
People who we call 'antinationals' are the ones who care: Arundhati Roy
In 'Mother Mary Comes to Me,' the Booker Prize-winning author, known for her controversial views, shares her tumultuous relationship with her mother
"Safety suffocates me". An unusual comment from others perhaps but not when it comes from Arundhati Roy who has faced fame and fury alike for her writings, be it her debut novel that won her the Booker Prize in 1997 and propelled her to stardom or her unflinching political pieces.
Also Read: Arundhati Roy: Portrait of a writer as a political activist, and polemicist
Arundhati Roy's memoir
Roy, whose candid memoir Mother Mary Comes to Me was launched on Thursday (August 28), takes it all in her stride. Even if she is called an antinational, whose words and views have made her the target of trolls and a polarising figure.
As she sees it, her writings, scathing for some and straightforward for others, come from “a place of love and caring about something”.
“I write when it becomes harder to keep quiet than to write,” Roy told PTI in an interview.
It has been so right from her first political essay, The End of Imagination, which confronted nuclear proliferation and its devastating impact on humanity and the environment.
'Antinationals' are the ones who care
"People don't understand why one gets so upset? Why do I write? Because it comes from a place of love. It comes from caring about something. Otherwise, why should I bother? Like, why shouldn't I enjoy my Booker Prize or whatever it was,” she said about her much feted novel The God of Small Things.
"Almost all the people who we call 'antinationals' are the ones who care. And then the people who call themselves great nationalists, I can bet you that 99 per cent of them are dodging taxes, have sent their kids to America, or are doing everything to make sure that what goes on in this country doesn't affect their personal wealth or their whatever bullshit," the ever frank Roy added.
She is a writer and an activist, but when people hyphenate the two, she says it’s a label she finds absurd, something like the clunky term "sofa-bed".
Also Read: Arundhati Roy’s first memoir, ‘Mother Mary Comes To Me,’ to release in September 2025
Solace in danger
Her memoir explores how Roy navigated the ebbs and flows of life to become the person she is today — the one who continues to find solace in the most dangerous of places rather than the safe ones.
"The most dangerous place in the history of time has been writing. I've never been under any illusion that it was a safe place. So I'm okay here. Because it's the safety that suffocates me," she declared.
Over the past two decades, Roy has authored fiction and non-fiction books — including The Ministry of Utmost Happiness — along with numerous essays covering a broad spectrum of issues, ranging from Kashmir, big dams, and globalisation to Dalit icon B R Ambedkar, meetings with Maoist rebels, and conversations with whistleblower Edward Snowden and Hollywood actor John Cusack.
Relationship with her mother
The subtext of straight talk continues in her latest work centred around the fraught relationship with her mother Mary Roy, a celebrated educator and women’s rights activist who fought the landmark case allowing Kerala’s Syrian Christian women equal rights in their father's property.
Roy said the book was born out of the "onrush of memories and feelings provoked by Mary's death" in 2022 at the age of 89.
"I wrote this book because I feel that my mother is someone who deserves to be shared with the world." Mother Mary Comes to Me offers a deep dive into her tumultuous life, with Roy mincing no words as she gives voice to long-held emotions and recounts her equation with her tough, strong-headed mother.
Also Read: Mary Roy, the indomitable fighter who lived on her own terms
Writing without resolving
She describes the book as neither a judgment nor an accusation, and certainly not a "hagiography". For a writer, she adds, the most interesting thing is to “write without resolving".
"I never responded to her... I was quiet all this time, but here it is now... I try not to judge her. I don't know whether that's right or wrong, but I tried and I succeeded, I think," the 63-year-old explained.
"I just think as a writer, she is an unusual character in her own way. It was difficult. But there's no point in writing anything that's not difficult to write."
Revered by her fans and almost unfailingly reviled by her critics, the 2024 Pen Pinter Prize awardee's work has often provoked extreme reactions — from burning her effigies and disrupting her events to being told to go to Pakistan and facing charges of sedition and contempt, this celeb author-activist has seen it all.
Mirred in controversy
In fact, her meteoric rise to fame with The God of Small Things was not without controversy. She was accused of obscenity, marking the first of the three criminal cases filed against her.
One of those cases led her to spend a day in jail for protesting the construction of big dams during the Narmada Bachao Andolan.
This August, her book Azadi was among the 25 books banned by the administration in Jammu and Kashmir for promoting a "false narrative and secessionism" in the region.
The 1961 Meghalaya-born writer and trained architect left her home in Kerala at 18 and lived hand to mouth while dabbling in various professions, including a job at the National Institute of Urban Affairs, acting in "Massey Sahib" and both acting and screenwriting in the National Award-winning tele-film, In Which Annie Gives It Those Ones.
Also Read: Arundhati Roy’s ‘Azadi’ among 25 books banned in J-K for ‘glorifying terrorism’
Spine of steel
She has a self-confessed spine of steel, thanks to her mother, the complete antithesis of a typical doting maternal figure.
Roy recalls in her book that her mother insisted that she and her brother Lalith Kumar Christopher address her as “Mrs Roy” like her students at Pallikoodam, the school she founded in Kerala's Kottayam.
"It was almost as though for her (Mary) to shine her light on her students and give them all she had, we — he (the brother) and I (Roy) — had to absorb the darkness," writes Roy.
"She was rough, and that roughness was what put some steel into my spine... So when all those people were around me — protesting and calling me names — I’d just be going like, 'Do you know whose daughter I am?' Like, my needle isn't moving at all," Roy laughed, adding that the life she has lived makes her feel "165 years old" mentally while a part of her remains "highly immature".
Also Read: Prosecution of Arundhati Roy meant to show Modi 3.0 has teeth intact
No national pride
It’s difficult to tell which is the Roy who says with characteristic bluntness that she feels no national pride.
"I feel love but not pride at all. Love from what is familiar, what you know, and all of that. But you've got to tell me, like, why should I be proud when you practice caste, when you think of people as subhuman, when you have no desire to create a more equal society, what is there to feel proud of in those things?"
The book also narrates Roy's relationship with her estranged father — she met him for the first time when she was 25 — her loving brother, her romantic partners, and her ex-husband, renowned naturalist Pradeep Krishen. It also follows her engagement with social issues and subsequent controversies, including her brushes with the law.
(With Agency inputs)