Home / Mumbai-guide / Things To Do / Article /
From India's insides
Updated On: 18 February, 2020 09:15 AM IST | Mumbai | Shunashir Sen
A storytelling event over the weekend will focus on narrating tales in regional Indian languages

Lopamudra Mohanty narrating a story in Odia
There is an iconic Bengali book called Thakumar Jhuli in which a grandmother (thakuma) picks out stories from a bag (jhuli) and narrates them to the reader. These tales are often so fantastical that you are transported to a different world that's populated by speaking animals and demons, among other mythical creatures. They have been an essential component of a Bengali's childhood for generations now, with similar pieces of literature spread out across India. And Lopamudra Mohanty, founder of Big Buddy World — a platform that aims to inculcate the habit of reading in children — now wants to spread this wealth of stories through the second edition of an event called Indian Language Storytelling Mandala.
The weekend session will involve people from different parts of the country narrating stories in their mother tongue. All one has to do is send an email to the address listed below with details of the story they have chosen. Each selected storyteller gets seven minutes and only when they complete narrating it in its original language, do they tell the audience in English or Hindi what the story was actually about. "A lot is lost in translation when you tell an Indian story in English, and the idea here is to initially get at least a gist of what the narrative is about," Mohanty tells us.
How do you like the new new mid-day.com experience? Share your feedback and help us improve.

