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Book watch
To health the Indian way
DORLING KINDERSLEY, a quarter-of-a-century-old name associated
worldwide with practical information books, is back in India
under the ever-growing Pearson group. Though DK has had a
presence here for a while, this year's Valentine's Day saw the
re-launch of its trade operations in India under the better known
Penguin India banner.
And, DK's return was announced with an elaborately put together
illustrated guide on yoga by Yogacharya B. K. S. Iyengar. Packed
with 1,900 colour photographs, including "innovative 360 degree
views of yoga asanas", the 400-odd - page book provides step-by-
step sequences to the asanas with detailed instructions. Also
thrown in is a 20-week yoga course.
But it is not just a how-to-do-it book. Before getting into the
basics, Yogacharya Iyengar explains the aims and meaning of yoga,
its philosophy, and the relationship between the guru and the
yogi.
Yoga: The Path to Holistic Health, B. K. S. Iyengar, Dorling
Kindersley, œ25, special Indian price œ18.
* * *
Action replay
ONLY the language nature used to articulate its anger was
different. Otherwise, any number of stark parallels can be drawn
between the super-cyclone that all but washed parts of Orissa off
the map in October 1999 and the earthquake that rocked Gujarat a
little over a month ago.
The insensitivity and inability of the system to deliver as
witnessed in Orissa during the cyclone was replayed - almost to
precision - in Gujarat and the message was out loud and clear:
The Indian system had learnt nothing from its mistakes in Orissa.
This is the submission journalist Ruben Banerjee makes in his
chronicle The Orissa Tragedy: A Cyclone of Calamity.
While few would have contested Banerjee's conclusion - based on
his ringside view of the cyclone and the subsequent mismanagement
of the situation - the quake in Gujarat has given him enough
reason to rest his case. Not that he was looking for any
evidence, going by the not-so-dispassionate account of Orissa in
the year since the coastal districts of the State came in the eye
of the storm.
Beginning with a description of the manner in which Orissa Chief
Minister Giridhar Gamang closetted himself with astrologers to
find out whether the storm brewing in the Bay of Bengal would
pass his State by, Banerjee goes on to describe the dance of
anarchy in the days after, and place on record the continuing
vulnerability of the cyclone-struck areas.
The Orissa Tragedy: A Cyclone's Year of Tragedy, Ruben Banerjee,
Books Today, Rs. 225.
* * *
Fill in the blanks
SNATCHES of Sikh history - till date trapped in Persian sources -
are now accessible to scholars and historians alike; courtesy the
decision of the 60th Indian History Congress to put together "a
collection of accurate translations of major Persian sources of
Sikh history, down to 1765, when Sikh dominance over the Punjab
came to be firmly established".
Edited by the Director of the Indian Institute of Advanced
Studies, Shimla, J. S. Grewal, and fellow historian from Aligarh
Muslim University, Irfan Habib, the book has been published with
financial support from the Department of Culture of the Union
Government, and the Anandpur Sahib Foundation.
While Grewal steered the project, translations were mainly done
by Irfan Habib along with scholars associated with the Aligarh
Historians Society. A part of the research and publication
programmes of the Indian History Congress to commemorate the
tercentenary of the Khalsa, these translations, it is hoped, will
supplement the information preserved in the Gurumukhi traditions.
Still, by the translators' own admission, the book does not
include everything written in Persian about the Sikhs before
1765. And even in the parts translated, some derogatory
references to the Gurus and the community have been left out.
But, keen as those in charge of this project were to ensure that
the interests of history prevailed, these references have been
brought to notice even in absentia with an asterisk.
Sikh History from Persian Sources, edited by J. S. Grewal and
Irfan Habib, Tulika, Rs. 200.
* * *
Maratha valour
SHIVAJI might be the best known Maratha warrior, but that can in
no way rob the other brave son of the same soil, Peshwa Baji Rao,
of his place in the sun. And giving him his due is E. Jaiwant
Paul whose book on this warrior Peshwa is part of Roli's Lotus
Collection.
Obviously in awe of Peshwa Baji Rao, the author hails him as the
man who changed the map of India in the 18th Century and
"transformed the Maratha nation state into an empire". Of the
view that an untimely death stopped him from holding sway over
the Indus, Paul's book is a narration of the battles on land and
sea, and the backroom intrigue that was a staple of India those
days.
And since the ascendancy of Peshwa Baji Rao coincides with the
decline of the Mughal Empire and the consequent emergence of a
number of pockets of strength, Paul's narrative naturally weaves
in other historic figures. Woven in are life sketches of the
founder of the Hyderabad State, Nizam-ul-Mulk; Sawai Jai Singh of
Jaipur; and the daredevil Maratha admiral, Kanhoji Angre whose
descendent, Sambhajirao Angre, is currently in the news over yet
another battle royale.
Baji Rao: The Warrior Peshwa,
E. Jaiwant Paul, Roli Books, Rs. 275.
ANITA JOSHUA
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