Temsula Ao's stories about the unreal experiences of ordinary Naga people always strike a chord.
This collection presents stories during the Naga insurgency in the 1950s, highlighting the plight of ordinary villagers caught in the war between the underground movement and the Indian army. There are no winners in this war of death and destruction, only scarred bodies and minds are left behind.
The stories bring forth unspeakable acts of violence and inhumanity - forcible taxes by the insurgents, looting and raiding of entire villages for food and livestock, or in retribution for one villager’s treason, forced evictions from one’s own land, acts of torture by the army, and for the women, always molestation and rape.
Most of the stories are dark, depicting tales of lost innocence, identity crisis, suffocating patriarchy, changing political landscapes and affiliations, and unwilling victims of a war they did not choose, but there are also stories of love, discovering one’s sexuality, ambition, and hopes for a better future, as the war-torn elders pass on the stories of how they loved, lost, and survived to the next generation.
Naga folklore survives through oral tradition, and the insurgency, or even general Naga history isn't something we are ever taught, which is why writers like Temsula Ao deserve to be read and read widely.