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Shadow Princess

Page 37

by Indu Sundaresan


  Chattri

  literally “umbrella” or “canopy”; here a dome-shaped pavilion built over a funerary site

  Chaugan

  polo

  Choli

  bodice, blouse

  Chudidar

  pajama-style trousers, fitted tight around the ankles and shins

  Chukkar

  period of play in polo, usually seven minutes long

  Chula

  fireplace with walls for cooking

  Chunam

  a type of plaster made with quicklime and sand

  Dargah

  tomb of a Sufi saint

  Dholak

  double-headed hand drum

  Dhoti

  garment of loose cloth worn around the waist

  Diya

  lamp

  Durbar

  court proceeding

  Farman

  imperial edict; almost exclusively the privilege of the Emperor

  Firangi

  foreigner

  Gaddi

  seat

  Ghagara

  Pleated, full-length skirt

  Ghari

  measure of time; approximately twenty-four minutes; the day and night were divided into twenty-four gharis

  Ghariyali

  timekeeper

  Ghee

  clarified butter

  Hakim

  physician

  Halva

  sweet confection

  Hammam

  bathhouse

  Havaldar

  policeman

  Haveli

  house, mansion

  Hinabandi

  ceremony, part of the wedding celebrations, during which henna is applied to the bride’s hands and feet

  Hookah

  water pipe for smoking tobacco

  Howdah

  canopied seat, usually on an elephant or a camel

  Huzoor

  sire

  Imam

  Muslim spiritual leader

  Jagir

  estate, parcel of land

  Jali

  screen

  Jharoka

  overhanging balcony used by the Emperor for audiences

  Kabab

  grilled meat on a skewer

  Karkhana

  workshop, atelier

  Khazana

  treasure

  Khilat

  Arabic for “dress”; here a specific coat given by the Emperor to a subject

  Khus

  aromatic grass

  Khutba

  Proclamation of sovereignty; usually before the noon prayers at mosques around the empire

  Kichri

  mixture of rice, lentils, and ghee; usually poor people’s food

  Konish

  form of salutation

  Kurta

  long-sleeved tunic

  Maidan

  open field

  Mali

  gardener

  Mansab

  military rank denoted by the number of cavalry and infantry a noble had under his command

  Mardana

  men’s quarters in the house

  Mast

  intoxicated; when referring to elephants, “energetic”

  Matka

  earthenware pot

  Mehr

  gift from the groom to the bride during the wedding ceremony

  Mirza

  title for a nobleman

  Mohur

  gold coin

  Mulla

  man trained in Islamic law and tradition

  Naan

  leavened bread baked in a clay oven

  Nadiri

  sleeveless, thigh-length coat

  Nautch

  dance

  Nilgau

  a bluish-gray wild ox

  Nishan

  imperial edict; usually the privilege of queens, princesses, and princes

  Paan

  betel leaf, used as a digestive

  Pahr

  measure of time, the length of a watch; the day and night were divided into four pahrs each

  Pargana

  land holding

  Peshwaz

  long-sleeved, high-waisted garment that flowed to the knees

  Pishtaq

  portal, entry

  Punkah

  fan

  Purdah

  literally “curtain”; here to mean the veil

  Qaba

  overcoat with long sleeves

  Qazi

  judge who rules in accordance with Islamic law

  Rauza

  tomb

  Sachaq

  customary wedding gift to the bride

  Salah

  ritual prayer

  Sarai

  rest house for travelers

  Sehra

  headdress worn by the groom during a wedding ceremony

  Shamiana

  canopy, tent

  Shenai

  woodwind instrument

  Shikara

  slim wooden boat used in Kashmir

  Sitar

  stringed musical instrument

  Sura

  Arabic for “chapter” of the Quran

  Tabla

  pair of hand drums

  Taslim

  form of salutation

  ‘Urs

  death anniversary

  Uzuk

  royal seal

  Zari

  gold or silver wire thread used in embroidery

  Zenana

  harem quarters or the women within; consisted of wives, concubines, mothers, sisters, cousins—any women who required shelter and were related to the imperial family

  Shadow Princess

  INDU SUNDARESAN

  A Readers Club Guide

  QUESTIONS AND TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION

  1. In what ways does Mumtaz Mahal’s death change the dynamics of the royal household and, ultimately, the future of the Empire? How does her passing affect Jahanara in particular?

  2. Before her death, Mumtaz Mahal noted that “there was already a slender rivalry” between her two eldest daughters, “so inconsequential now as almost not to exist.” How does this “slender rivalry” develop into a full-blown contentious relationship between the sisters? How much of their dislike for one another has to do with personality and how much with the environment in which they live?

  3. Why does the Emperor forbid Jahanara, and also Roshanara, for whom he has little affection, from marrying? Why does Jahanara never ask her father for permission to marry Najabat Khan?

