I just finished the fifth book of
this marvelous Harry Potter series, entitled Order of the Phoenix. Now, some people call the Harry Potter books
as a children’s series, and sure, some parts of it, like the ardent belief in a
different world, a different school, where magic and supernatural prevails and
life is a battle between the good and the bad, seems like a childlike
fairytale. How is it not a fairytale, I ask you? There is a good guy, our baby
Harry Potter, whom we follow through his eventful school years, an eleven year
old adolescent to a seventeen year old man, prematurely aged because of the
tragedies that befall him. There are those several numerous friends around him –
whether it is Fred and George Weasley – my personal favorites, or Hermione
Granger and Ron Weasley, his preferred sidekicks.
Let me take this moment to dwell
on – or rather, as my best friend would put it, obsess over – Fred and George
Weasley. From the first book that I read, I’ve been in love with these two
boys. In the first book they are portrayed as cheerful thirteen year old boys,
their debut appearance in the first movie shows them as mocking their mother
for forgetting who was who again – as identical twins, J K Rowling seems to be
the only one who can actually distinguish one from another.
But that’s not why I love them. J
K Rowling, as an omnipresent observer in Potter’s life, has truly never
described any boy to be astonishingly good-looking or handsome, not truly. She has,
yes, described a younger Sirius Black and a younger James Potter, as well as a
now-decaying and old Remus Lupin as handsome, true. But in the case of my
beloved characters, she has not once described them as handsome.
And yet, there is something so
handsome about these two. There is something that really attracted me to their
characters. Their mischief, maybe, the way they caused mayhem – not actual mayhem, as George pointed out. They
knew when to draw the line, explained Fred, and they never crossed it, stepped
over it occasionally, yes, but never got expelled, said George. And what makes
them such wonderful – and much needed – men in the make-believe world of Harry
Potter is that they are, yes, they are, a relief.
That’s how I would describe Fred
and George Weasley. A relief.
Although this book is clearly
fiction – most of us Potterheads would hope, hope against hope that it wasn’t,
that yes, our Hogwarts letters were truly lost in the mail, we are actually
Muggle-born witches and wizards, but let’s be, brutally yes, but honest. If
this wizarding world existed, nobody would have let J K Rowling write about it
so publically and allow the Muggle world to become aware of their existence. She
would have been subject to various curses by now, for I’m certain there would
be some Decree or Law in the Ministry of Magic that wouldn’t allow any Muggle –
or witch, if Joanne would like to
push this point – to write so freely about their secret world.
Anyway, what is visible in this
fictional universe is that somewhere, it rings true to us. How is it that we
believe so much in this world? Why do we believe it so much? Because like the
Dark Lord, there are dark forces here too. Not everybody in this world we
inhabit are good people, though it is my belief that, just like Severus Snape
and Draco Malfoy, there is some good in everybody. Lord Voldemort might be a
bad person – putting it mildly – but not thoroughly so….
Um, he’s a creation of the mind,
so even if he is all dark, it’s not because there are people in this world who
are all dark.
And Fred and George Weasley light
up this world that is darkened by Voldemort with their jokes and their humor,
their pranks and their mischief. And although Fred dies in the end, a tragic,
sad, but beautiful death as he dies with his last laugh still etched upon his
face – the intensity and the uproar of emotions I feel, any reader feels, is
remarkable. It’s remarkable the number of feelings this story has made me feel.
It touches one’s heart in all the right places. You feel the bravery, you feel
the love, the utmost devotion, the humor and the laugh, friendship so strong,
relationships that can actually stand the tests of time.
And oh, how beautiful is this
all. Whether it is the relationship between Harry and his Godfather, or the
emotions that you can see between Lupin, Sirius and Harry – the depth of it is
spellbinding. Imagine how it is. These two are men who watched their best
friend die at the hands of another of their friends. Peter was obviously just a
hanger-on, but keeping him in their midst turned out to be a fatal flaw. Yet,
with Harry they see a regular glimpse of James – James, who was handsome and
majestic and cool, popular and wonderful, just like his two friends, and in the
end, dead for a noble cause.
The love of a father for his son,
the love of a mother for her son, as Lily Potter dies to save him and leaves a
special protection over Harry, which actually enables him to fight off
Voldemort later. What part of this can we not understand, can we not empathize
with? Don’t we see this love in our own lives? Don’t we see this protection,
and know it from our own experience?
What, I believe J K Rowling did,
was add magic to the ordinary happenings of our days. She did it in such a
beautiful manner however, that it took the world by storm. She does not go into
depth of what the characters feel – she doesn’t need to. You just need to
search Harry Potter posts on Tumblr or Pinterest to see how every other
Potterhead – yes, like you and me – have analyzed and re-analyzed and
understood and written and felt what she wanted to convey.
