In Defence of Our Present - On Giving Up The National Film Awards
In Defence of Our Present - On Giving Up The National Film Awards
In Defence of Our Present - On Giving Up The National Film Awards
Issued by
Solidarity with FTII Students
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Art
Nalini Malani
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preface
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To
The President and the Prime Minister of India
New Delhi.
Dear Sir,
It is with a deep sense of dismay that we write to you. Many of
the undersigned had written a letter to you barely a month ago in
support of the demands of the students of FTII. We had urged you
to intervene and ensure that FTII continues to be a stellar educational institution with a commitment to freedom of expression.
The student strike has entered the 4th month. The issue remains unresolved and our sense of apprehension about the fate
of the institute has only grown. We have seen the students conduct their protest in a democratic manner with utmost dignity.
We have also seen an attack on their credibility mounted in the
most disgraceful manner in the press by the very people who
were meant to be their guardians on campus- the director and the
registrar. The ministry has seemingly offered a patient hearing to
the students no less than 5 times over 4 months yet have made
no attempt to put into place a transparent process to make key
appointments to the people who are meant to give vision to the
institute. They have expressed an inability to reverse the process
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that provoked this strike. We see this as a blatant disregard for the
voice of these students.
It has also become imperative that we see the governments
stone walling of the students protest in a context. The Information and Broadcasting Ministry has appointed people with a narrow vision in the institutions under them. FTII, Childrens Film
Society and CBFC are examples that the film fraternity has objected to.
Meanwhile, we have watched the murders of rationalists
and writers like Dr. Narendra Dabholkar, Govind Pansare and
M.M.Kalburgi with dismay. These are clearly not random acts of
violence. People are being murdered for their beliefs and opinions. There seems to be no attempt to unravel the larger picture
and bring to book extremist groups that believe in ruthless violence to eliminate those who hold a counter view from theirs.
There has been no official condemnation of these groups and we
question this silence.
The lynching and murder of an ironsmith, Mohammed
Akhlaq, in a village at the edge of our national capital has shattered our faith in the spirit of tolerance that is the core of our robust democracy. The mob that stood at this poor muslim mans
house had been empowered by the belief that this was an acceptable way to express rage. The current climate has validated this
sentiment. Those who stand outside the circle drawn by the ruling elite are vulnerable in the most appalling manner. It has now
come to light that members of the party that rule at the Centre led
the mob. It is imperative that we take note of the impunity with
which the mob was instigated. No condemnation is complete
without naming the politically powerful who scripted this attack.
We are filmmakers who have been awarded by your most
esteemed office. We hold that to be a high honour. Our cinema
represents a rich diversity of political opinions and aesthetic ex-
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Anand Patwardhan
Paresh Kamdar
Nishtha Jain
Kirti Nakhwa
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Hari Nair
Rakesh Sharma
Indraneel Lahiri
Prateek Vats
Vikrant Pawar
28 October 2015
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To
The President and Prime Minister of India
Dear Sirs,
Last week the students of FTII withdrew their strike after a protracted struggle of 4 months. In those 4 months the students put
forward their core demands of putting into place a transparent
and tenable process with which key appointments are to be made
at the institute. They asked for the contested society to be dissolved. We were amongst the 190 signatories who wrote to you,
asking for the students reasonable demands to be paid heed.
The students have taken the high moral ground by retreating from the appallingly non-committal meetings with the I&B
ministry and by going back to class. They have not come onto
the streets, despite the huge support they garnered from student
groups and civil society, and have restrained from expressing
their deep frustration through anarchic action.
In response to the students call to the filmmaking fraternity,
12 of our colleagues lent strength to their protest, by announcing
their intention last week, to return their national awards. Their
gesture was a plea to the government, to take notice of the stu-
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dents demands and resolve the issue. It was also a protest against
the growing intolerance in the country.
We watched with disappointment how the ruling partys
leaders and supporters abused these filmmakers and belittled
their gesture. This has been the consistent response by of the powers that be, towards the writers, academics, scientists, filmmakers, historians and artists who have expressed their dismay over
the increasing climate of intolerance. Rather than see our fellow
filmmakers mocked, we have decided to stand with them and yet
again bring public attention back to the manner in which the current government is responding to dissent and debate.
A few days ago, a film made by 4 young students of the Tata
Institute of Social Sciences was stopped from being screened in
Delhi, by bureaucrats of the I&B ministry. The film was on the
caste politics in Maharashtra and around the issue of beef. The
film was to be screened at a film festival focussing on livelihood
issues. The representatives of the ministry allegedly told the festival organisers that beef was a sensitive issue, so a film discussing
it could offend people. Connect this diktat from the I&B ministry,
to the setting up of a Governing Council at the premier film institute of India, with people who have little to do with cinema, art
and culture. The students apprehension about the new appointees is not misplaced at all. If a film that discusses the beef issue is
blocked with ease, then we can imagine what culture of censorship will be put into place when students are learning and experimenting with the language of cinema at the FTII campus. If the
learning process at FTII is in danger of being marred so brazenly,
we have to speak up as members of the film fraternity.
In the last few days we have seen the police charge against
the students who have been peacefully protesting against the new
policies at the UGC. These new policies will thwart the ambitions
of students from pursuing research in the arts and the sciences.
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The intellectual integrity of so many academic institutions is being eroded. The threat to the academic culture at FTII and elsewhere, is what has brought us together here. Equally, it is the horror at of people being attacked and killed for their beliefs, for the
food they eat, for whom they love, for what caste they are born
into, that makes it impossible for us to sit back as mere observers. We carry a sense of hurt and outrage at the events unfolding
around us.
We are concerned citizens of this country, whose work has
been recognised by the Government of India. That is a great honour for us, and in returning this award, we are not rejecting the
recognition that the jury has bestowed on us. Neither are we belittling the honour given to us by the people of our country in the
form of the National Award. We are using the one possibility we
have of making you pay attention to our plea, resolve the crisis
at FTII, ensure that our precious right to Freedom of Speech is
unambiguously protected.
We, the undersigned, return our National Awards, and hope
that this symbolic gesture urges you to pay attention to our fears,
that the warp and weft of our robust democracy might be coming
apart in the current atmosphere.
Signatories
1.
Virendra Saini
2.
Saeed Mirza
3.
Kundan Shah
4.
Arundhati Roy
5.
Ranjan Palit
6.
Tapan Bose
7.
Shriprakash
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8.
Sanjay Kak
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Pradip Krishen
10.
Tarun Bhartiya
11.
Amitabh Chakraborty
12.
Madhusree Dutta
13.
Anwar Jamal
14.
Ajay Raina
15.
16.
PM Satheesh
17.
18.
Manoj Lobo
19.
