Friday, 14 January 2022

The Mountains Sing


 

                                     

  The Mountains Sing (Author : Nguyen Phan Que Mai)

 

“No, my mother died when I was ten. She was a Corps diplomat and was murdered trying to negotiate a truce with the enemy.”
“The enemy in that war you fought in?”
“Yes. It’s why I joined up. I was young and naïve and somehow thought I could avenge her death.”
“You couldn’t because you lost the war?”
“No, we won – but there’s no vengeance to be found in war. Turns out, it doesn’t work that way.”
 Felicia Watson, The Risks of Dead Reckoning

 

War has never been a solution to anything yet somehow, world over, across the ages that’s what men have turned to in their hunger for power. Each war, whether won or lost extracts a heavy price from those fighting it. We like to portray stories of bravery, valour, sacrifice and victory, making a war sound a noble cause in the name of the motherland. Deep hidden are stories of horror, loot, rape, murder, loss and unspeakable grief. Young lives gone too soon, brutally. Young men forced to draft against their and their family’s will, younger generation misled by false propaganda depending on the whims and fancies of those in power, using brutal force on its own citizens and those of the so-called enemies – all these are devices used by the power hungry to ensure that their power remains intact.

The book in reference – The mountains sing – is the author’s debut novel and tells the story of a family whose four generations are ravaged by the Vietnam War in the two decades from 1955-1975. What is narrated as a story of one family is clearly the reality for a lot of families whose lives have been ravaged by war across the world.

The novel begins with the life of two protagonists – an elderly woman who is a school teacher and her young granddaughter who is her responsibility while the rest of her able children – her two sons, her daughter and her son in law are on the battle field – fighting against the South Vietnamese and American troops. Bomb attacks, rushing for safety in bomb shelters, black outs and starvation are an everyday part of their life.

As the novel progresses, we get to hear the complete story of the Tran family who began life as wealthy landowners in the fifties. They have earned their wealth through sheer hard work and honest labour- a progressive family that values education for its boys and girls along with the value of hard work and believes in sharing their wealth. Everything is destroyed when the Land Reforms Act blindly states that every wealthy farmer is an exploiter and their land needs to be confiscated and distributed among the poor. Not to stop at that, the authorities also have a target number of landowners to be tortured and killed to prove their adherence to the law. This forces the matriarch of the Tran family to escape with her young children to the capital city of Ha Noi.

The story talks about her and her children’s life as they fight for survival and growth in a war ravaged country. It talks about those who go out and fight on the battle field, those who stay back and wait for their loved ones to come home, it talks about those who run away and escape to so called greener pastures. It talks about ghosts that haunt all of the above. It also gives us a window into the language and culture of Vietnam. The use of proverbs in the regular conversation adds a very poetic touch to the lovely prose

The author, a Vietnamese poet, has lived herself through this turbulent and painful times and depicts the pathos of the war in a raw and moving manner. She has chosen to write this in English which is for her an acquired language but in no way disappoints.


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