Rudyard
Kipling amazed me once again with his fables. After Just So Stories last
April, now he amused me with the even better one: The Jungle Book. The main story of it is of Mowgli, a little boy
who is adopted by a pair of wolves after his parents died. When Mowgli first
appears before the wolves’ cave, Shere Khan—the Bengal tiger—is haunting him to
make him his dinner. Father Wolf saves him, and brings him to the wolf pack
conference. He is at first rejected by the forum, until Bagheera—the black
panther—guarantees him. Bagheera then becomes Mowgli’s best friend, along with
Baloo—the bear—who teaches him the law of the jungle.
Shere Khan
is angry of losing Mowgli; he wants to kill him but could not do that as long
as Akela becomes the leader. Right after Akela is dethroned by his people, they
repel Mowgli who is not a wolf like them—thanks to Shere Khan’s provocation
too—and Mowgly doesn’t have any choices than leaving the jungle to live with
his own kind. So now Mowgli must live by his own while Shere Khan keeps
haunting him. At the end, Mowgli must have a fight with Shere Khan; what will
he do? And will he survive it?
Thanks to
the Disney version of Mowgli, I used to imagine The Jungle Book as childish as what we see on TV. But I was surprised
and amazed at the same time, finding that the original story is much deeper
than that. What Kipling portrayed in The Jungle Book is what we find in our own
world. How difficult it is for us to accept others who are different from us,
who have not the same origin or culture. We used to be suspicious of them, that
we could not see a villain with wicked plan among us, because he is ‘one of
us’; just like the wolves who blindly trust Shere Khan more than Mowgli.
The fight of
Mowgli and Shere Khan is both thrilling and emotional. It is in difficult times
that love and friendship would be purified. I was touched by Bagheera’s and
Baloo’s love to their little friend, and their respect to old Akela. Kipling
also highlighted how men praise freedom, but at the same time they could not
live without a leader. The law of the jungle is something we should adopt in
our society too; look how the entire animals work together to help Mowgli,
although he is not their own kind. Humanity surmounts differences. The goods
fight together against the bad, each contributes his talent.
Apart from
Mowgli’s adventure, this book also contains three great fables. There is
Kotick—the white seal—who persistently searches a new saver home for his people
after he saw his friends being slaughtered by men. It portrays our society too;
we often refuse to see the injustice among us, just because it ‘has been like
that for a long time’. Most of us accept that as faith, and we surrender our
dignity and life in the hand of more powerful authorities. When there is
finally someone brave enough like Kotick, who is willingly to take risks for
our salvation; instead of helping him, we laugh at him as a foolish dreamer.
That makes us an easy victim of colonialism and oppression.
The second
one is about a young mongoose called Rikki-Tikki-Tavi, who is carried away by
flood—separated from his parents—to a bungalow, where he is finally adopted by
a human family as a pet. From his new friends in the garden—a tailorbird and a
mouse—he gets acquainted with a pair of huge cobra: Nag and Nagaina (they
reminded me of Voldemort’s Nagini! :D). The cobras plan to kill the humans for
taking the garden which they have been previously dominated. Rikki-Tikki is
angry when he overhears their brutal plan, so he builds a strategy to fight
both cobras. The attack scenes are quite horrible; I was shivered imagining how
the family must have been terribly terrified while a huge cobra suddenly showed
up while they were dining. You would not know whether you should run away or
keep still; well…normally you wouldn’t escape that brutal attack, if you don’t
have a protector. Rikki-Tikki is an example of real hero; even though he is a
stranger, he fights bravely to save the family and the inhabitants of the
garden, simply because it is wrong to kill the innocent who is weaker; and so
it is his duty to protect them.
The third
story is my most favorite: the story of Little Toomai, the son of an elephant
hunter. His father drives Kala Nag—an old elephant, the cleverer and most senior
among the others. One day the boss, Peterson Sahib, is amazed by Little Toomai,
and professes that one day he might become a good elephant hunter. When Little
Toomai asks his permission to enter the stockade (which is normally too
dangerous for a little boy), he promises that he can do that only after
witnessing an ‘elephant dance’, which in their culture means ‘never’. It is
believed that numbers of elephants sometimes dance in a clearing. Nobody has
ever seen it, but some flattened grounds are the proof.
One night
Kala Nag seems to ‘hear the call’ from the native elephants. He slips out of
his pickets, and picks Little Toomai on his back as the boy is excited to go
with him. Kala Nag walks towards a clearing up in a hill where many other
elephants are gathering too, while Little Toomai is watching silently from the
elephant’s back. There he witnesses the elephants stamping their feet up and
down, making the ground tremble; that is the elephant dance, a dance no other
human being have ever seen.
I like the
story mostly because of the mystical air surrounds the elephant dance. Kipling
writes wonderfully Kala Nag’s journey in the dark and foggy night when the
jungle seems to be alive, and especially when the elephants start moving, ‘talking’,
and finally dancing for two hours, making the ground a dance floor. The
sensation is really amazing!
And finally
I closed the last page of The Jungle Book totally entertained and amused. Bravo
to you, Mr. Kipling, for making my end of year reading so enjoyable, intense,
and interesting. Without any doubt, I grant five whole stars for The
Jungle Book. Really, I have never thought that I would love a children book
(which I have never read as a child) this much!
~~~~~~~~~
*I read the translation edition from Atria (part of Serambi
Publishing group)*
*This book is counted
as:*
64th book for The Classics Club Project
Can you believe that I've never read this? I have an India challenge in November, so I will put this on my list. Thanks for the great review, Fanda!
ReplyDeleteHaha...I believe you, as I myself have never read this until this week.
DeleteGood luck with the challenge, I'm sure you'll like it :)
I've always been slightly wary of this one, but you've really changed my mind - I'm actually going to go start it now! :)
ReplyDeleteI've also been reluctant to touch this because others seem don't like it (and prefer Just So Stories). Fortunately I was willing to try. It's paid off in the end. Hope you find it good too.
DeleteWonderful review! I'm planning to read the Jungle Book this year and after reading your review, I want to read it sooner than later.
ReplyDeleteGood! Hope you like it too ;)
Delete