Rafeeq Ellias
20.
Sudheer Palsane
21.
Vivek Sachidanand
22.
23.
24.
Abhimanyu Dange
5 November 2015
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Saeed Mirza
Friends, I sit before you because I believe we are living in a time
where not to speak out would not just be mistake but a crime.
When the students of the FTII rose up in revolt against the
ad-hoc and arrogant imposition of the Governing Council members of their institute by the Government of India little did they
realize that the cause for which they were fighting would turn out
to be so much larger: Joining them were a host of eminent writers, scholars, historians, painters, film-makers, musicians, theatre
personalities, scientists, professionals and even industrialists who
joined in the struggle to reclaim the soul and spirit of this land.
The battle that the students had begun went beyond the manipulation of education to include intolerance, divisiveness and hate.
I would like to inform you that I am not an academic. I am a
film-maker, television producer, writer, traveler and, hopefully, a
thinker. Let me also inform you that this note of mine is written
to open up a rigorous debate if we have to understand the nature
of our country and where it is heading.
To understand what I am getting at, I have to go a little further back in our countrys history. We have to go back to the time
when India became a Constitutional Republic. It was the time
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when our leaders defined the nation to the people of India and to
the world. We were sovereign, secular and democratic.
Here was a country that was primarily feudal, caste-ridden,
that was born out of incredible communal slaughter and the largest mass migration of peoples in history and yet had the courage
to look into the future with a sense of purpose and, most importantly, a sense of poetry. It guaranteed freedom of expression, religion and equality and justice for all before the law of the land.
Left behind in the shadows were forces, though small in
number yet potent in influence, that were vehemently opposed to
this ideal. They had a different agenda and a far simpler notion of
what our country was all about: they had little faith in democracy
and far less in freedom of expression, religion and equality before
the law.
And today we are well aware of what is happening in our
country. How did all of this come to pass? There is a history to it
Let me now begin with the role of the Congress Party which
was in power in most of the country up to the mid 1970s. What
amazed me was the number of communal and caste riots that had
occurred in state after state under its watch. Here was a party that
professed to be secular and progressive and yet in Maharashtra,
Gujarat, U.P., Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan regional party bosses were either helpless or colluded with communal forces
in regular pogroms. If one calculates the numbers of people killed
and the destruction of property it would shame any country in
the world. And yet, no person or group was held accountable for
these atrocities. This would have enormous consequences in the
future.
There was one movement however, that really set me thinking. It was the beginnings of a political formation that started
out in the city of Mumbai. It was the birth of the Shiv Sena. Everyone knows that this movement had the blessings of the politi-
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plenty. It had stepped out from the cold and into political legitimacy.
There was much more happening at the academic and cultural level. We witnessed a series of attacks on seminars, art exhibitions, plays and libraries. Artists, musicians, theatre personalities and scholars were forced to retreat. Unheard of organizations
suddenly appeared on the horizon to terrorize and instill fear in
the minds of ordinary citizens. They were telling us what to wear,
what to eat and even what to think. The Gujarat pogrom and
slaughter was the final assertion of the new political and philosophical equation. How far had we, as a nation, travelled away
from the ideals of the Constitution?
And this is where we are today. The forces that lay in the
shadows at the time of our independence have emerged into the
sunlight. They are in power both at the overt and covert levels.
Will my handing over a National Award change things around?
Frankly I dont know. All I know is I have to raise my voice against
this state of affairs.
National Award for
Mohan Joshi Hazar Ho, 1984
National Award for
Naseem, 1996
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Virendra Saini
I am returning this award in sincere hope that the government
will solve all the problems of the Film and Television Institute of
India with an open mind.
National Film Award for Best Cinematography
Salim Langde Pe Mat Ro, 1990
National Film Award for Best Childrens film
Kabhi Paas Kabhi Fail, 1999
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Manoj Lobo
I received the National Award from Our former President Mr
APJ Abdul Kalam for cinematography in 2005 for my F.T.I.I diploma film Girni. It still remains a most cherished and valued experience in my life.
My cinematography career subsequently was in a big way influenced by the recognition I received getting this award
Today,I return this award in protest of the devaluing of our
academic institutions, specifically F.T.I.I., by appointing people
without solid past commitment to cinema, culture and history of
India. It is a humiliation I cannot bear .
I stand for an India thats multiculturally vibrant, secular and
intellectually rich.
Am awaiting my country and my award back.
Jai Hind!
Director of photography of
Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na,
Jhootha Hi Sahi,
Nautanki Saala,
Shaadi Ke Side Effects.
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Vivek Sachidanand
I am an alumnus of FTII and I received a National Award in 2005
for Audiography. I have no doubt in my mind that I owe the National Award or any other award or recognition that I have received in my professional career, entirely to the time I spent in
FTII and the education I received from my teachers and fellow
students during that time.
So for me its heart breaking to see that the posts of Chairman
and Governing Council members of such a reputed institute is
being filled up with people with no qualifications whatsoever. Its
indeed sad that a democratically elected government would distribute such posts, seemingly as gifts to undeserving people, for
their affiliation to a political party or its wings with no transparency. Whats even more disturbing to me is that this seems to be
happening with many such institutes in the country, which have
built their reputation over decades.
When I hear repeated instances of people in the government
saying that FTII has not produced any real talent in years and that
the students are naxals and anti-nationals, I feel its necessary to
make my voice heard and return the awards that the same Indian
government has given me as an FTII product.
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Ajay Raina
I return my National Award in support of the students of my alma
mater FTII and also in solidarity with all the writers, filmmakers,
artists, historians, scientists and people of eminence who have
spoken up as one voice to protest the deliberate silence of the present government at the centre on the current regime of fear and
intolerance being permitted against the vulnerable communities
all over the country.
Giving up my National Award is not an easy decision for
me. My cameraman Arun and I shot the documentary film
WAPSI, for which I won the award in 2005, undercover, at grave
risk and almost life-threatening circumstances in Pakistan without any official permission from the host government. In this film
I revisit the events of Partition and the consequent effects of an
engineered Hindu - Muslim divide upon Hindu and Sikh minorities living in Pakistan as well on the Muslim, Sikh and Kashmiri
Pandit minorities in India. My earlier film in Kashmir (Golden
Conch 2002, MIFF) shot in 2000 under similar circumstances
of fear is about my journey home to Kashmir a decade after the
forced exodus of my own community. Subsequently, all my work
as a filmmaker and writer has been about documenting Kashmir
and its devastation.
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I have never shied away from speaking up for any minority issue in my films and writings, so I feel conscience bound to
speak up even now as the idea of a secular, tolerant and pluralist
India seems to be under threat once again. I do this with hope that
many more people will speak up now so that the present regime
is compelled to rethink its agenda of manufacturing hate among
communities that have strived to pull along each other in peace
and harmony despite the tragedies of the past.
