East-West Part I
Sunil Gangopadhyay, Enakshi Chatterjeepartition of India. That a newly born country could exist as two geographically separated units was also an unheard
of event. But the inevitable had to happen. Culturally and linguistically dissimilar, East and West Pakistan had to
forge their different destinies.
This novel is a record of those tumultuous times in East Pakistan as well as in Indian Bengal. But their
problems were vastly different. The story, revolving around two college friends, both Bengali though one Hindu
and the other Muslim soon takes into its expanding orbit other characters, families, issues. The two friends drift
apart, separated by the political division, then each is caught up in his own problem. There is no sentimental
reunion, in fact the novel precariously poised, steers clear of sentimentality. There is the unspoken and
inescapable bitter conclusion— perhaps the twain can never meet. Under the deceptively simple surface are
hidden deeper and more complex human issues. East and west were initially a demarcation on the map but soon
west recedes further as younger people from the east migrate to the US and the UK leaving the aging parents at
home. Sunrise and sunset are two other symbols spun into the fabric of the novel, pointing to the evolution of
human life, the movement from birth to death. Thus from a partition novel set at a particular place and time, it
rises to the level of the universal, encompassing the entire gamut of human emotions and cultural encounters.