English, asked by luiyikhanmung, 6 months ago

do you think that the selling of the fish by chaoba at the end of the story is justifiable?give reason for your answer.​

Answers

Answered by swainansh56
4

Hilsa is no doubt one of the tastiest fishes I have ever tasted. My earliest memory of the taste of the fish goes back to a day in my childhood when Guru Bipin Singh was invited at our house. So plenty and delicious was Hilsa on that occasion that it remained in my sub conscious for ever.

In 2007, we went through an unforgettable experience of trying to get fresh Hilsa of Bangladesh from Agartala to Imphal across the Indigo check point. Our Pengba and Khabak are no less tasty but definitely not as romanticised as Hilsa.

Oja Kunjamohon's "the taste of an Hilsa" is no doubt a great story. I read it again and again but I always felt there must be something beyond the 'taste of the Hilsa fish'.

The theme of the story cannot be bounded by a river and a fish. When I read the many obituaries of this litterateur, I again began thinking about the meanings of the story. A write up by Londonbala in Poknapham even had the backdrop of the genesis of the story where my father E. Nilakanta Singh, fascinated by the Barak, inspired the author to write something related with the Barak River.

Answered by kenjie14
9

Explanation:

Yes, i think that it is justifiable for chaoba to sell the fish because chaoba and his family has no rice to eat . So chaoba has to sell the fish inorder to buy rice for his family .

hope it helps.

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