National Film Award (Rajat Kamal)
Wapsi, 2005
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I have thought long and hard and it has been a difficult decision to return the National Award. But as I was debating about
this, my fourteen year-old daughter told me that she would be
proud of me if I gave it up and joined the protest. And so, I made
up my mind.
National Film Award for Best editing
Celluloid Man, 2013
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PM Satheesh
I am returning my National Award protesting against the inappropriate appointments at the FTII, a premier academic institute
of the country. The students of FTII are meticulously chosen by a
panel of top most experts of the country based on merit, and the
Chairman of FTII has always been an inspiration and guide to
these students. Its appalling to see that the present appointments
are based on sheer political affiliations rather than credentials.
Am also protesting against the larger inaction of authorities
towards growing incidents of intolerance and gagging of independent voices at a scale that has never been seen before in independent India, threatening the very foundation of our secular and
pluralistic nation. I evaluate the present situation in the country
as alarming with the interference of the Govt. reaching the dining
tables of private citizens. I hope the voices and worries of the individuals who have taken this extreme and painful step of returning
the awards be heard and action be taken by the highest authorities
of our country to maintain peace, and dignity of the citizens.
National Award for Best Audiography
Kumar Talkies, 1999
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Rafeeq Ellias
After much thought and with deep regret, I have decided to return my national award for the film Legend of Fat Mama in solidarity with my fellow film makers, film students at FTII and with
concerned citizens of my country.
It is a simple, unmanufactured protest against the current
climate of intolerance, hate and violence and the curbing of the
voices of dissent. It is by no means an endorsement of the actions
and inactions of the previous government, whose own cynicism
is well established.
It is in response however to the unprecedented scale and
comprehensiveness with which the values and interests of the India we believe in, are being undermined.
National Award For Best Ethnographic Film, 2005
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Anwar Jamal
The growing culture of intolerance and continuing government
interference in academic institutions are matter of great concern
for all those who hold freedom of expression and democratic values dear. Given the way things are panning out, there is a sword
hanging over all filmmakers, artists and writers who do not believe in a narrow view of what India is and should be. I strongly
condemn the distasteful manner in which the government and
its foot soldiers are treating the students of Indias premier film
institute and all other dissenting voices.
National Award for the Best Investigative film
Call of the Bhagirathi, 1992
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or the other but that can not be an excuse for what is happening
now. Inappropriate but deliberate FTII society appointments and
subsequent failure to acknowledge the wrongdoing is just one of
many transgressions of the current regime which undermine progressive education and pluralist culture in India. I return my coveted national award with all the humility of a student of life, along
with my esteemed fellow artists to voice my protest against these
transgressions and all other things which undermine human dignity, freedom of speech and breech of governments responsibility
of ensuring transparency in its governance and securing innocent
lives.
National Award
Seek & Hide, 2015
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believe that this gesture of ours will speak to you of our sense of
despair.
We stand in solidarity with students across the country who
are raising their voice for preserving the universal tenets of freedom of thought, expression, and the right to dissent something
which FTII has stood for and epitomized over the past 55 years.
Prateek Vats:
Rajat Kamal for Best Short Fiction Film
Kal 15 August Dukaan Band Rahegi, 2010
Vikrant Pawar:
Presidents Gold Medal and Best Short Fiction Film
Kaatal, 2012
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Nishtha Jain
With much sadness I give up only my national award. It has
meant a lot to me as it helped to gain recognition for my film
Gulabi Gang and the issues it raised about gender discrimination in our country. But today this award has become a daily reminder of the the gap between the way the state looks at us as
filmmakers and how they treat us as citizens who dare to dissent. Together our films are watched by hundreds of thousands
of people, much lauded and awarded, as citizens of this country
and while raising our voices against the increasing commercialization and saffronisation of educational and cultural institutions,
increasing religious polarization and resultant violence and fear,
our voices are ignored. I refer to the letter that 200 eminent filmmakers sent to the president almost a month ago to bring to his
attention the concerns of the striking students of our premier film
institute. Our letter was not even acknowledged by the office of
the president. Clearly the film is over. The curtains are down and
time to suspend our disbelief and face the dark reality. Its time we
treat the various episodes of violence and protests throughout the
country not as isolated events but as various manifestation of a
fascist state in the making.
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Dibakar Banerjee
I am not here out of anger. Not out of outrage. Not to blame anyone. Those emotions have been exhausted. I am here to draw
attention. Returning my national award for Khosla Ka Ghosla is
not easy. It was my first film, and for many, my most loved. Those
who loved it had families, sons, daughters who went to schools,
colleges, institutes and wanted to become successful and proud
Indians whatever that definition may be.
I am here to draw the attention of those citizens of India, if
they are listening, if they care, if they think I am one of them
and not an outsider.
What we teach, what we learn today is what we live tomorrow. India has had a proud tradition of teaching and learning for
thousands of years. Central to that tradition was the Guru, and
their shishyas. It is not for nothing that famous names like Drona,
Kripa and even religious teachers like Shankara, Gautam Buddha,
Mahavir, Nanak live between us even today, in scriptures and legends. Before they were anything, they were teachers, who taught,
lead, and inspired a group of students.
They did so in forests, dusty roads, humble huts and under
a tree.
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Through the return of my award, I want to appeal to the students, teachers and parents of India to pay attention to what the
FTII students are saying. If they do, they will know that their contention is far bigger than FTII. What they are protesting against is
happening at a much larger scale in educational institutes all over
the country. As citizens, students, parents I appeal to them to
become interested custodians of our shiksha parampara of how
we run, govern, and nurture the institutes of excellence that will
one day deliver Indians that make us proud.
I also appeal to the sane, fair and unbiased elements amidst
the political, executive, legislative, judicial and legal constituents
of the Indian society to give this protest a fair hearing and a fair
solution.
Through my humble return of this august award, I aim to
speak for all Indians who want our classrooms to become true
source of learning and not of mediocrity.
National Award for Best Popular Film
Khosla Ka Ghosla, 2007
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Anand Patwardhan
Returning an Award:
National awards have always meant a lot to me. They were more
precious than International awards and awards from private institutions precisely they represented those rare moments when the
Government of India became willing to uphold the spirit of our
secular, socialist and democratic Constitution.
Today this spirit is evaporating. Our nation is at a crossroads.
On one side is the secular path that our freedom fighters laid out
for us and on the other, the path towards majoritarian fascism
that the present regime seems bent upon. I am not saying we are
already a fascist state. I am saying that the early warning signs are
unmistakable.
