Tughlaq By Girish Karnad Text -
Essential reading for anyone who loves political tragedy, dark irony, and characters who break your heart while making you question your own moral compass.
Written just two decades after Indian independence, Tughlaq was also a searing commentary on Nehruvian idealism’s failure to translate into just governance. The play asks: What happens when the visionary becomes the tyrant? When the map in your head is more real than the starving man at your gate?
Set in 14th-century Delhi, the play centers on Muhammad bin Tughlaq, one of medieval India’s most controversial sultans—a man historically known for shifting his capital from Delhi to Daulatabad, introducing token currency, and watching both plans collapse spectacularly. But Karnad doesn’t just dramatize these events. He transforms Tughlaq into a tragic, almost Shakespearean figure: brilliant, paranoid, ruthless, and achingly lonely. tughlaq by girish karnad text
If you think modern political disillusionment is a recent invention, Girish Karnad’s Tughlaq (1964) will shatter that illusion like a poorly thrown stone from a siege engine. Written when Karnad was just 26, this play isn’t just history—it’s a scalpel slicing into the flesh of power, idealism, and self-destruction.
Karnad weaves a world where every character mirrors some aspect of Tughlaq’s fractured psyche. The wily, loyal stepbrother; the cynical poet-scholar; the naïve commoner Aziz, who exploits the Sultan’s own laws to loot the poor—Aziz is Tughlaq’s dark twin, proof that idealism without institutional integrity becomes a license for predation. Essential reading for anyone who loves political tragedy,
What makes Tughlaq electrifying is its central paradox. The Sultan is an intellectual—well-read, rational, obsessed with justice and secular ideals. He dreams of a unified India where Hindus and Muslims coexist, where merit trumps birth, where law applies equally to all. And yet, to achieve these noble ends, he lies, murders, exiles, and betrays. He invites his aging, upright father (the previous king) to court under pretense of reconciliation, then watches as he is trampled by a royal horse—a metaphor so brutal it needs no gloss.
Tughlaq is not a historical play. It’s a mirror. And if you look closely, you might see a little of the Sultan in every idealist who ever held power—and in every one of us who ever confused a beautiful idea for a just act. When the map in your head is more
By the final act, Tughlaq is alone on a darkened stage, the capital empty, his token currency worthless, his people scattered. He cries out, “I tried to give them what they did not want—order, justice, reason.” And yet, we don’t laugh. We shudder. Because in his madness, he remains terrifyingly lucid.