Teasing the Almighty
Teasing the Almighty
I will be exploring the culture and religion of India from the short story “teasing the almighty” retold by Chong Kum Fatt, an Indian folk tale. The story has many hints and gestures about religion, people, jobs, and surroundings.
First of all, about the daily life of the main character, the woodcutter, I was able to pick up that he tends animals such as buffalos, goats, and chickens, and obviously that he is a woodcutter. From these facts we can assume that he is in the lower class, since he has to do physical labor for a living. Also, it mentions that the woodcutter lives near the jungle, and since most high class people live in cities, which tend not to be next to a jungle, we know that the community he comes from is poor or rural, because of the location. When he finishes cutting wood, it says that he has cut enough for the day, meaning that there’d be problems if he couldn’t get the day’s work done. Probably meaning that he wouldn’t have enough money or pay. Another part that justifies his class is when he begs Allah for help, he offers buffalos, goats, chickens, and eggs. From that, we see that those are the most he can offer, and cannot offer money or anything expensive.
The religion of the country is Hindu and Islam as we know, and in this story, the woodcutter is Muslim. When the woodcutter foolishly trapped himself on the tree, he calls to Allah for help in getting down. Since the Islam god was the only god mentioned, we can tell that the woodcutter only believed in Allah and not the Hindu gods. Also the method of prayers he used to get himself down was bribery or fair trade, which tells us a little about their culture. Considering the amount of bribery he had announced to Allah we can assume that, that is the way the Indians at the time got what they wanted, and the way they lived.
After the problem was resolved, the woodcutter decided to turn back on his promise and laughed at Allah for not being careful about the terms of their trade. Since he did not receive any punishment for this, we see that the Indians (Muslims) do not believe in Karma, and that the woodcutter didn’t feel any gratitude towards his god. From this story, one is to assume that the Indians are unmoral, cunning, and dishonest. Since the woodcutter had been the successful one in the end, we see that the Indians do not find being dishonest to be a wrong way to live. We may even go as far as saying that they are much like Machiavelli whose famous quote is “the end justifies its means”.
The climate, although not directly described must be cold because generally woodcutters cut wood so that they can sell firewood. In only cold temperatures would someone need firewood, and since the story made it seem like cutting enough wood would make the day’s income, we can tell that it is a pretty stable market. Although it must be cold it wasn’t freezing and it probably isn’t winter since there was a jungle in the neighborhood as described. The animals that the woodcutter owned also fit into the description of India, therefore we have proof that the story is from India.
This story was a traditional folk tale that has been past on for many centuries, not as a moral but for amusement and laughter.
-Haruka Fukukawa
May 20th, 2008 at 9:14 pm
Haruka, a good analysis – use direct quotes to prove your points. I like the Machiavelli reference.
May 27th, 2008 at 2:47 am
Hi ,
I was reading ur blog posts and found some of them to be wow.. u write well.. Why don’t you popularize it more.. ur post on Indian animals took my particular attention as it is an interesting topic of mine too
BTW I help out some ex-IIMA guys who with another batch mate run http://www.rambhai.com where you can post links to your most loved blog-posts. Rambhai was the chaiwala at IIMA and it is a site where users can themselves share links to blog posts etc and other can find and vote on them. The best make it to the homepage!
This way you can reach out to rambhai readers some of whom could become your ardent fans.. who knows..
Cheers,