It is the duty of all thinking citizens to speak out before it
becomes too late. Filmmakers are thinking citizens who cannot
look away. When the government attempted to foist unqualified
saffron administrators on the FTII, students there went on strike.
The strike has lasted an unprecedented 4 months. In this period
people from all walks of life began to wake up to the unmistakable
reality that the India they knew was on a dangerous new path. The
killing of rationalists, the hounding of whistleblowers like Teesta
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Setalvad and Sanjiv Bhatt, the denial of justice to victims of religious pogroms and caste based massacres, the emboldening of
the religio-lunatic fringe and the impunity of those who kill or
advocate killing in the name of religion is accompanied by the
wholesale rewriting of history, the denial of scientific enquiry and
the consequent production of a generation of dumbed down consumers for whom having an enemy to hate replaces their thirst
for knowledge.
So it is with a heavy heart I am returning my very first National award for Bombay Our City. Back in 1985 even as we won
this award the homes of people I had filmed were demolished.
I did not go to receive the award. Instead Vimal Dinkar Hedau
whose home in Bandra had just been demolished went to Delhi to
receive this award and distributed leaflets about the cause of the
homeless. The prize money went to the slumdwellers movement.
Today I am returning the medal.
What do we want from this government? Not much. Just its
resignation. Will that happen any time soon? Not likely. What do
we want from the people of India? Not much. Just eternal vigilance.
National Award for best Non-Fiction Film
Bombay, Our City, 1984
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Ranjan Palit
In Nazi Germany, everybody looked the other way. We will be
allowing a similar situation to develop in India if we do the same.
Over the years, I have directed ten documentary films and worked
as the cameraperson for around a hundred. I have received four
National Awards (including one that I won jointly). Im today returning three of the National Awards in protest. My empathy lies
with the agitating students of the Film & Television Institute of
India in Pune, where I was a student as well. For months, the students of FTII singlehandedly stood against the saffronization of
education and the rising Fascism of the Narendra Modi government. The FTII students were among the first to protest and my
solidarity is with them. To me, returning the National Award is
significant because it should come across as a slap in the face of
the government. And there is no doubt that the current government under Narendra Modi needs to be slapped in the face.
National Film Award, Best Cinematography
In the forest hangs a bridge, 1999
Kaya Poochhe Maya Se,2004
National Film Award, Best Voice Over
In Camera, 2009
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Rakesh Sharma
Why I returned my National Film Award:
An open letter to the President of India
Mananiya Rashtrapatiji,
Some weeks ago, many of us national film award winners - had
written to you on behalf of the film-making community, urging
your direct intervention. We never had the courtesy of even an
acknowledgement, let alone a considered response either from
your office, or from the Government of India, to whom you presumably forwarded our letter.
Since then, the climate of fear and intolerance has only become worse even those protesting against the brutal killings of
writers and intellectuals have been subjected to harassment and
intimidation.
Hate and bigotry seem to have become the defining characteristics of our times. A not-so-subtle majoritarian agenda appears to mark the actions (or inaction in some instances) and
words of the ruling dispensation which seems to include not
just their Ministers and MPs, but also the emboldened cadres of
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Tarun Bhartiya
Today, I wish to return my National Award for Best Editor Non
Fiction for In Camera Diaries of a Documentary cameraman,
2009, in protest against the dark times this country is being made
to go through. Times are truly dark and one must be honest to
say this darkness was in the making for long: it hasnt descended suddenly upon us. There was unease in me even when I took
the Award the Rajat Kamal in 2009. There was enough to cry
about even then. The award itself was an accident, since I never
actively sought for the award by submitting the film I had edited
for consideration of National Award, since that privilege is always
with the producer. But I took the award anyway and even felt
some pride. It meant recognition from a peer group, a sign of
appreciation of my work from other film makers whose work I
admired and had learnt a great deal from - a fraternity to which
I belong. Today the unease has grown and examples of the truly
greats the ninety year old Krishna Sobti , for instance returning their awards gives me a feeling that I dont need to keep mine
either.
The destruction of Babri Masjid and the Gujarat genocide are
not the only sores that plague this republic. In Kashmir the bul-
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lets never stop, the north-east too is an army zone with draconian
AFSPA, the State is waging a war against the people in Chhattisgarh. The everyday assault on democratic rights and peoples
livelihoods, the theft of their resources, the unrelenting violence
on Muslims, Dalits, Christians are instances of a process by which
the Republic is redefining itself. One cannot escape the realization
that one is part of a nation-state that has turned against its own
people, and is now rapidly moving to become a Hindutva Reich.
These are not aberrations of Indian Democracy but are being institutionalised into a vision of India supping from the chalice of majoritarian views and opinions.
As a political filmmaker, I can be blamed for waking up too
late to these times. Perhaps I was nave to think that the kinds of
film I make, edit, shoot, or direct and the nature of the dissenting
politics I have been actively involved in are challenges enough to
the nationalist consensus of this and previous Governments. This
can no longer be an excuse to hold onto a recognition from the
Indian state which on a daily basis makes it clear that dissenting
ideas, politics, lifestyles, food choices, choices of whom to love,
how to be, will have to be forcibly marshaled into a narrow mainstream. I refuse to be part of any mainstream identity.
Some have told me, why give away that heavy, nice looking
silvery medal. Just keep it and continue to do what you do. I am
tempted, who doesnt want to keep the bauble. But then you read
that another film is being denied the permission to be screened
in a festival by the ministry of Information and Broadcasting the co-ordinating ministry for these national awards - and my
acquistive temptations vanish in anger and irritation and a bit of
unparliamentary swearing too.
I wish to leave you with a story from the land where I live and
work The Khasi-Jaintia Hills of Meghalaya. In the Western part
of these hills, there is a village of seven households called Domia-
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Amitabh Chakraborty
With all humility and as a last resort I return my National Award
to the nation.
I wish to draw attention to the pogrom that is destroying the
FTII. Belief in the Hindu Rashtra is the neo nationalists war cry.
Therefore Gajendra Singh Chauhan, Dr Narendra Pathak, Anagha Ghaisas, Rahul Sholapurkar and Sailesh Gupta. And if you
resist them because they are not qualified for their posts, you are
anti nationals, you have to be cleansed out of the system. Gajendra and gang have been appointed to clean out the FTII and make
it compatible with the Hindu Rashtra. Accept this or elseThis is
muh mein Ram aur bagal mein churi.
I would like to appeal to the nation. I thought we were voting
for development we would all get rich quick but if I do not commit to the Hindu Rashtra then I am not part of the nation. The
word secular in the Constitution has to be replaced by the word
Hindu. Only then can we walk this path.
The previous government stole our money and this one will
steal our Constitution. Both of them have scammed us. Let us all
peacefully stand up to the tyranny of the elected.
