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Toba Take Singh by Sadat Hassan Manto

 Toba Take Singh

Sadat Hassan Manto (11 May 1912 - 18 January 1955) was a short story writer from Pakistan who migrated from Mumbai. He is well known for his short stories, he has written a large number of short stories and is considered one of the best short story writers in Urdu. Among his short stories, Toba Tek Singh is one of his short stories. It was one of Manto's last stories. It was published in 1955 in Maktab Jaded Lahore.

 

Sadat Hassan Manto's short story "Toba Tek Singh" is the most remarkable story about partition. This story is deeply rooted in the tragic event that India and Pakistan faced before, during, and after independence.

The story is a beautiful satire on the partitions and bitter accusations on the political process and management how the people suffer due to this partitions process, and how people were displaced from their homes. Manto with his writing skills brilliantly criticizes in unrealized manners the behaviour of some lunatics in a lunatic asylum in Lahore and presents an irreversible history. An unknown narrator who seems to be Lahori tells us a series of seemingly factual events that are not as straightforward as they appear. The author through the unusual conversation of lunatic people put forward his message. How there is a state of confusion in the mind of people regarding their identity. Whether they became Indian or Pakistani, no one knows the effects of changes.

The whole aspect of the concept of nationality has come to the fore through the talk of these lunatics. Manto penetrates the human psyche. Characters are presented anonymously they are neither Hindus nor Muslims but human beings belonging to nowhere yet exist.

 

The authors end up the story with the most affected character Bashan Singh known as Toba Tek Singh, in no man's land between the two nations' barbed-wire borders. Bashan Singh a lunatic in Lahore asylum, everyone called him Toba Tek Singh. The author tells about the character of "Toba Tak Singh" and his early life. Bashan Singh wants to know which country Toba Tek Singh is a part of. This is the most important question in Bashan’s mind. But more importantly, Bashan represents those in India and Pakistan who were left without a state during the migration.

What really makes the difference or heightens the story is the death of Bashan on a piece of land that has no name. He prefers to die in a place that does not belong to anyone, rather than to decide where he really belongs.

This is exactly what happened to all those who were forced to leave their lands, homes, and loved ones in the process of partition. The pain and loss still linger in the hearts of all those who have gone through this ordeal.

Manto as a man or writer was in constant rebellion against the binary choices that religion and politics impose on human beings. The lunatics in the Lahore asylum are a microcosm of society. Through them, all sections of society have been targeted and exposed, and among them is Bashan Singh who successfully competes against all such identities who choose what is imposed on them which belongs to no one. Therefore, instead of choosing between India and Pakistan, Bashan would not like to die in anyone's land.



References:

https://www.wordswithoutborders.org/article/toba-tek-singh

https://www.criticalbuzzz.co.in/a-critical-analysis-of-toba-tek-singh-by-saadat-hasan-manto/

https://thefeministbibliothecary.wordpress.com/2020/05/23/lite-reads-review-toba-tek-singh-by-saadat-hasan-manto/

https://penguinindiablog.wordpress.com/2009/11/24/sadat-hasan-manto-toba-tek-singh/

http://sittingbee.com/toba-tek-singh-saadat-hasan-manto/

http://bookwormreviews9.blogspot.com/2015/02/selected-short-stories-by-saadat-hasan.html

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