Paris-based poet, author, dance producer and curator Karthika Nair was born in Kerala. She began her career as a journalist, before moving to the France in 2000 to study art management. Nair’s first book, a collection of poetry titled Bearings, was published in 2009. In her latest book, Until the Lions, an experimental retelling of the epic Mahabharata, Nair writes poetry in the voices of those whose narratives remained untold. She calls them the “downtrodden of history.” The title of her book is derived from an African proverb: “Until the lions get their own historians, tales of the hunt will always glorify the hunters.” Through the book, Nair attempts to conduct an “inquiry of power” through the eyes of those who do not possess it: most often, the women of the Mahabharata. The 18 voices she employs belong to characters such as Gandhari, the wife of Drithrashtra and the mother of the hundred Kauravas; the unnamed mother of Drithrashtra’s half-brother, Vidura, who she names Poorna; Mohini, the female avatar of Krishna; and Shunaka, a dog.
In the following excerpt, Nair writes in the voice of Kunti, wife of King Pandu of Hastinapur and the mother of the five Pandavs. In the poem, titled “Ossature of Maternal Conquest & Reign,” Kunti is talking about her sixth son Karna with her daughter-in-law, Draupadi.
No mother can ever love each of her sons
alike. You should know, Draupadi, you who own
two five-chambered hearts, the smaller for your sons,
the first for husbands. Yes, Karna is my son,
my firstborn, forged as a shaft of living light –
rare, brilliant – but an accident, a son
I neither desired nor envisioned, the son
born of an unsought boon, arcane spell that moved
from a sage’s lips to mine: power to move
much more than mountains or oceans—for a son
from a god could rule creation, etch your name
on myth and history, get planets renamed.
Draupadi, you ask why I left him unnamed
all these years, why I never hailed him, my son
Karna, as mine: Karna the fulgent, the name
any parent would rejoice, would vie, to name
as theirs. No, I never proclaimed him my own,
though not because he’s baseborn, unnameable,
as the bards will soon sing. For who would not name
the scion of Surya, the Sun God who lights
the world? Vyaasa too, esteemed sage, alighted
out of wedlock—yet his mother takes his name
with joy and pride. Karna was an unplanned move:
at first, that enjoined silence. Too young, too moved,
was I to resist the Sun God. When he moved
towards me, eyes locking mine, I blazed; nameless
flames of purple and copper and crimson moved
through veins, our limbs dissolved, my womb glowed. Life moved
between our thighs, taut and sinuous. But sons,
like pleasure, should serve a purpose: I had moved
Karna from my sphere for I saw none, moving
swiftly before my faithless heart could disown
good sense. I sailed the child away from his own
kismat, down Ganga’s arms—first having removed
all signs of kinship, save his father’s lighted
armour and earrings, bequest to save, to light,
his life. Years later, when his fearsome skills lit
up Hastina’s skies, I knew at once: he moved
in cursives, he quelled like a god, and the light
from his earrings drowned midnight. But aurous light
is too firm, too pure to rule the realm—namely,
not in suta-breeding lies his flaw, backlit
that day by brilliance; no, it is lightness
Karna lacks. A mother needs most from her son
compliance, chiefly to reign—the perfect son
for that is Yuddhishtir, well-trained, just half-lit
by resolve. Were I now, in public, to own
Karna, none of my sons, Child, would ever own
Kuru: Karna would crown Duryodhan owner
of earth, cede this war unfought, all to highlight
his friend’s birthright. I’d rather sever my own
breath first! And hence I met him in stealth: I owned
the truth, he learnt we’re kin. For now when he moves
in battle, he’ll know that his siblings, his own
blood, face him; know either victory is owned
by fratricide. Arjun is the only name
he’ll not spare—for their rivalry has been named
by heaven, he says; they’ll duel till death owns
one, that is written. But I’ll still have five sons,
when war ends, he swears. Who that last living son
will be rests on who can best perform a son’s
role, Karna or Arjun, who’s armed in his own
innocence; Arjun, whose arrows will delight
to greet his foe while sorrow mires Karna’s moves.
A hero bears no shame, no grace, just his name.
Karthika Nair’s Until the Lions has been published by HarperCollins Publishers India.