
This is a lightly edited version of the author’s keynote address delivered at the inauguration of the 14th Goa Arts and Literature Festival on February 12.
Each time I come to the Goa Arts and Literature Festival, I am struck anew by the manner in which this festival continues to create a space for voices from the margins and explore “ways of belonging”.
The idea of identity, of belonging, has shaped much of my recent work. At the same time, I am also concerned about the dark underbelly of belonging, the forces of othering that are gathering like dark clouds over our country. On this glorious day, in this wonderful setting , it seems strange to talk about fear and I thought long and hard whether I should or not, but then I decided if not at GALF where else can one speak one’s mind, where else can one speak of one’s deepest, darkest fears?
I want to talk about fear, a fear that is very real for very many of us, one that rubs away insidiously at the idea of belonging. While I will mostly talk about the fear that Muslims in India feel, I know that fear is shared by many – by other...
from Scroll.in https://scroll.in/article/1090719/a-low-grade-fever-a-relentless-sadness-being-muslim-in-the-new-india-that-is-bharat?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=public https://sc0.blr1.cdn.digitaloceanspaces.com/article/211970-vwfzqeogle-1770980858.jpg
via

0 Comments