IMASI BINODINI DEVI
“I am glad I could do so much for Manipur, I
can die in peace now...”
And those were Maharajkumari Binodini Devi’s prophetic
last lines as she ended her interview for a documentary which we were filming.
That was in the year 2009. Two years later one of Manipur’s iconic woman
litterateur, poet, painter, sculptor and a social activist breathed her last.
But not before she left behind an outstanding legacy that boasted a body of
impressive literary works including numerous short stories, essays, plays and
award winning screenplays.
It was an
unusually bright and hot summer’s day when we landed at the Imphal airport. My
first time in a state which I had many personal connections with and one whose
stories of insurgency and state misrule I had read, heard of and was all too
familiar with.
We had come
to film a documentary on the legendary octogenarian M K Binodini Devi, the last
of the Manipur royal princesses and a woman who had carved for herself not just
a name in the literary and artistic world but was also known for her candid and
forthright views on the social and political fabric of the state she lived in
and loved.
Quite
naturally we had gone through reams of material and read up whatever was
available on the works and life of M K Binodini Devi.
But nothing
at all prepared me for the meeting with Maharajkumari Binodini Devi. As we
entered the compound of her simple yet elegant single storey house, I kept
nervously repeating in my mind the questions that I had written down for the
interview. We were told to set up our camera for the interview and having done
that we waited in the lawn in front of her house.
Binodini
Devi walked out a little later. She was petite, elegant and poised in her
phanek (sarong worn by Manipuri women) and shawl and looked somewhat frail. But
her eyes and spirit belied her age. There was an inexplicable spark and
intelligence which shone forth.
At first she
seemed reluctant to talk, seeing the camera and microphone officiously
intruding into what she perceived to be a casual conversation. Eventually with
some gentle prodding from her son she graciously consented and agreed to be
filmed.
To the world she was Maharajkumari
Binodini Devi. But to those whose lives she touched and those who knew her, she
was simply Imasi or mother. And that’s how I came to regard her during the
course of our filming and thereafter. Such was the warmth and generosity that
Imasi exuded.
Imasi Binodini was born in the year 1922, the
youngest of five daughters of Maharaja Sir Churachand Singh and Maharani
Dhanamanjuri Devi of Manipur. Her father, Maharaja Churachand, who ruled
Manipur from 1891 till 1941, was the first Western-educated monarch of Manipur
and her mother, Maharani Dhanamanjuri, played a pivotal role in ensuring that
her children were not wanting when it came to modern education. Binodini Devi
was thus formally educated at Pine Mount School, Shillong; Tamphasana Girls
High School, Imphal; St Mary’s College, Shillong; Vidyasagar College, West
Bengal; and at Rabindranath Tagore’s Viswa Bharati University in Shanti Niketan.
She studied art at the university and had many firsts to her name including Manipur’s
first female graduate and the first lady of Manipuri feminism and the women’s
literary movement.
A Padma Shree and Sahitya Kala Academy winner, Imasi married Dr L Nanda
Babu Roy in 1950, with whom she had two sons.
Imasi
was a true peoples’ princess and that was perceptible during the course of the
interview as she candidly shared with us her prolific journey from the House of
Manipur Royals to the cultural portals of the Viswa Bharati University and then
to establishing herself as one of the greatest woman writers and thinkers of
the state.
“I had friends in Shillong who told me about
the place (Shanti Niketan) and how exciting it was. When I decided to go there,
my whole family was against it. There was chaos and being from a royal family
it was difficult. In college I only wore phanek (sarong) and therefore was
different from the rest. I was pretty popular then.”
While her
memory couldn’t quite reconstruct the Shanti Niketan of those days, Imasi did nostalgically
describe it as a great place with beautiful trees surrounded by hills.
At Kala Bhawan, Imasi
learned art and sculpting under the guidance of celebrated Bengal Masters Ram Kinkar
Baij and Nandalal Bose. In fact she is said to have inspired the pioneer of modern
Indian sculpture, Ram Kinkar Baij, who had painted many a portrait of Imasi’s.
She,
however, seemed a little embarrassed when during the interview she was asked if
the character in one of her later novels was based on Ram Kinkar Baij. She
stoically replied, “I cannot say anything about that. He was from a very
influential family and I cannot mention or say anything about him, though
people do insinuate many things.”
Imasi did
remember some of her Guru’s eccentricities, though.
“He (Ram Kinkar Baij) had a beautiful house
surrounded with bamboos. He also had a boy who helped him in the house. One day
he was standing outside his house and some of us asked him what he was doing. He
said that he was waiting for the boy to finish his painting!”
“He was a great human being an extraordinary
man. If he didn’t like something, he would say it outright. His classes were
huge where he taught us. There is so much to learn from him and I am glad we
did.”
