KAMALA
KAMALA
KAMALA
By Vijay Tendulkar
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Vijay Tendulkar was one of India’s most influential and renowned playwrights
of the 20th century, particularly in the Marathi language.
Tendulkar was born on January 6th, 1928 into a Brahmin family in Kolhapur,
Maharashtra. He left school at age fourteen because he was involved with
Gandhi's anti-British Quit India movement. He read voraciously, attended
numerous theater performances, and began writing for newspapers. In the
early 1970s, he turned to cinema, writing screenplays in what became India’s
new wave cinema movement.
Tendulkar said of his love of writing, “Give me a piece of paper, any paper and
a pen and I shall write as naturally as the bird flies or a fish swims. For the last
50 years, I have been writing...at roadside restaurants and on the crowded
local trains. I have written on the sick bed in the hospital in spite of the
doctor's advice... It was a great relief. It was joy."
Vijay Tendulkar was a leading Indian playwright, movie and television writer,
literary essayist, political journalist, and social commentator primarily in
Marāthi. He is best known for his plays, Shantata! Court Chalu Aahe (1967),
Ghāshirām Kotwāl (1972), and Sakhārām Binder (1972).Many of Tendulkar's
plays derived inspiration from real-life incidents or social upheavals, which
provides clear light on harsh realities. He provided his guidance to students
studying "Playwright writing" in US universities. For over five decades,
Tendulkar had been a highly influential dramatist and theater personality in
Mahārāshtra.
Kamala
In the play ‘Kamla’, Tendulkar portrayed the woman in a quite realistic way.
The character of Kamla, the victim of flesh business, who sold to Jaisingh
Jadhav is shown as a practical and she has accepted the truth of life and trying
to adjust her life. She is fond of her master although she knew he is not going
to marry her and unaware of the reality of that he is just going to use her for
his own professional profit. She also see Sarita, wife of Jaisingh as an another
slave whom her master bought and trying to live with her.
Kamla: can I ask you something? You won’t be angry?
Sarita: no. Go on
Sarita: what?
Sarita: [recovering]. Me? Look here, Kamala. [Changes her mind, and sits down beside her]
For seven hundred.
Kamala: [pauses]. it was an expensive bargain, memsahib. If you pay seven hundred, and
there are no children …
Then he has to pay for clothes, and for food. He must be very unhappy really.
Here the simple side of the Kamala can be seen .The relationship between
Jaisingh and Sarita is of master and slave and from Kamal’s view if women
can’t give child to their master then they are worthless. Kamla has influence of
patriarchal thinking on her personality. Through the play until her exist the
character of Kamla is shown as a simple, Patriarchal thinking women who is
fond of her master while unaware of his intention.
Sarita
In play ‘Kamla’ Vijay Tendulkar did fabulous job to show the role of women in
patriarchal society through the character of Sarita. Sarita is wife of a successful
journalist Jaisingh Jadhav. She is a well-educated lady but it doesn’t any
difference to Jaisingh who treats her as inferior and does not give her any
chance to take a decision on any subject or matter. Jaisingh: [handling the
bundle to kamala, says to Sarita] its I who takes Decisions in this house, and no
one else. Do you understand? Chalo Kamala. [to Sarita] I will be back tonight –
if there are any Phone calls, say I’ve gone straight to the office, and write them
down.
From that scene it proves that Jaisingh doesn’t value the opinion Sarita. It is
also questionable that whether he gives Sarita as status of his wife. For Jaisingh
Sarita is only needed for satisfying his physical, mental, social needs, and for
household works. He doesn’t treat her as human being rather he treat her as
his personal slave. Jaisingh exploits her in every way. But due to Sarita is
married to Jaisingh in patriarchal society she has to bear that torture of
Jaisingh because in patriarchal society the females are considered as inferior to
males and they have to listen to their husband, or father [6,7]. The portrayal of
the patriarchal society in the play is very much common in particularly in
Indian cultural. The wife or women have to listen to male, even the male is
considered as a characterless, or without any great achievements. It’s the sad
reality which has been depicted through the play and through the character of
Sarita Tendulkar trying to show the feminist perspective in Indian society.
Kamla: Can I ask you something? You won’t be angry?
At this moment Sarita starts to realize that her life and Kamla’s life is not so
different. she has been bought by Jaisingh and Sarita herself is sold by Her
father gave her to Jaisingh with giving lots of dowry. From above conversation
with Kamla she understands that she is living like a slave. Tendulkar in realistic
way make audience to realize that even a married woman can exploited like a
victim of flesh business. When this torched gets unbearable then rebel will
happen. Her frustration and pain about this slavery can be seen in following
conversion.
Sarita: listen to the story of how he bought the slave Kamala and made use of her. The other
slave he got free- not just free – the slave’s father shelled out the money – a big money. Ask
him what he did with it.
In this conversation Sarita is in deep pain, but now she wanted to become free
this slavery and had a great determination in her eyes. Sarita is well educated,
married to a successful person, but ultimately gets treated as a slave because
she is a woman in patriarchal society. Through the Play the Character of Sarita
shows the harsh place of Indian women in Indian patriarchal society. Women
are always considered to be an inferior, unintelligent and rather subordinate to
the males. Even after marriage the husband treats the women as object which
is there to satisfy him. Thorough the play Tendulkar shows the Mirror of reality
to Patriarchal society and as well to the audience who is mostly influenced by
Patriarchal Society.