Monday, June 22, 2026

Shantaram: A Personal Revisit

 Shantaram: A Personal Revisit

While rearranging the books in my bookcases at Jalgaon, my hands lingered on Shantaram—Gregory David Roberts’ sprawling 936‑page autobiographical novel. Instantly, a tide of memory rose within me: the moment I first bought the book in 2004, the long nights spent reading it, and the echoes of my student days in Mumbai during the eighties.

Roberts’ life itself is a narrative of extremes. Once an armed robber who escaped from prison in Australia, he drifted into Mumbai and lived for years in the slums of Colaba under the adopted name Shantaram. There he opened a free health clinic, worked with the underworld and politicians, fell in love, acted in Bollywood, and even fought alongside mujahideen in Afghanistan. His journey carried him to Germany, where he was captured and extradited to Australia. After serving his sentence, he rebuilt his life, founded a small media company, and devoted himself entirely to writing.

The book is a testament to endurance. It took him thirteen years to complete, and the first six years of work—six hundred pages—were destroyed in prison. Yet he persisted, producing a novel written, as he himself said, in blood and tears.

What draws me most is his language: lucid yet layered, with sentences so long they seem to resist comprehension, but once embraced, they touch the heart with startling clarity. Consider his reflection: “Fate needs accomplices, and the stones in destiny’s wall are mortared with small and heedless complicities such as those. I look back, now, and I know that the naming moment (Shantaram), which seemed so insignificant then, which seemed to demand no more than an arbitrary and superstitious ‘yes’ or ‘no’, was pivotal in my life.”

His philosophical commentary transforms incidents into insights. Early in the book, he describes himself with stark honesty: “I was a revolutionary who lost his ideals in heroin, a philosopher who lost his integrity in crime, and a poet who lost his soul in a maximum‑security prison.”

Reading Shantaram resonates deeply with me because Roberts was in Mumbai during the same years I lived there. I too glimpsed some of the scenes he describes:

The calm streets at night, Nariman Point’s necklace illuminating the horizon, the waves and cool, salty breeze of the Arabian Sea at Girgaon Chowpatty. The Mahalaxmi Temple, radiant in its silver glow, spreading its spiritual aura. Haji Ali, standing boldly amidst the waters, its white dome glowing softly against the night sky. Mahim Church, with its graceful silhouette, inviting quiet reflection. Bandra’s seaside road, with the iconic Sea Rock Hotel rising tall against the shimmering waters. And Juhu beach, woven into the fabric of daily life, brimming with vitality: coconut trees leaning toward the waves, hotels like Sun‑n‑Sand and Horizon framing the shore, crowds of people engaged in countless activities. It was a world alive with movement and memory, and all of it found its way into my books.

Pat Conroy says:

“Gregory David Roberts does for Bombay what Lawrence Durrell did for Alexandria, what Melville did for the south seas, what Thoreau did for Walden Pond: he makes it an eternal player in the literature of the world.”

Thus, returning to Shantaram is not simply reading—it is reliving. The novel soothes me, carrying me back into a world I once inhabited physically, and still inhabit mentally whenever memories rise from the depths of the heart.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @  Jalgaon on June 22, 2026
Author of Value‑Based Leadership


 #ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats #EngineeringDreamsInspiringSouls #Shantaram #
अभियांत्रिकीस्पंदने

 

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Shantaram: A Personal Revisit

  S hantaram : A Personal Revisit While rearranging the books in my bookcases at Jalgaon, my hands lingered on Shantaram —Gregory David Ro...