  4. Roshanara is often spiteful toward Jahanara, starting rumors of incest between her sister and the Emperor and setting her sights on Najabat Khan. What does she hope to gain by doing these things? Is her behavior at all understandable? Why or why not?

  5. How is Jahanara both powerful and powerless? In what ways is she a “shadow princess,” as the novel’s title suggests?

  6. How is Jahanara influential in matters of state? In what instances are her opinions and insight most critical? Why does she staunchly support Dara as Shah Jahan’s successor and vehemently oppose Aurangzeb’s claim to the throne?

  7. Why does Jahanara give up her son, Antarah? Does she have any other choice? “In the end, it was Aurangzeb, with his rigid views on propriety and decency, who reached out a hand to his sister’s son, a boy she would never acknowledge in public.” Why does Aurangzeb, and not Dara or one of Jahanara’s other brothers, reach out to Antarah?

  8. Indu Sundaresan reveals in the Afterword that after Shah Jahan’s death, Jahanara returns to court to be the head of Aurangzeb’s harem. Do you find it surprising that she would accept a position in her brother’s household given her feelings for him? Why or why not?

  9. Have you read Indu Sundaresan’s novels The Twentieth Wife and The Feast of Roses? If so, how do they compare to Shadow Princess? If not, are you now interested in reading them?

  ENHANCE YOUR BOOK CLUB

  1. Feast on an Indian meal, ei
ther meeting at a restaurant or having each member bring a different dish. Enhance the atmosphere by eating apples, sipping chai tea (“fragrant with cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg”), and savoring chicken biryani like the characters do in the book. Check out www.recipesindian.com.

  2. Visit www.InduSundaresan.com to find out more about the author and her other books in the “Taj Mahal Trilogy,” read the back story behind Shadow Princess, and view a family tree outlining the major players in the novels.

  A CONVERSATION WITH INDU SUNDARESAN

  The Luminous Tomb in the Taj Mahal is constructed from white marble. What is the significance of the color white in Indian culture? What about red and green, the signature colors of Jahanara and Roshanara?

  White is actually the color of mourning in most of India for both Hindus and Muslims. Red is the color of weddings, clothing, decorations, and jewelry, so also now a lot of green.

  As for the Taj Mahal (the mausoleum itself), it’s almost entirely constructed from striated white marble. I think Emperor Shah Jahan was inspired by the tomb (Itimad-Ud-Daulah’s tomb) that still stands today across the River Yamuna from the Taj. This was the mausoleum Mehrunnisa constructed for her father circa 1628 when she was still Empress, and it’s the first important example of an all-white marble tomb in the reign of the Mughals. All other tombs until then—Emperor Akbar’s tomb in Sikandra; Emperor Humayun’s tomb in Delhi—were made largely of the red sandstone found plentifully in quarries near Agra and Fatehpur Sikri. White marble was mostly used for inlay.

  The novel includes fascinating passages about the creation of the Taj Mahal. What can you tell us about your visits to the Taj Mahal? What was it about the majestic monument that made the greatest impression on you?

  There’s that moment when I step into the cavernous hallway of the Great Gate, the main entrance to the tomb, and step out onto the platform that leads into the gardens of the Taj, that is always magical. Here, in moving from the darkness to the light, I’m confronted with this “traditional” view of the Taj—the long reflecting pool along the pathway, the square pool that halves this long pool, the red sandstone platform that houses the white marble mausoleum in the center.

  When I visit the Taj Mahal, I roam the entire complex—the two red sandstone buildings, the mosque to the left (west), and the assembly hall to the right (east) that flank the marble mausoleum; the Great Gate itself, which people often pass through quickly, eager for their first sight of the Taj; the pavilions that mark the four corners of the complex, even the space in front of the riverfront terrace where Mumtaz Mahal is said to have been buried briefly until the terrace and the subterranean rooms under the mausoleum were completed.

  I’ve been to the river’s bank and seen the back of the Taj (the same view you see on the Shadow Princess cover); I’ve roamed through the Jilaukhana, the forecourt to the tomb, which is where a visitor can buy tickets and enter through before getting to the Great Gate.

  In researching every structure in the Taj’s mammoth complex, I’ve become familiar with each of these buildings; I know their history, their purpose, their original intent.

  You once said in an interview that Indian people have been hearing stories about the great noblewomen of the Mughal Empire all their lives. How have Western readers reacted to your novels The Twentieth Wife and The Feast of Roses? For those who have yet to read Shadow Princess, what would you like to tell them about Jahanara?

  From people who are unfamiliar with India’s history, especially the Mughal period, I hear stories of how they welcome this glimpse into a world that’s unfamiliar to them, and more important, how they can relate to a woman who lived in seventeenth-century India. Readers admire Mehrunnisa’s ambition, even her cunning, and her capacity for loving and being caring—feelings and thoughts that are contemporary, I think, to any generation. She was a woman hidden behind a veil, who had enormous power and exercised that power to the best of her abilities.

