The Tale of Aypi

by Ak Welsapar

Rating: 4 (1 vote)

Tags: Male author

The Tale of Aypi

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The Tale of Aypi follows the fate of a group of Turkmen fishermen dwelling on the coast of the Caspian Sea. The fear of losing their ancestral home looms over the entire village. This injustice is being made to look like a voluntary initiative on the part of the fishermen themselves, whilst the ruling powers cynically attempt to confiscate their land. One brave fisherman from the village rises up to confront them and fights for his native shore, as a response to an act of cruelty inflicted on a defenceless young woman centuries ago. This unjustly executed soul returns as a ghost during this troubled time to exact a terrible revenge on the men of the village. The relationships among the characters mirror the eternal opposition between the forces of nature, with the intervention of mystical forces ratcheting up the tension. *** Ak Welsapar Ak Welsapar was born in 1956 in the former Soviet Republic of Turkmenistan. He received his Master's degree in Journalism from Lomonosov Moscow State University in 1979. In 1987, Ak Welsapar became a member of the Soviet Writers' Association and received his second Master's degree in Literary Theory from the Maxim Gorky Literature Institute in 1989. In 1993, after spending a year under house arrest, he was excluded from the Writers' Association following the publication of some investigative articles about colossal ecological problems in Central Asia, mostly caused by the overuse of pesticides needed for cotton production. The consequences of this were terrible and even resulted in the Aral Sea drying up. The regime in Turkmenistan declared Ak Welsapar a "public enemy," and the persecution that he faced began again, with redoubled force. There was a ban on publishing works written by him, whilst his published books were confiscated from bookstores and libraries, to be burnt. To avoid unjust imprisonment and the persecution of his family, Ak Welsapar eventually left Turkmenistan in 1993. He and his family have now been residents of Sweden since 1994, where he is a member of the Swedish Writers' Association. He has also been an honorary member of the International PEN-Club since 1993. Ak Welsapar writes in Russian, Turkmen and Swedish. Ak Welsapar has contributed articles to such journals and newspapers as Literaturnaya Gazeta, Druzhba Narodov, Soviet Culture, The Washington Post, and many others. He is the author of more than 20 books but he made his debut as the author of the poetry anthologies Which of Us will Dive Deepest? (1982) and The First Drop (1983). His novel The Melon Head (1984) was awarded a prize in a Turkmen national literature competition. In 2012, The Union of Writers of Russia awarded Ak Welsapar the Sergei Yesenin literary prize. He also received the Nikolai Gogol prize for his book of short stories from the Writers' Union of Ukraine in 2014. Most of his novels are banned in Turkmenistan, including, to name but a few: A Long Journey to Nearby (1988), This Darkness Is Brighter (1989), The Bent Sword Hanging on the Old Carpet (1990), Mulli Tahir (1992), The Cobra (2003), The Tale of Aypi (2012). Ak Welsapar is still a proscribed writer in Turkmenistan and his name has been in the list of black-listed writers since 1990.

Reviews:

Read Around The World Challenge user profile avatar for Pedro
(7 months ago)
04 Apr, 2024
Un pueblo pesquero a orillas del Mar Caspio ve amenazada su supervivencia por un proyecto del gobierno de construir en el sitio un centro de recuperación de la salud, aprovechando los efectos benéficos del agua y el aire. Sólo un hombre, Arak, los desafía y les hace frente, invocando la defensa de la historia y la tradición ancestral: abuelo pescador, padre pescador: el hijo deshonraría su memoria si no lo fuera. Mientras tanto, el resto de la población, aunque respetuosos y con cierta admiración sobre la conducta de Arak, sienten que es una lucha desigual y destinada a la derrota; y discuten la realidad a través de una gran cantidad de los diálogos que en gran medida giran sobre la actitud ante las innovaciones, la modernidad, la urbanización. ¿Qué se gana? ¿Qué se pierde? Ambos temas, la lucha desigual frente al poder, así como tradición versus modernización son frecuentemente abordados por la literatura y las ciencias sociales; aún así, la historia es muy buena y vale la pena, en particular por la riqueza de los personajes, y de sus muy buenos diálogos (aunque puede haber cierto abuso del recurso: pareciera que Weksapar sabe que es su fuerte). Y por si esto no fuera suficiente, toda la historia está teñida del misterio procedente de la leyenda de Aypi, una mujer que fuera cruelmente sacrificada en un momento impreciso de la historia del pueblo. Admirada, ignorada o temida, parece ir haciendo su aparición a través de la ocurrencia de hechos irracionales, inexplicables y sobre todo arbitrarios: una arbitrariedad que barre y da por tierra con toda la antagónica racionalidad con que se venía desarrollando la historia. Una historia muy bien narrada y atrapante, que me dejó pensando en la frecuente arbitrariedad y el azar de la Historia, que no es justa ni injusta; simplemente es. Un muy buen libro.

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Country: Turkmenistan flag Turkmenistan
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