Synopsis of my forthcoming novel
The chronicle of a slave to
The
Mughal prince Dara Shikoh
The story about a beautifully tragic life as
related in a long lost manuscript written by Mubarak Ali, a faithful palace
eunuch who was Prince Dara Shukoh’s constant companion and witness to all the
battles, intrigues, scholarship, trial, death and events of his tumultuous
life. The book is packed with military action, the magnificence and intrigues
of the Mughal court and a battle for the very soul of India with Dara’s
religious tolerance pitted against the puritanical Islamic intolerance of
Aurangzeb.
Mubarak Ali’s adventures are pure fiction set in
the actual history of the Mughal empire between 1620 and 1660 where emperor
Shahjahan’s eldest and favorite son Dara battles against his brothers Shuja,
Aurangzeb and Murad for the Mughal throne after Shahjahan becomes seriously ill.
Over five battles, the conflict eventually narrows to one between the liberal
Dara and the orthodox Aurangzeb. Betrayal gives Aurangzeb a very narrow
victory.
Dara was a liberal thinking scholar (also of
Sanskrit) who first had the Upanishads and Bhagavat Gita translated from
Sanskrit to Persian to become widely known for the first time. He also wrote
his own book `Mingling of the Oceans’ showing the commonality between the Quran
and the Hindu Shastras. If Dara had won the Mughal throne India might have
enjoyed a long period of Hindu – Muslim amity instead of centuries of communal
strife.
Mubarak, the fictitious narrator of this epic
story, is a faintly foreign eunuch of the emperor’s Zenana. Aged six years
younger than Dara he is intimate with all the members of the imperial family
from their childhood to their adult years. Over the years he develops from a
nine year old boy into a capable soldier and reveals intimate insights into the
lives of the powerful men and women of the court. In the cloistered zenana he
also develops a secret and strictly forbidden intimate relationship with a
royal princess.
His adventures describe the exciting royal hunts,
the passing of Mumtaz Mahal, the building of the magnificent Taj and the new city
of Delhi. He shares his experiences while among tribals in the jungles, worship
in Hindu and Muslim holy places, Dara’s grand marriage to Nadira Bano and the trade
at the sea port of Surat with its many taverns and brothels. He shares Dara’s
spiritual quest for Hindu-Muslim brotherhood exploring the many religious ideas
of a time when Hindu’s were just beginning to assert their position in a Mughal
world. The reader will follow Mubarak on a colorful tour of Hindustan from the
limpid lakes of Kashmir to the craggy terrain of the Deccan and Kandahar, the
lush pastures of the Punjab, the forested hills of the Himalayas to the sandy
wastes of Sind and Baluchistan.
Mubarak describes many scenes of battle where the Mughal
strategies and command structures are described for the first time. He rides
with Dara at the battle of Samugarh and follows him on the long retreat to
Lahore and then down the Indus. He then assassinates an enemy commander and
helps rally Dara’s forces for his final battle at Deorai near Ajmer. He then
travels with Dara’s family and retainers through the cruel deserts of Sind and
Baluchastan until Dara is again betrayed and taken to Delhi as a prisoner. He
is with Dara when he is paraded through Delhi and taken before the imperial
Qazis where he is tried for heresy and condemned to death.
The
Ocean of Cobras is a tale of love and war, of compassion and cruelty in a
period of Mughal grandeur and passionate pride. The story of Dara is a true
story that many people in India still remember despite the passage of the
centuries.
105,000
words with three maps.
Rs.
350
looking forward to read your new creation
ReplyDeletelooking forward to read your new creation
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