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Honor by thrity umrigar review
Honor by thrity umrigar review




honor by thrity umrigar review

Through this documenting of human bias, prejudice, violence, caste discrimination and the divisions of faith, Umrigar paints an emotive landscape of familial ties. Umrigar deftly ties together disparate elements and sub plots spread across time zones and the divide between rural and urban India as she also exposes the fault lines within a seemingly progressive city. The narrative voice is firmly female and moves from Smita to Meena who recounts the tender moments she shared with Abdul, the victim of a brutal “honour killing”. (Arun Sharma/Hindustan Times) 336pp, ₹1802 Algonquin Books Safe houses shelter inter caste and inter faith couples who are in danger of being attacked by their families. A young married couple at a government safe house in Rohtak, Haryana in July 2015. As she grows from an unwilling bystander reluctant to cover a story to a deeply involved champion of Meena’s rights, Smita goes through an emotional journey that brings her face-to-face with judicial, social and individual failures.

honor by thrity umrigar review

As she follows the case of Meena, a Hindu woman attacked and ostracized by her own family and village for marrying a Muslim man, Abdul, Smita comes face to face with complex social norms and, in the process, pieces together a story that threatens to unearth the painful secrets of her own past. Smita, an Indian-American journalist, whose family had moved from Mumbai with no intention of ever returning, reluctantly goes back to India to cover a story.






Honor by thrity umrigar review