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Madhusree Dutta
With a heavy heart I relinquish my three national awards. I am
very sad that I have to do it, for these are honours bestowed on me
by the nation and adjudged by fellow filmmakers. The National
Film Awards of India is a great institution that has acknowledged
diverse film practices across genres, languages and scales. I am
truly humbled to have received these awards.
The National Award, named after the nation and not the government of the day, has nothing to do with the ideology or control
exercised by ruling political parties. It is an award of excellence in
the field of creativity and hence it cannot be, even by manipulation, linked with the short-sighted concerns of players in the field
of electoral politics and their short-term berths of five years. The
National Award is far more durable and perennial. Hence I am
not returning my National Award, there is nobody to whom I can
return it. I am only relinquishing my claim on it.
I believe I have lost the right to hold such an award. When
my fellow citizens do not have the right to food of their choice,
when artists of the next generation are denied their right to a decent education, when rational thinking is declared a life-threatening activity, when parochialism and coercion become an alibi
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for upholding cultural traditions, I believe that I too have lost the
right to an award of excellence.
The National Award is not only an honour but also a responsibility to work towards upholding the conscience of the country; to fight the dominant forms of social amnesia; to foreground
the stories that are being strategically and systematically erased; to
enhance the ethos of democracy in order to let creativity bloom;
to toil to make this country a little healthier and richer with each
film, each poem, each cuisine and each debate. In recent months
we have witnessed an erosion of the space from which such initiatives can stem. I believe that the murder of Muhammed Aqlaq,
M.M. Kalburgi, Govind Pansare, Narendra Dabholkar and others
has substantially tarnished the meaning of such awards that celebrate excellence and critical thought.
Yet, I also believe if we who belong to the community of artists and intellectuals continue to keep the faith and work hard,
we shall be able to restore the honour of the National Award. We
shall be able to bring about a time when all Indians can eat, love,
think, debate, campaign and make films the way they want to; and
then, the nation will be ready once again to honour excellence
among its citizens. Resistance to intolerance is the both crucial
and fundamental to bringing about that time of abundant creativity. I hope I shall receive some National Award then.
National Award for Best Film on a Social Issue
Memories of Fear, 1996
National Award for Best Anthropological Film
Scribbles on Akka, 1991
National Award for Best Film on Culture as Producer
Friend Fish, Chicken Soup and A Premiere Show
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Pradip Krishen
I dont work or perhaps even think as a filmmaker any more.
But many years ago, someone in their folly or wisdom thought to
give National Awards to two of the films I made. Today, in solidarity with the students of the FTII who are being bullied and
humiliated into accepting third-rate people to preside over their
destinies, I wish to return both these Awards to a Government
that is taking this country down several wrong paths.
What is happening to the FTII today is only a symptom of
what this government has systematically tried to do with a large
number of educational and professional institutions of excellence
in India, filling them with their own appointees purely on the basis of their saffron identity.
All across this country, artists and writers and academics have
come together to forge this movement of protest. The government
says it is manufactured and the work of a small minority that is
not in touch with reality. But it will discover soon enough that
we are just the tip of the iceberg. A tsunami of resentment and
anguish is building up against the tenor and policies of this government. We just happen to be the visible tip of the movement.
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Sanjay Kak
With the recent return of awards that have been given to them by
the State a range of writers, poets, scholars, artists and filmmakers
have have deployed their visibility and credibility to articulate
the growing anxiety of a vast number of Indians, those who may
remain less visible but are no less perturbed at what is going on
around them.
In raising their voices through this symbolic act these Indians have simply done what their work enjoins them to do: join
the dots, make the connections, and help us to understand what
the meaning of seemingly unconnected incidents may be. It is
unnecessary to repeat here the widespread fears triggered by the
growing air of majoritarian menace that surrounds us, especially
for those the self-appointed majority considers marginal Muslims, Christians, Dalits, Adivasis. This cancerous fog threatens
everything that makes India a place of plurality and difference.
Already people have been assassinated for a disagreement with
their views. And now with the lynching in Dadri of Mohammad
Akhlak, even on a suspicion of what the food in their refrigerator
might be.
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This fog affects everything: which is why the brave and historic strike by the students of the Film & Television Institute of
India has revealed in all its starkness the systematic manner in
which educational and research institutions are being bludgeoned
under this Government. The disregard with which the Ministry
of Information & Broadcasting has dealt with this already enfeebled institution of national importance is very much a part of a
hurried attempt to foist a narrow, reactionary and regressive ideology on us all. The ruling dispensation must be told that this will
be resisted, for their view of the world does not truly belong to
this land.
Through this past year the deathly silence of the Government
of India has been broken only to justify or condone these tragic
developments, or to trivialise them. Faced with the unprecedented upsurge in public opinion represented by the return of awards,
they are now suggesting that this is all part of a well thought out
conspiracy. The villain is that old shadow enemies of the people.
In solidarity with these protests, and in particular to protest
at the way the students of the FTII have been treated, I too join
my fellow filmmakers in returning the two national awards that I
have received. My own belief in the sanctity and meaning of these
honours is moderated by the fact that for filmmakers to be even
eligible for the National Awards our work must have first been
passed by the censors, a colonial era mechanism that has not significantly changed in its essential purpose. No surprise then that
this circumscribes the universe of issues on which films can be
made if they are to be even acknowledged by the State, let alone
be honoured by it.
Thankfully an entire ecosystem of filmmaking and viewing
has mushroomed autonomously, and well below the all seeing
gaze of the State, which is why we can continue to contemplate
making films that carry question about the holy cows of our time
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the sanctity of the nation state, and issues of sexuality and difference, to take just two. The writers, poets, scholars, artists and
filmmakers who have raised their voices in protest are being accused of playing politics. Now is the time for them to acknowledge that they are and this is not an accident, it is what the times
are forcing upon all of us. Our politics must now include rising
in defence of our right to an India different from the one being
pushed down our throats by this Government and its stormtroopers.
National Film Award, Best Non-feature Film
In the forest hangs a bridge, 1999
Best Non-feature film on Social Welfare
Geeli Mitti, 1984
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Paresh Kamdar
I am not returning my National Award, I am sacrificing it. I am very
anguished by the manner in which the government has been treating FTII and several other Institutions, as well as by the shocking
instances of communal violence in the country. I am sacrificing my
award to draw attention of the larger society towards this growing
crisis and to register my protest.
National Film Award for Best Editing of a Non-Fiction Film
Rasayatra, 1994
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Shriprakash
Respected President of India,
I am compelled to return, with a heavy heart, the prestigious National award conferred on me for my film.
