"Listening to them, I see two distinct worlds...".In the context of mukesh,the bangle maker's son, which world is Anees Jung referring to?
Answers
Answer:
Poverty stricken family/ burdened by stigma of caste and -Vicious circle created by sahukars, middlemen, policemen, keepers of law, bureaucrats (any two)
Explanation:
Listening to them, I see two different worlds…”, the author here is talking about two families, one caught in the web of poverty, burdened by the stigma of caste in which they were born and the other is the vicious circle of sahukars, the middleman, policemen, the keepers of law, the bureaucrats and the policemen. All of them together they have put the burden on Mukesh that he cannot keep aside. Before he is aware, he accepts it naturally like his father. For him to do anything else would mean to dare.
Explanation:
In the prose 'Lost Spring' by this line Anees Jung specifies two different world:-
- One is the vicious web of poverty in which narrator describes the state of perpetual poverty in Firozabad. There are over 20,000 families which are into the work of bangle-making for glass-blowing industry. These people live in slums and they only do the same bangle-making job for generations without thinking of doing something else. They do not dare to take risk and go out to seek for different opportunities and force their children to do the same think so they are stuck here forever.
- Another world we can see is that the injustice of these people by the middlemen. These people cannot organize themselves into cooperatives as they are significantly suppressed by the Sahukaars, middlemen, policemen and politicians. If they think of organizing themselves then they would be hauled by the policemen and would be thrown into jails for illegal purposes.
So i was clear enough in my answer of explaining the things as clearly as i can.
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