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Monday, August 11, 2025

Writing to Vido: Celebrating Sir Vidia Naipaul at 92

by

Ira Mathur
358 days ago
20240818

Vidi­ad­har Sura­jprasad Naipaul (Au­gust 17, 1932–Au­gust 11, 2018), No­bel Lau­re­ate and Book­er Prize win­ner, was a Trinidad-born writer whose work delved deeply in­to themes of iden­ti­ty, dis­place­ment, and post-colo­nial life. His most cel­e­brat­ed works in­clude A House for Mr Biswas, Miguel Street, The Mys­tic Masseur, The Mim­ic Men, A Bend in the Riv­er, and Guer­ril­las. Ho­n­oured with the No­bel Prize, David Co­hen Prize, Trin­i­ty Cross, and a knight­hood, Naipaul re­mains one of the great­est writ­ers in Eng­lish lit­er­a­ture.

Yes­ter­day, to mark Sir Vidia Naipaul’s 92nd birth­day, the Friends of Mr Biswas, found­ed by Prof Ken Ram­c­hand to pre­serve Naipaul’s homes and lega­cy, host­ed a spe­cial event at NALIS.

The evening fea­tured fic­tion­al read­ings in­spired by Naipaul’s works, stir­ring per­for­mances, and a provoca­tive talk by Prof Ram­c­hand ti­tled “Did Naipaul Hate Trinidad?”

Trinida­di­an writ­ers were in­vit­ed to write fic­tion­al birth­day let­ters to VS Naipaul.

This let­ter was writ­ten by Ira Math­ur and in­cludes an ex­cerpt she read at the event yes­ter­day.

Dear Sir Vidia, Hap­py Birth­day.

I still burn with shame when I re­call our first meet­ing in April 1990. It made me agree with T S Eliot: “April is the cru­ellest month.”

As a star­ry-eyed rook­ie re­porter for NBS Ra­dio 610, I found my­self at Pi­ar­co air­port on one of my first as­sign­ments, in­ter­view­ing you along­side Judy Ray­mond, an Ex­press colum­nist, Max­ie Cuffie, and then a jour­nal­ist. That Sun­day, my em­bar­rass­ment deep­ened when I read Judy Ray­mond’s sharp and bril­liant ac­count of the en­counter in the Sun­day Ex­press. Ray­mond, now a writer of note, had thank­ful­ly not named me—she sim­ply called me “610 girl.”

I quote from her April 15, 1990 col­umn, Wait­ing for Vi­do.

“By 5.30, we were won­der­ing if Sir Vidia hadn’t al­ready sneaked past us to do his du­ty-free shop­ping and board the plane. It was af­ter six when we were sum­moned back in­to the VIP lounge to press the knight­ly flesh. First, he be­rat­ed us for not hav­ing known that the press con­fer­ence would start late.

“Why did you wait so long?” he de­mand­ed. We took that to be a rhetor­i­cal ques­tion.

In re­sponse to a pre­lim­i­nary in­quiry about what he had been do­ing dur­ing his stay, he launched in­to what for a mo­ment seemed to threat­en to be­come a hypochon­dri­ac’s mono­logue on his health; the fa­mous Brah­min sen­si­bil­i­ties were show­ing. Max­ie re­ceived the length­i­est and most thought­ful an­swers and con­clud­ed that this was ev­i­dence of chau­vin­ism. But it so hap­pened that it was Max­ie who asked him about race and pol­i­tics; al­though we had all thought of and pooled those ques­tions dur­ing our wait, the 610 girl and I asked him about book­ish and per­son­al mat­ters.

I got off light­ly. In re­sponse to the 610 girl, he claimed, “I know noth­ing about the Rushdie af­fair.”

The 610 girl per­se­vered. When she asked whether he was prepar­ing to re­turn to Eng­land and felt he was go­ing home, he asked whether she did not think that was a shal­low ques­tion.

She said she did not and that she had asked it be­cause she some­times felt “trapped be­tween two worlds.” He re­peat­ed the phrase, ex­claim­ing: “What lan­guage!” An­oth­er ques­tion elicit­ed, “My good­ness!”

She asked whether he thought West In­di­ans in Eng­land were hap­py: “Do you think they’re hap­py?” he replied.

She had, she said, re­al­ly on­ly seen them in Tube sta­tions. “Did they look hap­py when you saw them in the Tube sta­tions?” he asked. “Was it a cold day?”

I had asked how he felt about be­ing writ­ten about: he nev­er read any of it, he said. The 610 girl pur­sued this line. Asked about vary­ing re­ports that he had grown more bit­ter or more mel­low, he mused: per­haps he was both; was he mel­low­ly bit­ter, more bit­ter­ly mel­low? Then, his pa­tience wore thin. “What do they mean? What do they mean?” he snapped. “They’re just throw­ing words around.”–End of quote.

Now for some quick news. Prof Ken Ram­c­hand and his NGO Friends of Mr Biswas have saved your fa­ther’s house on 26 Nepaul Street in St James, trans­form­ing it against all odds in­to a her­itage home for your fam­i­ly.

The Li­on House, in Ch­agua­nas, your moth­er’s home, which you made fa­mous as Hanu­man House in A House for Mr Biswas, is a wound­ed crea­ture wait­ing for its fi­nal col­lapse. The walls have alarm­ing branch­ing cracks, and tree-like bush­es are shoot­ing up through its foun­da­tion struc­ture, the earth re­claim­ing the space. Your fam­i­ly is dead­locked over what to do with the house. It can’t be sold or do­nat­ed.