Not just the love between
friends, love that could be brotherhood, as these two men try to save and be
there for the son of their fallen friend, but a love that sprouts between
families. Sirius himself never belonged much to his family of Blacks, he was
not like them. He tells Harry in the fifth book that he would, many times
escape to the Potter’s house, and although there is as of yet no mention of
James’s family, and Harry’s paternal grandparents, it shows a love of an
entirely different level, of family that accepts a friend as one of their own.
Just look at how welcomed Harry
feels in The Burrow, amidst Ron’s family. Mrs. Weasley accepts both Harry and
Hermione, not knowing, of course, that these two would later marry into her
family and truly become her children. She is a woman of such strength and love,
she witness horror and tragedy, loss and fear, yet she stands strong amidst a
crowd of sons way taller than she is, yet looking at her for support and
comfort. The image of a Mama Bear comes to mind, and yet when I watch her tears
when Fred dies, the tragedy drives home.
The death of Fred Weasley was
tragic, not just for me, for other Potterheads who love the Weasley Twins, but
for J K Rowling herself. She has admitted Fred was one of her favorite
characters, and she too cried when he died. Many readers like me have taken his
story forward, the story of the Weasley twins, both so cheerful, dauntless and
rebellious, both so brave and courageous in their foolhardy tricks, and yet, so
poetically tragic.
On their graves placed next to
each other, Fred’s has the word ‘MISCHIEF’ written on it, for he died when he
was just twenty, he died when he was yet in the mischievous days of his youth.
On the grave next to his is the word ‘MANAGED’ written under George’s name, for
he lived till the ripe age of eighty, for he, managed to live his life without his twin, his other half, his
brother. Fred lived in mischief, George
managed. Fred died laughing, George
died crying. There are so many posts I can find about Fred that make me so
emotional, at first I blamed my own hormones wreaking havoc and then reasoned
that, it must have been something else that made me cry over this fictional
death so much.
I grieved Fred Weasley like the
next reader, but I grieved the loss also of a significant yet innocent life in
a war that had nothing to do with him personally. Why does this realization
make it even more difficult for us to part ways with this boy? Because,
although we ourselves might not know a Fred Weasley, but his story is not
uncommon in our Muggle world either. For in every war, there is a boy, a man, a
child, who dies an unwarranted death.
After every war, there is a
family that grieves the untimely death of their son.
There are friends, who suffer the
loss of their mate.
We all know it. Thankfully, many
of us have not experienced this, but we know it.
That’s why this haunts us.
Fred Weasley, as a character
Rowling created, along with his twin George Weasley, are perfect examples of
brothers, troublemakers, and sons. They care for their family, they are the
perfect big brothers to Ron and to Ginny. When Ron makes it on the Gryffindor
team and performs miserably, these brothers make sure he never forgets his
abysmal performance. When Ginny is nearly killed by Lord Voldemort, these
brothers are, like any other elder brother, as worried as could be. There is a
scene in the fifth movie of the Harry Potter saga, where the twins are shown to
be comforting a young kid who is crying because Umbridge’s punishment is giving
him pain. That was one scene I really liked, because it showed that, at the end
of the day, these two are brothers, elder brothers, and they know how to act
like them.
These boys are shown not to
complete their education. They leave without giving their N.E.W.T.S (I propose)
and they leave Hogwarts as champions, legends, as two men who had the guts to
stand up against something they didn’t like, and follow through. Once leaving
school they do not return, they do not regret, they mark their destiny in the
occupation they desire. They show that academic excellence does not equate to
achievement and success, they show that you don’t always have to take things
lying down. They were in Gryffindor for they were brave, their courage and wit
might not have been portrayed in ways similar to that of Harry and Hermione,
but yes.
In a world where being sad is so
easy, it is actually really difficult to be, and remain, happy. Fred and George
showed us how to bring light into the darkness, in more ways than one. They
brought laughter, cheer and happiness, they made us chuckle, giggle, and smile,
not just in the book, but even in the movies, as portrayed by the handsome
James and Oliver Phelps. Many, like me have harbored crushes on them from book
one, and many, like me, will not forget them even after Fred takes his last
breath, even after the end of the last page of Deathly Hallows.
Rowling said that whenever we
want it, Hogwarts will be waiting for us. Hogwarts has become home to so many
of us, home of our imagination, home of people we have loved and followed and
looked after in our own ways. We thank Rowling for the beautiful journey she
enabled us to experience, but most importantly, we thank Rowling for the
characters she gifted us, none of whom we’ll ever forget or ever love less.
As for me, I’ll always imagine
Fred and George Weasley living till a ripe old again, even today, sitting
somewhere together with their children and their grandchildren, tricking them,
playing with them, yet the heroes of every child’s childhood.
2 comments:
Extremely well written
Thanks!
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