Soul: said...

@karan
LOSER!! YOU pushed me into engineering!!
thanks for dropping by lallu :)
keep visiting!!

The Soul: said...

@solitaire
thanks :)
n yea..you have soooo many blogs!! i blogrolled the short n sweet one cuz i simply loooved it! :)

keep visiting!

Think Tank said...

tagged ya ;)

The Soul: said...

@farah
thats 2 in a row! :P

jenny said...

this is simply ammmmaazing!
remember our chat.when u,ritika n I used to sit down n make lists of how girls r better than guys! :P
lil did we know there's no doubting that!!
i miss school days :( :(

The Soul: said...

@ jenny
I KNOW!! i miss school days too :(

Anonymous said...

brilliant!!
do you write? I mean..r u a professional??

Swati said...

@anonymous
thanks :) not a professional..how i wish i was!!


PS: leave ur name the next time! :)