Government appointing its loyalists for responsible positions of
the state and institutes is not a new phenomenon. Against one such
appointment the students of the Film and Television Institute of
India, Pune have been protesting from nearly 150 days now and
their protest has been in the most peaceful and democratic manner.
How is one supposed to decipher the silence and indifference of the
Government towards this resistance and protest? The people in
power, it appears to me, know that the middle and lower middle class students protest when met by such indifference will lose
their patience and possibly be compelled internally and along
with external pressure and arm twisting, to take to aggressive
methods. This, for which the Government will long, will make it
easy for the Government to defame the protest and break it. This
method of the state is not new, not unknown. From the battle for
the aboriginals and tribals for land, water and forest to the battle
of Irom Sharmila all battles of the right against the might have
faced the same or similar response from the state.
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With a heavy heart I am returning the national award that I received for a film which I made with all my heart under difficult circumstances as a mark of protest against intolerant and indifferent
society and Government.
National Film Award, Best Film on Social Issues
Buru Garra, 2008
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Tapan Bose
Fundamental freedoms, freedom of conscience, freedom of expression, freedom of movement are under serious threat in our
country. Never in the history of independent India, were we told
what kind of food we may eat and what we cannot eat, what kind
of music we may hear and what we cannot, which books we may
read or not read. Groups of self-appointed cultural and religious
police aligned to the ruling party are roaming the streets intimidating, threatening and killing people with impunity. This murderous spree has been continuing unabated the last 18 months
as the government has done virtually nothing to reign in these
fanatics. Even more frightening aspect is that several ministers of
the central and state governments have been clearly encouraging
these street gangs. And now, the Chief of the RSS, the chief mentor of our Prime Minister has asked the government to formulate
a population policy to check the growth of the population of people belonging to non-Bharatiya religions meaning Muslims
and Christians. Our country has become a dangerous place for
Muslims, Christians and all those who believe in freedom and
democracy.
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Writers, artists, filmmakers, musicians, scientists and business people have been protesting against this violence, the killings and attacks on our freedom. A large number of them have
returned the awards that the nation had bestowed on them in the
past in recognition of their work. They had done so in the hope
that the government would be motivated to take action against
the murderers. The ruling party completely failed to recognise the
anguish of these people. Instead of taking steps to stop the fanatics, and restore the confidence of the people, the leaders of the
government turned against the writers, filmmakers, scientists and
artists, blaming them for raising the bogey of intolerance when
there was none. Ministers of the government abused the protesting writers, filmmakers, scientists and artists calling them agents
of foreign agencies which want to denigrate India. In the latest
incident, responding to Shah Rukh Khans comment that intolerance was a crime against patriotism, a BJP leaders suggested Shah
Rukhs soul lives in Pakistan. I am most amazed by Mr. Arun
Jaitlys assertion that it is the writers, filmmakers, scientists and
artists who were intolerant and there was no intolerance in India.
Self-righteousness is a serious disease. It afflicts the victims vision, hearing and his mental faculties. I hope that he would soon
recover from the ailment.
I have decided to join my peers who have been anguished by
the spreading culture of intolerance and return the two National
Awards that I received for my films during the 80s. The films are,
An Indian Story, a documentary on the blinding of the under trial
prisoners by the police in Bhagalpur during 1979-80 and Bhopal:
Beyond Genocide, a documentary on the worlds biggest industrial disaster which killed nearly 2500 people in 1984 and the victims struggle for justice. Both these films were virtually banned
by the governments of the day. We got the censor certificates
through lengthy process of litigation. The fact that these two films
received the National Awards for Best Non-Fiction Film shows
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that the members of the National Award jury in those days were
free to exercise their judgement and were not afraid of incurring
the displeasure of the government. Clearly such freedom does not
exist today. I am sure that the jury who awarded these films will
appreciate my decision to return these awards as a protest against
the failure of the government to end this atmosphere of fear and
intolerance. I sincerely hope that the government will take steps
to protect the life and liberty of all citizens. A governments failure
to protect the life and liberty of citizens raises questions about its
legitimacy, and we may soon descend into chaos.
National Film Award, Best Non-feature Film
An Indian Story, 1982
Bhopal Beyond Genocide, 1987
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Arundhati Roy
Although I do not believe that awards are a measure of the work
we do, I would like to add the National Award for the Best Screenplay that I won in 1989 to the growing pile of returned awards.
Also, I want to make it clear that I am not returning this award
because I am shocked by what is being called the growing intolerance being fostered by the present government.
First of all, intolerance is the wrong word to use for the
lynching, shooting, burning and mass murder of fellow human
beings. Second, we had plenty of advance notice of what lay in
store for usso I cannot claim to be shocked by what has happened after this government was enthusiastically voted into office
with an overwhelming majority. Third, these horrific murders are
only a symptom of a deeper malaise. Life is hell for the living too.
Whole populationsmillions of Dalits, Adivasis, Muslims and
Christians are being forced to live in terror, unsure of when and
from where the assault will come.
Today we live in a country in which, when the thugs and
apparatchiks of the New Order talk of illegal slaughter they
mean the imaginary cow that was killednot the real man that
was murdered. When they talk of taking evidence for forensic
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examination from the scene of the crime, they mean the food
in the fridge, not the body of the lynched man. We say we have
progressed 5 November, 2015 but when Dalits are butchered
and their children burned alive, which writer today can freely
say, like Babasaheb Ambedkar once did that To the Untouchables, Hinduism is a veritable chamber of horrors, (Babasaheb
Ambedkar Writings and Speeches, Volume 9 pg 296) without
getting attacked, lynched, shot or jailed? Which writer can write
what Saadat Hassan Manto wrote in his Letter to Uncle Sam? It
doesnt matter whether we agree or disagree with what is being
said. If we do not have the right to speak freely we will turn into
a society that suffers from intellectual malnutrition, a nation of
fools. Across the subcontinent it has become a race to the bottomone that the New India has enthusiastically joined. Here
too now, censorship has been outsourced to the mob.
I am very pleased to have found (from somewhere way back
in my past) a National Award that I can return, because it allows
me to be a part of a political movement initiated by writers, filmmakers and academics in this country who have risen up against
a kind of ideological viciousness and an assault on our collective
IQ that will tear us apart and bury us very deep if we do not stand
up to it now. I believe what artists and intellectuals are doing right
now is unprecedented and does not have a historical parallel. It
is politics by other means. I am so proud to be part of it. And so
ashamed of what is going on in this country today.
P.S. For the record, I turned down the Sahitya Akademi
Award in 2005 when the Congress was in power. So please spare
me that old Congress vs BJP debate. Its gone way beyond all that.
Thanks.
