Thursday, October 4, 2012
When Mr. Pirzada Came to Dine Quotation
In the Autumn of 1971 a man used to come to our house, bearing
confections in his pocket and hopes of ascertaining the life or death of his family. His name was Mr. Pirzada, and he came from Dacca, now the capital
of Bangladesh, but then a part of Pakistan. That year Pakistan was engaged
in civil war. The eastern frontier, where Dacca was located, was fighting for
autonomy from the ruling regime in the west. In March, Dacca had been
invaded, torched and shelled by the Pakistani army. Teachers were dragged
onto streets and shot, women dragged into barracks and raped. By the end of
the summer, three hundred thousand people were said to have died. In Dacca
Mr. Pirzada had a three-story home, a lectureship in botany at the university,
a wife of twenty year, and seven daughters between the ages of six and
sixteen whose names all began with the letter A.
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This quotation clearly sets the setting of the story. It immediately sets an underlying theme, which could be stated as "wars tear families apart". It is stated that Mr. Pirzada is no longer in his home country, but is instead, away from his "three-story home" and his family. This shows that him and his family are apart.
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