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Rajani Thindiath: Portfolio: Stories | Scripts | Series | Books

Gyblinns vs. Faeries :  Original Fantasy Story & Script: Was nominated in the Best Children's Writer category at the Comic Con Awards, 2014 ALIENS : Original Futuristic Sci-Fi Series Dreams: My World in My Hands : Original Fantasy story and script:  Was nominated in the Best Writer category at the Comic Con Awards, 2015 YogYodhas : Original Fantasy series based on Yoga and the ancient martial art of Kalaripayattu SuperWeirdos : Original Fantasy series about super heroes with odd powers Defective Detectives: Intruders : A humorous series based on two paranoid, bumbling detectives Defective Detectives: De-camped Graphic Novel: SuperWeirdos: Whoosh! Comic Book: YogYodhas 1: Warriors of the Spirit Comic Book: SuperWeirdos 1: The World's Gone Weird Comic Book: SuperWeirdos 2: Whizz! Whack! Whoop! Manikantan Has Enough :  Comic adaptation of a story for ICSE Coursebook 4 for Indiannica Learning Shakti—Tales of the Mother Goddess: Scripted two stories— Kanyakumari and Shasti...

How YogYodhas was born

Note: After I finished writing this blog, I realized I was adding thought after thought about what went into the making of this comics series. Small wonder then that I’ve often been accused of over-thinking… though I think it’s not so bad when it comes to conceptualizing. :P

Anyway, it was 2017 when I was talking to Anurag Aggarwal, the then CEO of Amar Chitra Katha, and he thought it would be a good idea to introduce kids to yoga through a series in Tinkle (the children's comics magazine I was editor of for a decade). And yes, I've heard all the jokes about the meaning of the name in American slang but for me it has always been the sound of tinkling bells. :) So, I asked for time to think about it. It had been my practice to introduce a new character series in Tinkle only after a lot of deliberation and after taking into account the thoughts, ideas, dreams and demands in the letters from readers.

Also, I was not too sure how keen kids would be about yoga. Perhaps, I remembered the half-hearted PT lessons from school which I didn’t take too seriously. :P The only time I felt excited was when the teacher introduced ‘lezim’ training, a dance form from Maharashtra using a musical instrument with cymbals on it. Though it does beg the question—why were we learning dance during physical training? Perhaps one can argue that dance is a form of physical training! :P

Anyway, I mentioned this yoga series to my team and asked them to come up with ideas. In the meanwhile, I had been thinking about it too. I usually don't like preaching to kids based on the simple principle that when I was a kid I didn’t like being preached at. :P But how does one interest kids in something so serious?

Then I did what I like to do as part of spinning my stories—I got down to research. I read about yoga which led to many, many wonderful things (as research often goes!) till I reached martial arts related to yoga, primarily kalaripayattu from Kerala. I could feel tiny light bulbs sparking through my brain. What if I combined yoga with kalaripayattu and added in a dose of fantasy, my favourite genre?

But that was not enough for me. Now, I wanted to put in my two bits to get kids thinking about issues that I feel strongly about. In this case, I wanted to look at diversity from the lens of birthmarks which are often considered unpleasant to look at. From there I dreamt up these siblings who are bullied by their classmates because of these birthmarks (in their case seven of them!). To be fair, they are also bullied because they are favoured by some of their teachers (Ustads) at the school-sanctuary (VidyAshray). :P

Thus were born Bir and Bala. I got their names from Birbal, the wise minister in Emperor Akbar’s court though my duo are completely lacking in that fine quality! I also wanted something pan Indian, so Bir is a name from the north while Bala is a common enough name for girls in the south. Now, I didn’t want Bala conforming to gender norms. So, as is the case with the female lead in the first book I wrote and am pitching, Bala is ill-tempered, stubborn, impulsive, with no respect for boundaries plus, she is quarrelsome to boot. Actually, pugnacious is a nice adjective for her. :D The way she irritates her brother and the way they end up quarrelling may just have been influenced by the fearsome fights between my sister, Sappu, and me when we were kids (more on this in another blog! :D)

I also thought the south was under-represented in mainstream stories, so since I had kalaripayattu anyway, I thought I’d set the story in Kerala. Now, as mentioned in my Wayanad blogs, I had been quite taken by the bamboo island of Kuruvadweep. So, that was where I set the story.

After that, there was a storm of ideas that had me writing furiously till I ended up with a story arc that was enough to span two years (Tinkle year where comics stories appear every month or so), with a surprise in the climax to mark the end of each year. Beginning from when Bir and Bala meet a stranger and discover hidden powers connected to their birthmarks to all the twists and turns they encounter till their story reaches its conclusion, I put it all down. After that? I pitched the idea and story to my team, took feedback and that was how YogYodhas was born. J 

Image Courtesy: ©Amar Chitra Katha Pvt. Ltd. Art: Vineet Nair


Comments

  1. Enjoyed reading the process that went into the making of this series, Rajani Didi. And, am enjoying your blogs too. Keep it up.
    P. S. I hope we get to read your book soon.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you! That means a lot and is super encouraging. :)

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