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The mind, with memory in tow, has strange ways. A sudden bout of forgetfulness, a hurried flash of remembrance, an unlikely association – there is a haphazard thrill to the madness.
I vividly remember one sultry evening steeped in an eleven-year-old’s concerns. I was alternating between the Mahabharata and my treasured collection of fairy tales – two radically different worlds – none of which had lost their familiar charm, but had strictly compartmentalised themselves in my head.
While the Pandavas conjured up visuals of sombre men in white dhotis, making life-altering decisions, the Rapunzel and Cinderella narratives were mulled over Cheetos and Pepsi.
That particular night, to my horror, I dreamt of Rapunzel looking down at Arjuna from her tower, her face lit, her cheeks flushed. Rapunzel’s Prince, on the other hand, lounged behind a bougainvillea bush, chatting up Krishna who was decked as a woman. I remember trying to reach out, trying hard to break free and disentangle the worlds. They couldn’t possibly intermingle! Everything looked out of place. I was left with that inexplicable feeling of sand running through my fingers.
The next morning at breakfast, I had some serious questions for my parents. Did Rapunzel know Arjuna could metamorphose as and when he wanted? Did she know he could turn himself into a woman? If she found out, how exactly would she appear in my next dream?
Somehow I don’t remember the exact words my father used. But it was a brief discussion.
That night, over dinner, he broached the topic on sensing my grave concern. He told me that sometimes the oddest of things are clubbed together; it doesn’t mean they are wrong – it just means we need to find a way to fit all the pieces of the puzzle.
I remember reading about a documentary trying to reimagine popular fairytales. Here, Rapunzel has a hair-loss problem and Prince Charming is from the LGBT community and so on and so forth. It brought back a wild gush of memories.
And Voila! I saw the postcolonial child’s silver lining. I had had best of both worlds. Without realising, a child’s wonder and imagination had strung these worlds together and taught me a huge lesson in receptivity and social sensitivity.
Over the years, I’ve come across numerous readings calling out the problematic depictions of women, gender and traditions in the Mahabharata. Nevertheless, even a cursory reading of the epic is enough to portray the fierceness and flexibility that identity is given.
When taught right, our children will find no anomaly in Shikhandi, born a woman and later turned into a man, who had helped the Pandavas win the Kurukshetra War. They will find no anomaly in Arjuna, who had turned into a eunuch for a year. Neither will they be stumped by the traditionalism of a Cinderella or a Snow White. Princes can be happy with Princesses. Princes can be happy with Princes too.