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Niamh Ryan
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Part of our series on Anita and Me, this comprehensive study note summarises chapter by chapter each of the 13 chapters in the book. It provides a summary of the main events, analysis and key quotes. This is the ideal study resource to start learning to story of Anita and Me.

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Niamh Ryan
Created by Niamh Ryan about 8 years ago
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4/13
Chapter 4

Plot summary

Meena’s parents are clearly worried by her stealing.  However, they show concern rather than anger – they are worried that she steals because she feels deprived.

Meena recounts her father’s musical evenings in which the Aunties and Uncles gather together to sing traditional songs.

During one of these evenings, she overhears heart-breaking stories of the partition of India into the separate states of India and Pakistan.

These memories come back to her when her father mentions the partition, after she asks if he was ever in a war.  He tells Meena a story of unknowingly planting a bomb outside a wealthy Muslim merchant’s house in Lahore.

That night Meena wakes up to see Mrs Christmas being taken away in an ambulance.  The neighbours whisper that she has been dead for weeks, but Mr Christmas had not realised. Mr Christmas dies a few weeks later, after a short stay in the hospital

Papa is clearly disturbed by their deaths, as it makes him think of the death of his own parents.  Meena reflects on how good her mother is at comforting her father when he broods in this way.

Meena is not happy to hear that her mother is expecting a baby.

 

Quotes and analysis

“I celebrated my seventeenth birthday in a refugee camp with only what I stood up in”

            Papa’s reflections on his childhood provide a harsh contrast with the childhood that the reader witnesses first hand in the book, that of Meena.             While she may have her hardships, she lives in luxury compared to the conditions her father would have experienced in a refugee camp.

“Maybe me and Anita Rutter were murderers”

            We see that Meena’s conscience is developing.  However, her overactive imagination is also flourishing.  What we see here is a combination of              these two forces, causing Meena to feel guilt for many things, even those for which she clearly cannot be to blame.

“Once I heard about Dada’s film ban, I became obsessed with what I had missed out on, being the daughter of a famous film hero”

            Meena seems to have an obsession with fame, glamour and wealth.  It provides relief from the banality of her quotidian.