National Film Award, Best Screenplay
In which Annie Gives it Those Ones, 1988
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Kundan Shah
This is the only National award I have for Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron
and I feel very very sad to part with it. I owe this award to my alma
mater i.e. FTII there wouldve been no JBDY if I had not studied
at FTII. The gesture, the act, the protest is primarily for the appointment of an inappropriate person as the Chairman of FTII
and some 3-4 members appointed on the Governing Council.
Weve raised the protest several times during 139 days of the FTII
strike but the government has failed to listen to reason many
nationally and internationally have joined in this protest including Noem Chomsky.
Is Gajendra Chauvan the right choice? This appointment is
an insult to our intelligence and standing by this choice is kind of
a slap on the thinking populace of this country. I want to ask the
bureaucrats at the Broadcasting Ministry, the Minister of the State
Mr Rathore and Minister Mr Arun Jaitley what face can they
show to their family, their children when they make and stand by
such an appointment to a very prestigious institute? The appointment of 3-4 other members on the Governing Council suggests
thursting and forcing upon students a different ideology in fact,
this is a part of a larger design of this ideology to take over the
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ies? Stop favoring our Corporates who are the real draculas the
blood suckers. Instead of trickle down theory lets try trickle up
theory weve already missed the bus of Make in India where
China has a lead of 2 and a half decades. (PPP or PPPP as per PM
Modi has failed according to Naik CEO of L&T reference his
article in TOI or Economic Times) But are there not other ways to
development and progress? Lets invite fresh minds, many economists and many out of the box thinkers like me who have wonderful ideas of taking India forward with a GDP growth which is
only possible in our dreams.
National Award
Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron, 1984
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Naresh Saxena
I am returning my National Award as a Film Director which I
got for my short film Sambandh in 1991 at National Film Festival, New Delhi by the then President of India. I liked and loved
this award as it underlined my another dimension as a film maker
because till then I was known as a Hindi poet, I still respect the
award and the jury who selected for their special mention award.
But It has become necessary to be able to stand with numerous
Scientists, Writers, Historians and Artistes who have also returned their awards.
Also want to underline the fact that I had opposed emergency enacted by Mrs. Indira Gandhi and also the treatment
mated out to Tasleema Nasreen by CPM and I do not belong to
any political party.
This is to express my anguish against the creation of a climate
of communal violence and chain of murders of innocent people
like Mohd. Akhalaq of Dadri and prominent persons of scientific
temper like Kalburgi, Pansare and Dabholkar for their creative
activities to suppress superstition, it is also to oppose the climate
of intolerance and rejection of reasons against which Kalburgi
and Pansare were fighting.
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Of course, thats how life is. A turn of events may seem very small
at the time its happening, but you never really know, do you?
How can you? Tom Xavier, Dark Curses and Faerie Dreams
It happens all the time. But it never fails to surprise us. For me
these reflections began a few weeks back when I saw Bernado
Bertoluccis The Dreamers. How serendipitously the dots seemed
to connect the present with the past.
Bertoluccis film is set in the Paris of 1968, and begins with
the agitations around the abrupt removal of the director of the
Cinmathque Franaise, the now-legendary Henri Langlois. The
struggle was for his reinstatement and for the removal of a man
named Pierre Barbin. Barbin was an obscure and relatively inexperienced film-festival organiser, and Langlois was a culture hero
even in the eyes of his adversaries.
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A students movement
The students of FTII have been on an indefinite strike since June
12, protesting against the Information and Broadcasting Ministrys appointment of actor-politician Gajendra Chauhan as the
institutes chairman. The pinnacle of his career, according to him,
is that he played Yudhisthira in the TV series Mahabharata. That
was 25 years ago. Since then he has appeared in numerous television soaps and several "B" grade Bollywood films, which many
describe as soft-porn.
Apart from this, the students are also protesting the appointments of four of the eight members of the reconstituted FTII panel. These include Anagha Ghaisas, who has made several documentary films about Prime Minister Narendra Modi; Narendra
Pathak, a former president of the Maharashtra Akhil Bharatiya
Vidyarthi Parishad; Pranjal Saikia, an office bearer of a Rashtriya
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The retelling is necessary, not least of all, as a tribute to the courageous students of FTII, who seem to have grasped the significance
of cinema in the life of a liberal, civil society. Though it is debatable whether society understands its debt to cinema.
Gaston Roberge, often described as the father of film studies
in India, has a wonderful description of this phenomenon in his
classic book on film appreciation, Chitra Bani:
Films are the collective dream of society. They provide society
with mythologies or patterns of behaviour. Contemporary films
do not necessarily convey the entire mythology of the present
time. However...most people today respond in one way or another to the dream-like fantasies projected on the screen. For
these fantasies relate to various areas of human life: war, politics,
sex and violence, death, conscience, and the future of man.
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But Andre Malraux, who was then the Culture Minister, and
an artistic icon in his own right, had his own way of seeing things.
Along with the Gaullist cabinet, he wanted to convert this film
school into a national institution, but failed to carry with him
Langlois and his colleagues. Administration was not one of Malrauxs many talents. In a ham-handed manner, the organisation
was taken over, and within 24 hours the locks were changed and
Barbin installed as director.
Within (the same) twenty-four hours, forty filmmakers, including Gance, Franois Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Jean Renoir,
and Robert Bresson, had withdrawn permission for their films
to be shown at what was soon referred to as the Barbinothque.
They were quickly joined by dozens more, including Charlie
Chaplin, Roberto Rossellini, Fritz Lang, Richard Lester, Carl
Dreyer, Orson Welles, and Jerry Lewis. On Wednesday, a crowd
of three thousand showed up at the Trocadro, in front of the
Palais de Chaillot. The demonstration was broken up by a police
charge, leaving a number of people slightly wounded, including Truffaut, Godard, and Bernard Tavernier. Louis Menand
in The New Yorker
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As international support grew for the Cinmathque movement, there was a call for the boycott of the Cannes Film Festival
that was to be held later:
The Information and Action Assembly of the French Cinema,
bringing together on May 17, 1968 more than a thousand professionals at the National School of Photography and Cinema on
the rue Vaugirard, occupied by its students since May 15, asks
that all directors, producers, distributors, actors, journalists and
jury members at Cannes, in collaboration with their foreign colleagues and by the means proper to them, oppose the continuation of the Festival so as to show their solidarity with the striking
workers and students, to protest against police repression, and
to express their determination to contest Gaullist power and the
current structures of the film industry.
Barbin, of course refused to step down (which sounds familiar), but finally engineered his own downfall when he made the
absurd demand that a copy of every film distributed in France be
donated to the Cinmathque, at a cost of a million francs (about
a thousand dollars today). Immediately, the head of the Motion
Picture Export Association of America, Frederick Gronich, informed the French government that not only would no prints
of American movies be deposited at the Cinmathque until
Langlois was reinstated but all prints already on deposit must be
returned within twenty-four hours. Barbin was advised to back
down.
