On Saturday nights, when shabbat is over, a collection of Jewish boys and girls congregate with black and Asian boys and girls outside McDonald’s. They sell each other drugs. Sometimes, to pass the time, they get on the tube to
Golders Green and stand outside Golders Green station. Then they come back to Edgware station.
Edgware is a multicultural haven.
If you carry on past McDonald’s, you also pass a newsagent, which is sponsored by the Jewish Chronicle. There is a board outside the newsagent, also sponsored by the Jewish Chronicle. The board is part of the deal. It is where they advertise their headline stories. When Nana returned home, to look after Papa, the Jewish Chronicle’s main story was this.
‘Win a Pesach holiday for Four in Majorca!’
I am afraid that this, combined with the ten-foot high menorah, made Nana feel sad. It made her nostalgic. Well, perhaps not nostalgic exactly. She was not Jewish at all. Israel was not her personal homeland. She was just thinking sad upset and tragic thoughts about one adorable Jew in particular.
You have to remember. She loved Papa. But she loved Moshe too.
Past this newsagent, on your right, is where the Belle Vue cinema used to be. If you carry on walking, however, you soon come to the architectural extravaganza of the Railway Hotel. The Railway Hotel was built in 1931 by A. E. Sewell in an unrestrained mock-Tudor style, complete with its own fake gallows. And that is the end of Edgware High Street.
Edgware is suburban. It is dismal, quiet, lovable and kitsch.
But no, actually there was another person in this story who was happy. In a way, at this point, she was even more happy than Nana.
Anjali was sitting in Moshe’s flat, sleepily dozing. She was sitting in Moshe’s flat and thinking about Nana. She was also thinking about Moshe.
Anjali was thinking about love.
I want you to remember Anjali. You must not read this carelessly.
Anjali was remembering her Bollywood films. The loveliest Bollywood film she had seen was Devdas. This film was very moving. In its closing scenes, as Shah Rukh Khan dies outside the gates of Aishwarya Rai’s house, it shows how wonderful and powerful love is. It shows, thought Anjali, that love is stronger than anything.
And I think that Anjali was right. I like her, I really do. But I especially like her, I think, because although she was drifting off, thinking about the wonder and power of love, she was still practical.
Because Anjali was practical, she was nonplussed. She could not quite understand what she was feeling. It was not love. She knew that. It was just that she was happy. She was suddenly and surprisingly happy.
III
11. The finale
1
As papa sat on his duvet, with its innovative design of small white lions and falcons and fruit trees on a magenta background, he chatted to Nana about her sweet boyfriend Moshe.
Papa liked Moshe. He liked Moshe very much.
Anjali is not the ending. Surely you must have known that. I was not going to end with Anjali on her own, being happy. No. I started with a bedroom scene and I’ll end with a bedroom scene.
‘Anyway. How is Moshe?’ said Papa. ‘When are you going back?’
Before we go any further, I am going to describe Papa’s get-up. His get-up was unusual. It was one red Tote sock, one navy Tote sock, a pair of black suit trousers — whose zip was done up but whose button was not — and a white T-shirt printed with a picture of a curlybearded satyr that Papa had bought in Rhodes in 1987.
So, now I can start again. I just wanted you to get his day wear right.
‘Anyway. How is Moshe?’ said Papa. ‘When are you going back?’
You see, Papa did not know that Nana had left Moshe, for ever. Nana had not told him. This was because she did not want to embroil him in her love life. She wanted Papa to feel entirely loved by Nana. And this meant that she could not tell him that Moshe and Nana were no longer together. It would complicate her gesture of pure love. It would make it seem less sincere.
Because Nana was making a gesture of pure love. It was true.
2
I think you should not judge Nana’s secrecy here, about her split with Moshe, as entirely crazy. It is very difficult, being moral. It is, I reckon, almost impossible. You have to rely on all kinds of generalisations and theories.
One generalisation is this. People often think that a noble gesture is inherently better than a pragmatic gesture. Even if it is ineffectual and potentially harmful to oneself, a noble act is still noble, it is still moral.
In the vocabulary of this novel, then, staying with Papa is better than staying with Moshe. It may be self-destructive, and potentially harmful to Nana’s eventual happiness, but it is more virtuous.
Nana would find a supporter for her theory in the Czech dissident and ex-president, Vaclav Havel. On 9 August 1969, when he was a dissident, Vaclav wrote a letter to the former Czech president, Alexander Dubcek. This was a year after the Russian invasion of Czechoslovakia. The Russians had invaded because of Dubcek’s softer, nicer version of communism. They had made Dubcek resign as president, but had allowed him to stay in parliament. However, they did not leave him alone. They wanted him to publicly repudiate his nicer version of communism.
Vaclav did not want Dubcek to do this. Vaclav wanted him to affirm his belief in his nicer version of communism, even if this was dangerous for Dubccek and would have no effect whatsoever. That was why he wrote his letter to Dubccek, imploring him to be noble.
Because, wrote Vaclav, ‘even a purely moral act that has no hope of any immediate and visible political effect can gradually and indirectly, over time, gain in political significance’.
Vaclav means that we should not laugh at useless and self-harmful moral gestures. They are not necessarily just for show. They are not necessarily gestures. Some good might eventually come of them.
Unfortunately, Vaclav’s theory never got a chance to be tested. In September 1969, the Russians removed Dubcek from parliament as well, a month after Vaclav’s letter. Vaclav never got a reply.
3
Nana did not immediately answer Papa’s question. She did not immediately tell him when she would go back to Moshe. Instead, sitting with Papa on Papa’s bed, she opened the post. The post, this morning, was one card. It was a card of condolence from their family friend and dentist, Mr Gottlieb.
Dear Nina,
What a great loss your father is.
With best wishes from Luke Gottlieb.
She giggled. She read it out. They both giggled.
‘What a bastard!’ said Papa. ‘That’s what he sends when I’m dead? One sentence? Give it me.’ Papa read it. He read it again. ‘What a bastard!’ said Papa. Nana put the card on the window sill. It did not balance. She flexed the card out. It balanced. Papa said, ‘And what were you doing, telling him I was dead? Why was he sending the card at all, that’s what I want to know.’ ‘I can’t remember,’ said Nana. ‘I dint say a thing. I said, no I dint say a thing.’
Of course, this was not true. She had wept and told Mr Gottlieb that she was terrified of Papa dying. Mr Gottlieb must have misheard. But Nana could not tell Papa that she was scared he might die. No. Nana was too careful for that. She was too kind.