Imasi’s recollections
of the time at Shanti Niketan, however misty, did indicate that those were
memorable days for her. However, soon after she left Shanti Niketan, Imasi’s
tryst with painting and sculpting came to an end.
“I got married, had family and so my
lifestyle changed and most importantly I started writing and after that I
didn’t take interest in anything else.”
It was when she was with her mother in
Nabadwip in Bengal that Imasi Binodini’s initiation into writing truly began.
She was introduced to the prose of legendary Bengali authors Sharat Chandra
Chatterjee, Bankim Chandra Chatterjee, Rabindranath Tagore and Michael
Madhusudan Dutta.
Ashangba Nongjabee (Azure Skies), the first drama
she wrote after leaving Vishwa Bharati, was, by her own admission, influenced
by her time at Shanti Niketan. The fun and joy that she experienced during
those years were imbibed in the play. Imasi thus embarked upon her literary
journey, one that brought her many accolades and prestigious awards including
the Sahitya Akademi Award and the Padma Shri.
She went on to pen numerous literary works
including a published collection of short stories titled Nung’gairakta
Chandramukhi, several song lyrics, and many radio plays as well. She also
translated the works of a number of Bengali writers into Manipuri.
Reminiscent of many of her literary mentors
like Sharat Chandra Chatterjee whose narrative always embraced strong women
characters, Imasi Binodini’s writings too were well known for portraying women as
central characters in exceptional and unconventional roles.
The tapestry of her
prose also wove into its innumerable collage stories of modernity, of a
contemporary Manipur struggling to come to terms with its constantly evolving
social and political fabric and a novel developing demography. Ratan Thiyam,
the celebrated playwright and thespian, in a parallel interview, spoke of how effortlessly
she bridged the two worlds with cohesion.
“You will find in her writings how Manipuri
society is changing and growing. It is because of her association with the
royal family. As a princess she has seen the entire changing history of Manipur
and being a part of the royal family she knows exactly the whole custom and
tradition of this society because in early Manipuri society everything was
governed by or controlled by the royal family. And not only that she was also
exposed to a different kind of culture, particularly her association with
Shanti Niketan for quite a long time and in fact she was the first person to be
able to bring Tagore, Gurudev’s idea to Manipur. Writing for the people is one
of the most important factor or element of, you know, being M.K.Binodini. Reaching
out to the people, down trodden very backward classes of people, because being
in the royal family she comes in contact with different type of people very
different type…from the very lower strata people to the most powerful people.
So the range is quite a lot…it’s very difficult for a person to have that kind
of range. And also for her understanding…for both the royal family aesthetics
with a customary background and tradition and understanding rural aesthetics
with quite a lot of mixing up with very backward people and so on and that is
how she writes also that is how she has written in her novel. Of course they
are different type of things, in some of the short stories really remarkable
work she has done and in some of the novels its chronicle royal chronicle kind
of thing and then the whole concept of colonial attitude of being exposed you
know because she has experience, about the colonial British rule. There are not
many people who are familiar with the intricacies of Manipuri society. It is a
very rare combination which makes M.K.Binodini great. I’ll always tell Smt
M.K.Binodini Maharajkumari is one of the genius gems of Manipur.”
Imasi
Binodini’s writings were characterised by an almost revolutionary appeal. Her
abundant commentaries and observations on the flagging political and social environment
in her home state to the cultural denigration of customary traditions to
voicing the anxiety, apprehension and distress of hundreds of Manipuri women,
found space in not only her stories but also in innumerable articles which she
wrote for many newspapers in Manipur.
Unfortunately, as Ratan Thiyam observed, she
did not quite receive her due, something she truly deserved. Despite wielding
the pen with such flourish, despite giving voice to the marginalised and
despite articulating the deep divides in our times so magnificently through her
writings, she remained nondescript as far as the mainland was concerned.
“She is a natural intellectual, she is a
social activist she has done quite a lot. She is a thinker. Quite a lot she has
spoken very strongly during many times. She has taken part in many of the
struggles and agitation that has been borne out of the political
situation...and she has been always involved it is not only one incident…she
has been always involved. Her other story is that…you see the main problem of
being born and brought up in this region is she can’t get exposure anywhere.
She got stuck somewhere in a corner and could not come up to the limelight as
it should be everywhere, she can be compared with anybody in that fact. She
could have been a very well known personality known by everybody in this
country but that could not happen. In the later part of course with her
association with films, the television, the media she could somehow come up but
I don’t think that is enough for her.”
In October
2001 Imasi Binodini founded Leikol, a collective of women writers, bringing
together women academicians, intellectuals and authors on a platform that would
enable them to communicate their thoughts and express their ideas on themes
ranging from women’s issues, social issues, and political concerns.
