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The Song of Kahunsha door Anosh Irani
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The Song of Kahunsha (editie 2006)

door Anosh Irani

LedenBesprekingenPopulariteitGemiddelde beoordelingAanhalingen
19513139,964 (3.56)23
Fiction. Thriller. Ten-year-old Chamdi has rarely ventured outside his orphanage and entertains a fantasy of what Bombay is like beyond its garden walls ?? a paradise he calls Kahunsha, ??the city of no sadness.? He runs away to search for his long-lost father and finds himself thrust into chaos. Moving, poignant, and wonderfully rich in the sights and sounds of Bombay, this novel is the story of Chamdi's struggle for survival on the city's dangerous… (meer)
Lid:bogmommy
Titel:The Song of Kahunsha
Auteurs:Anosh Irani
Info:Anchor Canada (2006), Paperback, 320 pages
Verzamelingen:Jouw bibliotheek, Aan het lezen
Waardering:
Trefwoorden:Mumbai (Bombay), orphans, caste system, violence, poverty, street life, India, Canadian authors

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The Song of Kahunsha door Anosh Irani

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Chamdi is a 10-year-old orphan Who lives in an orphanage in Bombay. The orphanage Is about to get closed down, and the children will be sent north to an unknown place. Chamdi doesn't want to leave Bombay because he dreams of finding his father, so one night he runs away. Instead of finding his father, he finds a corrupt landscape where he's drawn unwittingly into the grip of the leader of a ruthless gang.

Beautiful and terribly sad, full of characters to love and despair of, and descriptions of vivid, at times revolting sights and smells. ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
Chamdi is a 10 year old boy raised in an orphanage in Bombay. For his entire life, he has been awaiting the return of one of his parents to take him home. He has not been outside the walls of the orphanage, but is sure that the city of Bombay is beautiful and full of loving people. He imagines a beautiful place and names it "Kahunsha", which to him meant "the city of no sadness." When the matron tells the children that the orphanage will be moving, Chamdi decides to run away and look for his father.

When Chamdi arrives on the streets of Bombay he quickly learns that people are not kind. He spends a night and two days on the street with nothing to eat, scorned by the people around him. On his second night he is approached by a girl his age, and she brings him to an alley where she lives with her brother and their mother who is schizophrenic and detached from reality. The girl, Guddi, and her brother, Sumdi, had approached Chamdi because they had noticed how thin he was, and felt that they could make use of him to slip through the bars of a nearby temple and steal the offering plate. Chamdi is horrified at the thought of stealing, but Guddi and Sumdi have been kind to him and fed him, so he decides to stay with them as they teach him the art of begging. They introduce him to their "Boss", Anand Bhai, an older man to whom they must daily turn over the proceeds of their begging, and be rewarded with a small amount in return. On his first meeting, Chamdi witnesses Anand casually gouge out the eye of another child beggar he caught withholding some of his earnings.

Over the next several days Chambi learns to live on the streets. He is surprised to find so many people sleeping in the streets, and begins to view the entire city of Bombay as an orphanage. He sees and experiences many horrors, but Chambi tries to maintain his illusions. All of this takes place against sectarian violence that broke out when Hindus destroyed a particularly holy mosque. Chambi and his friends are ultimately unable to avoid this violence.

The novel is narrated from the pov of Chamdi, and his is a delightful and charming voice, despite the grimness of his experiences.

Recommended

3 1/2 stars ( )
3 stem arubabookwoman | Sep 7, 2013 |
I really had no clue what to expect with The Song of Kahunsha - in fact, I had never heard of it until my book club picked it. From the moment I started reading, I was drawn into Chamdi's story. Much like Oliver from Oliver Twist, Chamdi is an orphan who must leave the orphanage and ends up falling in with the wrong crowd. However, Chamdi's story is much rougher and at times, it is hard to stomach. Irani's writing, though, is very beautiful and simple. ( )
  bookwyrmm | Jul 11, 2012 |
Chamdi’s name means “a boy of thick skin,” as appropriately given to him by Mrs. Sadiq, his caretaker at the orphanage where he has spent his short life sheltered from the evils that lurk behind the towering and concrete walls, in the streets of Bombay. His upbringing has been humble, with the same meals of rice and vegetables provided three times a day, a cot with a white sheet to sleep on, and a basic education affording him the knowledge to read and write. You can’t help but feel sad for Chamdi and his situation, until the closing of the orphanage sends him to the streets of Bombay where we quickly learn things can be much worse than he had ever experienced.
Chamdi’s road becomes increasingly harder, as he struggles to stay alive with no food in his tummy, money in his hand or a roof over his head. His saving grace and the true inspiration of this story is Chamdi’s ability to dream in colours. No matter how dark, dismal and desolate his circumstances appear to be, Chamdi need only close his eyes and dream of Kahunsha, his make believe recreation of Bombay, where there is no sadness, criminals, or starvation. This is a truly inspirational story that will not only make you thankful for all that you have, but hopeful for all that you have the power to imagine.
  PamelaReads | Aug 5, 2011 |
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Fiction. Thriller. Ten-year-old Chamdi has rarely ventured outside his orphanage and entertains a fantasy of what Bombay is like beyond its garden walls ?? a paradise he calls Kahunsha, ??the city of no sadness.? He runs away to search for his long-lost father and finds himself thrust into chaos. Moving, poignant, and wonderfully rich in the sights and sounds of Bombay, this novel is the story of Chamdi's struggle for survival on the city's dangerous

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