Book review: The Blind Man’s Garden
The Blind Man’s Garden explores the aftermath of conflict through the lives of ordinary people who become victims of an ugly war that uproots their happiness. Much of it is about the perils of living with bombings, torture, disappearances, beheadings and terrorism. The novel is set in Heer, an imaginary town in Punjab, where portions of the plot unfold slowly, often quietly, amid an exquisite garden surrounding a house that has seen much sorrow. We follow the sadness of Naheed who waits for years for her lover, of her mother Tara and her sister-in-law Yasmin, of the family’s elderly patriarch, Rohan, who is blinded as he attempts to rescue the son of a bird-catcher from the prison of a warlord in Afghanistan. Aslam knows his backstory. There are references to warlords selling prisoners to the Americans for money, the torture of young boys for information, drone attacks on Taliban compounds obliterating families, patronage for Arab insurgents by rogue military officers. Rohan’s sons Jeo and Mikal (the latter is adopted) travel secretly to Afghanistan to help the wounded (“wishing to be as close as possible to the carnage of this war”) while their families and lovers are left to pick up the pieces when death and destruction slowly take over. Jeo is killed (his wife Naheed is unable to visit the graveyard because local female vigilantes forbid women from praying at graves) while Mikal is taken prisoner by a warlord, unaware that his brother has died. And so begins his search that further sucks him into a war in which he has no interest. In the wake of 9/11, hundreds of young men travelled from Pakistan as jihadi fighters recruited through religious schools. Other global recruits also joined the Taliban insurgency because they prescribed to Al Qaeda’s world view, despite the apparent differences in the goals and modus operandi of the Afghan Taliban and Osama bin Laden’s fighters. Pakistan’s new generation of fighters were often boys too young to fight, as Mikal notes while crossing the border in a bus packed with first-time insurgents. There are detailed, harrowing scenes of boys being raped in Taliban compounds and descriptions of American-led torture (interrogations that Bagram and Guantanamo prisoners are known to have suffered) that Mikal narrates. When captured by the Americans in Afghanistan, they photograph him against a height chart, shave his head and beard and interrogate him at an unnamed prison. When he is unable to answer whether he’d spent time in Sudan or had links with the man who blew up an American airport, he is put into a sleep deprivation cell and beaten, arms shackled to the ceiling — Mikal becomes the character we see interrogated in a secret prison for information in Zero Dark Thirty. This novel could easily be termed Aslam’s best: executed with perfection, with an understanding of territory and of ordinary emotion, and with the ability to numb the senses. There is an emotionally charged sentence that runs through a page when Mikal imagines being derided by an American interrogator for “being worthless, for the disaster that is his love for Naheed, for not being able to help Jeo, for Pakistan and its poverty … [for] his nation where the taps don’t have water, and the shops don’t have sugar … his disgusting, repulsive country where everyone it seems is engaged in killing everyone else … a land of revenge attacks.”