  Jahanara, in Shadow Princess, inherits a similar power, but unlike Mehrunnisa she doesn’t have to fight for it. And yet, there are plenty of obstacles in her way. Beloved as she is of her father, immensely rich from inheriting her mother’s income, she still has to fight to put her brother Dara on the throne, and engage in a rivalry with her sister.

  The interesting thing about Mehrunnisa and Jahanara is that they were both powerful women—one (in a more traditional role) in her husband Emperor Jahangir’s harem, the other (more unconventionally) in her father’s harem. They both had the devotion of the male principal, but even after writing these three novels of the trilogy I still wonder—was the wife more beloved than the daughter? Or the other way around?

  You mention in the Afterword that you came across references to Jahanara while doing research for a previous novel. What was it about the princess that captured your interest? Did you know immediately that she would be the focus of one of your novels?

  The initial mentions of Jahanara and Roshanara came when I was reading (for The Twentieth Wife and The Feast of Roses) Niccolao Manucci’s travelogue. (For those of you interested, the full reference is in the bibliography in Shadow Princess.)

  This is what I remember reading: Jahanara was a mere seventeen when her mother died, and she became powerful almost immediately after Mumtaz’s death; she was never allowed to marry; she and Roshanara smuggled men into the harem for their pleasure; and they both dabbled in politics and supported different brothers as their father’s successors.

  There was enough, in these little bits of information, to intrigue me and I knew then that they would be part of a future novel; it hadn’t taken shape in my mind fully, that would only come later, after I had finished The Splendor of Silence and In the Convent of Little Flowers. At the time, I read, stored away the information, and went on to write something else.

  Turn the page for a sneak peak of Indu Sundaresan's new novel, Mountain of Light.

  Fragment of Light

  June 1817

  The midday sun leaned over to place its fiery kiss upon the Shalimar Gardens in Lahore, four and a half miles east of the fort and walled city. The blazing light wavered into a haze around the almond, guava, and mango trees, and except under the trees where it could not penetrate, all shadows leached into the blistering ground.

  The Shalimar Gardens—the Abode of Pleasure—was a name taken by the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan from the gardens his father had built in the valley of Kashmir. In the late 1630s, the Ravi River in Lahore flooded its banks. Angry waters swamped and carved out new geographical features, shifting vast quantities of mud from one place to another, leaving acclivities and declivities where none had existed before. One such slope in the land was born after this flood. So it was here Emperor Shah Jahan ordered the garden to be built in three terraces that descended from the south to the north.

  At high noon on this day of June 1817, two young men tarried in the central platform of the pool in the middle terrace.

  They were both bareheaded, their chests bare also. Each wore only a kispet—long, tight shorts of buffalo hide leather, which covered them from their waists down, the ends rucked up over their knees to facilitate ease of movement. The upper halves of their bodies, and their legs and feet, glistened with sesame oil, pungent and aromatic in the sear of the sun. Earlier in the morning—according to the rules of the game—they had smoothed the oil on each other. It was the first and last gesture of amity and goodwill.

  For their referee, they had corralled an old gardener lounging in the deep shade of the nearby tamarind tree, a hand-rolled beedi wrapped in his fist, smoke coiling out from between his fingers.

  “Him?” Ibrahim Khan had asked, thick eyebrows elevated in disbelief.

  His sovereign had shrugged, lifting massive, muscled shoulders. “As good as anyone else, Ibrahim. We know the rules ourselves. The only other man around is Zaman, and he’s useless, as you know. Should I have to call upon one of the flowers in my zenana instead?”

  Ibrahim grinned. “With respect, your Maj
esty, the women of your harem will only support you. And they’re likely to squeal or curse in horror when I defeat you. Calling on them is not conducive to an even playing field.”

  A small smile flitted across Shah Shuja’s face. And when it did, it lightened his features, brought a sparkle to his gray eyes, erased the embedded lines of worry on his forehead. Made him, so Ibrahim thought, more like the deeply powerful man he had known all of his life.

  A tiny spear of ache stabbed Ibrahim’s heart. They were far removed from what they had once been. Shuja had been born of a king—Shah Timur Durrani—whose father had established the Afghan Empire in the name of the Durrani dynasty. Timur had had many sons, of many wives, as was the established custom of the time. There was no law of primogeniture—the eldest son did not automatically inherit the throne. Nor was he gifted with quiescent brothers willing to live out their lives as governors of districts or provinces. At Timur’s death, the throne had changed hands four times, one son or the other claiming it for his own for a brief while, driven from it when another had amassed enough of a threatening army. And so Shuja had lost his kingdom to his half brother Shah Mahmud.

 

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