During the course of filming our documentary, we
did get an opportunity to meet and speak with the members of Leikol. Vivid and
intelligent yet humble and modest at the same time, these remarkable women led
by Imasi opened our eyes and minds to their world, a world where feminist thought,
social revolution and romantic ideology poured forth from the pens of
housewives, academics and businesswomen alike. Dr Sheelaramani of Leikol and a Reader in the
DM College of Arts recounted how it had begun with Imasi Binodini at the helm.
“She was the founder president of this
association and she was very active for sometime. Off late she has been sick
she has been very aged and she has some health problem, but still she is very
active you know. I used to visit her some 2 years ago in the very early morning
nearly dawn you know, and I found her with a table lamp on her bed reading all
the newspapers and sometimes writing and also in winter in December and that
also just 2 years ago and it was amazing to me at her age she is very active
she is an intellectual. I come to know that she is a cent percent intellectual
woman unlike other aged women in the region and also unlike other aged women of
the nation, not only of the state, she is intellectually very active. We have
been influenced by her a lot. The younger women writers of Manipur have been
influenced by her a lot in thematic source and in language and also in
activism. They have been influenced quite a lot by M K Binodini and her writing
and her activities.”
Women in
Manipur have always been known to essay an active role in successive
wars...conflicts arising out of political, social, economic and cultural
suppression and coercion.
They have,
since the early 20th century, raised their voices and their
collective might to lead peaceful yet powerful struggles against the state,
insurgent groups and many a times against social evils that threaten to destroy
the fabric of their society and community.
Women’s struggle against
various oppressive forces in Manipur started with the Nupilan (Women’s Wars)
and continued with the Meira Paibis (women torch bearers). If it was the
colonial powers in the early 20th century that demanded their
attention, then after independence, these intrepid women were unswerving in
their commitment to ensure freedom of their people from the excesses wrought by
the Indian army and para military forces in the name of the draconian AFSPA
(Armed Forces Special Powers Act, 1958).
The nature of their
struggle is not limited to the political context alone. The Meira Paibis have acted
as sentinels to check alcoholism and drug abuse among other things. There have
been numerous instances of young boys being picked up for questioning by the
security forces, never to return. Again, at such times, it is the women who
take to the streets to protest, to raise their voices, to hold those
responsible accountable.
Their struggle is against
state and insurgents alike and practices that threaten their societal fabric. And
it is in this struggle that Leikol offers a literary forum and powerful medium to
many women to voice their angst and opinion and inform many of the oppressive
nature of the state, as articulated by Dr Sheelaramani in her interview.
“You know the women writers of Manipur have
taken issues such as family issues for the first time in the history of writing
here in Manipur that like one has taken up the issues, the family issues in the
region for the first time the association organized a seminar on feminism in
the state. It consisted of other issues, not only literary issues but also
social and political issues of women in the region in that seminar you know. In
fact, the organization has initiated this contemporary school of thinking in
literature and in other aspect also. After that many literary organization has
also taken up the issue as an objective of their organization and it is…I am
very proud that Leikol has the credit of introducing these kind of thinking in
the region. The women have been active since time immemorial here in the state
you know. Many movements of women have been noticed in history in the past also
and at present also we have women moving in the front against the atrocities
committed by the armed forces special powers act and the security personnel and
yes woman as a frontal organization have done a lot, have contributed a lot in
bringing changes.”
In that
sense Imasi Binodini’s contribution as a writer activist has been colossal. As
Dr Sheelaramani very succinctly put it, “She
(Binodini Devi) is an activist. It is at this point that women are very
different from men you know. She speaks from her own person; she is very
personal in her tone. Whenever she reflects on a social issue she speaks from
her own personal feeling, becomes very personal, she speaks in a very highly
personalized language as other women writers as other women activists too.”
As we were
winding up our interview with one of Manipur’s greatest women icons there was
one question which seemed to tug at our hearts, whether Imasi Binodini’s
Manipur would ever hark back to its glory days when insurgency, festering state
misrule and social decay were just lurid and nightmarish thoughts. She summed
it up in the way she knew best, straightforward and uncomplicated, quite like
herself: “Art and culture have been
living and surviving in Manipur for a long time. It is my feeling that it can
sustain even in troubled times. As an old woman I feel I have seen for a long
time, it will survive anyhow. For me any change is good. I may die anytime because
I am very old, I’ve witnessed many cruel things and now I feel that Manipur is
surviving. I have nothing to regret nor feel bad about…I got involved and that
is joy for me. I am glad I could do so much for Manipur, I can die in peace
now...”
Our interview had drawn to a close and through
the course of the journey that we had traversed with Imasi Binodini we had
borne witness to the life and times of an incredible woman...Maharajkumari
Binodini Devi, an extraordinary soul whose undying spirit cherished a splendid
and glorious legacy which no doubt will be carried forth by those whose lives
she touched.