If you’re read­ing this, I’m sure you’d recog­nise this let­ter as a woman’s writ­ing—af­ter all, you once claimed you could tell with­in a para­graph or two. You fa­mous­ly dis­missed most women writ­ers, in­clud­ing Jane Austen, Doris Less­ing, and Toni Mor­ri­son, as in­fe­ri­or.

Per­haps you’d for­got­ten that you al­so ad­mit­ted your late wife, al­so a woman, Pa­tri­cia Ann Hale, was your most trust­ed read­er. You didn’t spare your­self in your pur­suit of the truth as you saw it, ad­mit­ting that she be­came a vic­tim of your cru­el­ty, ne­glect, and in­fi­deli­ty as she was dy­ing of can­cer. “It could be said that I had killed her,” you con­fessed to your bi­og­ra­ph­er, Patrick French.

I was shocked at my own laugh­ter when I saw you dur­ing a BBC in­ter­view re­spond­ing to an in­ter­view­er who asked you what the dot on an In­di­an woman’s fore­head means. You an­swered that it meant that “I don’t have a brain.” You had to rip things in­to pieces to un­der­stand them.

Your bi­og­ra­ph­er, the late Patrick French, wrote that your life “was one of per­pet­u­al ex­ile and dis­place­ment, dri­ven by a pro­found sense of rest­less­ness and dis­sat­is­fac­tion.”

This rest­less­ness, ev­i­dent in your writ­ing, seems to me a mir­ror of your strug­gles—your grap­pling with iden­ti­ty, be­long­ing, and the deep wounds in­flict­ed by a world that you of­ten viewed with dis­dain.

French ob­served, “Naipaul’s great­est fear was of be­ing ‘sec­ond-rate,’” a fear that haunt­ed you through­out your life, push­ing you to achieve lit­er­ary great­ness. This fear has been your gift and your curse. It drove you to pro­duce works of un­par­al­leled bril­liance yet led you to push away Trinidad, the world you knew best.

You wrote so many books on Trinidad. Miguel Street hu­mor­ous­ly cap­tures life in Port-of-Spain, The Mys­tic Masseur fol­lows a teacher’s rise to pow­er, and The Suf­frage of Elvi­ra satiris­es lo­cal elec­tions. A House for Mr Biswas tells of one man’s fight for in­de­pen­dence, and The Mim­ic Men ex­plores ex­ile and alien­ation.

In The Mim­ic Men, you wrote, “We be­come what we see of our­selves in the eyes of oth­ers.” This line res­onates and cap­tures the essence of how your own view of your­self was shaped by the ex­pec­ta­tions and judge­ments of oth­ers—ex­pec­ta­tions that you both re­belled against and in­ter­nalised. Your need to prove your­self and be seen as “great” of­ten led you to mea­sure your worth against im­pos­si­ble stan­dards, leav­ing lit­tle room for com­pas­sion for your­self or oth­ers.

As French wrote, you were “haunt­ed by the ghosts of your own in­se­cu­ri­ties and doubts.” Your harsh­ness to­wards the world and your bit­ing cri­tiques seem to me a way of cop­ing with the pain you car­ried—a pain root­ed in the com­plex­i­ties of your iden­ti­ty, your dis­place­ment, and your de­sire to be more than the world ex­pect­ed of you and every­thing your fa­ther ex­pect­ed. You’d be glad to know that your fa­ther’s sto­ries and jour­nal­ism were fi­nal­ly pub­lished by Peepal Tree Press in 2024, ti­tled Seep­er­sad Naipaul, Amaz­ing Scenes: Se­lect­ed Jour­nal­ism 1928-1953.

Of your fa­ther Seep­er­sad’s death, you once wrote in The New York­er that we are nev­er fin­ished with grief, that it is in­escapable and pro­por­tion­ate to love.

Six­ty years lat­er, you found com­fort in ys be­lief that your fa­ther, ever the hu­morist, was hav­ing a good laugh at the fam­i­ly’s grief.

You drew on this idea to con­sole your­self when your beloved cat, Au­gus­tus, died.

You wrote, “My idea was that Au­gus­tus was con­sid­er­ing every­thing in the house that no longer held him; he was con­sid­er­ing every­thing and work­ing out how he should re­spond in­tel­li­gent­ly.”

I like to think you’re do­ing that to­day, con­sid­er­ing things among us all.

Of Au­gus­tus, you wrote, “A cat on­ly has it­self,” clear­ly ap­prov­ing of its self-con­tain­ment.

But you didn’t just have your­self, you know. Your whole life, you railed against things and hurled to­wards writ­ing, which is, af­ter all, ul­ti­mate­ly a way of speak­ing to the world—your life work.

On your birth­day, I re­mem­ber that meet­ing from so long ago and think you were al­most not worth the wait, but your books will be worth every­thing long af­ter all of us gath­ered here have joined you, where you’ll be laugh­ing with your fa­ther, and Au­gus­tus will con­tin­ue to con­sid­er every­thing.

Yours sin­cere­ly,

Ira Math­ur

Ira Math­ur is a Guardian Me­dia jour­nal­ist and the win­ner of the 2023 OCM Bo­cas Prize for Non-Fic­tion for her mem­oir, Love The Dark Days. Web­site: www.iras­room.org 


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