With the intervention of influential persons who exercised
financial clout with the Gaullist government, Henri Langlois was
finally reinstated.
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flow bottlenecks, that need little to get out of hand. Hence, it takes
routinely five years to fully graduate from the three year FTII
course. In the case of the 2008 batch, it has taken a record seven
and counting. Its no surprise then, that these two share an easy
camaraderie forged over many seasons of tea and conversation;
and in sitting down with them in the leafy glade of the FTII canteen, Ive caught them in their natural habitat.
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issue bothers them and how it affects them. There were over 80
people in that GBM. Everyone spoke. People weve never heard
speak in a public forum spoke. There were issues of language.
People were falling short of words. People had tears rolling down
their cheeks. But everyone came forward and spoke. It was like
everyone was opening their hearts up. This happened for 14
hours and everyone stayed put and listened.
If the GBM provided the heart, the hands provided the voice.
If you were to walk into FTII today you would see that the campus
from its walls to its roads have been turned into a powerful
canvas of protest. From graffiti and paintings, to wall murals and
sculptures, art came to provide the expressive force of the protest
on campus.
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lish. By the third year, theyll be the best of friends. It happens all
the time, he says.
Add to this the fact that the first year has the common foundational course in which everyone learns everything. From editing to cinematography to direction, the foundational component,
critical to the holistic pedagogical approach of FTII, (the defence
of which has itself been the source of protests in the mid-90s) is
designed to produce a fully-rounded film maker.
The reason, according to Ajithkumar B and Rajeev Ravi
both national award winners as editor and cinematographer respectively that FTII produces the best technical specialists in
the industry; someone like, say, a Resool Pookutty. Its a tight
schedule that keeps the first-years busy from 10 am to 10 pm. Its
the year where you are made to dive off the deep end, and the
most baffling component of your day comes at the very end with
what is called the General Screenings.
Every evening during the academic year, the campus holds
film viewings that are open to everyone on campus, and are mandatory for the first years. Over the course of a year, the students
are exposed to every kind of cinematic form and visual grammar
that has found expression in the medium from the time of its invention; across time and film cultures, from the better known to
the obscure, these include films only a serious film scholar would
know. And because the medium is cinema, the exposure is not
just to the full expressive range of an art form, but also to its anthropological content the way people live and see the world
across cultures and at different times in history.
Picture then the combined effect of all of this on the Hindionly speaking boy, who since his day began has had to communicate with his Malayali roommate through hand signals, followed
by a days worth of a multi-variable technical course, who now
at the end of that day, is struggling to catch the fast moving Eng-
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debate? How do we value those among us who stand up and question under the Wisdom Tree?
As the Ghatak fan Shuklaji says, We need to question. This
is such a time that the need is to question. Through the medium
of our art, through the medium of ourselves, till such time as we
can.
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At least since the time of Indira Gandhi, the Central government has sought to undermine the autonomy of institutions that
promote culture and scholarship. Two Congress education ministers were particularly culpable: Nurul Hasan and Arjun Singh,
both of whom cultivated and promoted scholars of a Marxist or
socialist persuasion.
Hasan and Singh may not have chosen the best, but at the
same time they stayed away from the worst. What is new about
the appointments made by this NDA regime is that they have
chosen individuals held in contempt by their fellow professionals.
The most egregious examples may be those of Y Sudershan Rao, a
chairperson of the Indian Council of Historical Research (ICHR)
whose publications are unknown to historians; and Gajendra
Chauhan, a chairperson of the Film and Television Institute of
India (FTII) who is likewise far from being regarded as a leader
in his field.
Between 1998 and 2004, the first NDA regime was in power.
It packed the governing councils of academic bodies with RSS
sympathisers. On the other hand, when it came to the most important post, that of chairperson, it paid at least some attention to
scholarly credentials. Thus, AB Vajpayees government appointed
the historian of ancient India, GC Pande, chairman of the Indian
Institute of Advanced Studies in Shimla, while the historian of
modern India, MGS Narayanan, served as chairman of the ICHR.
Meanwhile, the diplomat-turned-academic ML Sondhi was chosen chairman of the Indian Council of Social Science Research
(ICSSR).
That none of these three scholars were Marxists, and at least
two had publicly confronted Marxists, was perhaps not incidental to their appointments. But other criteria were also at play. For
both Pande and Narayanan were serious and well regarded schol-
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ars. And Sondhi was a a senior professor in the countrys best department of international studies.
Move further back in time, to the United Front government
in which HD Deve Gowdawas prime minister and SR Bommai
HRD minister. This regime chose S Settar chairman of the ICHR
and D Nanjundappa chairman of the ICSSR. Again, the fact that
these scholars were from Karnataka, the state to which the HRD
minister and the prime minister also belonged, may not have
been a coincidence. At the same time, no one could deny that
professor Settar had done pioneering work on Hoysala temples,
or that professor Nanjundappa was a celebrated teacher actively
involved in public policy.
This brief survey leads to three broad conclusions. First, that
nepotism and patronage have been endemic in academic or cultural appointments in the gift of the Government of India. Second, that while previous governments have not been shy of using ideological criteria, they have at least sought to seek people of
credibility. Third, that this present NDA regime has abandoned
the pretence of credibility altogether.
This last quality (if it may be called that) is evident in the two
appointments mentioned earlier, and of a third; that of Baldev
Sharma as chairman of the National Book Trust. Apart from having edited the RSS mouthpiece, Panchajanya, Mr Sharmas contributions to either literature or scholarship lie unrecorded.
Consider, on the other hand, the names of some past chairmen of NBT. They include the historian Sarvepalli Gopal, the
critic Sukumar Azhikode, and the novelist UR Ananathamurty.
All were left-of-centre politically, yet all had written books that
were widely read, discussed, and debated.
To head bodies like the ICHR, ICSSR, FTII or NBT, one requires (a) to have the respect of ones professional peers; (b) to
be a competent and fair-minded administrator. It is in the first,
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crucial, respect that the appointments of Sudershan Rao, Gajendra Chauhan and Baldev Sharma so manifestly fall short. Even if
all are good human beings and good administrators, they remain
(to put it politely) professionally under-qualified for the jobs assigned to them.
The appointments made by the current NDA regime are far
worse than those made under NDA Mark I. Why is this so? One
reason may be that while Mr Vajpayees government had some
ministers with connections to scholars and scholarship, the present government has none. A second reason may be that as chief
minister of Gujarat, Narendra Modi had little respect for intellectual or cultural creativity, and this has now been transferred
to the Central government. A third reason may be that the Prime
Minister has left this space entirely to the RSS, so that it does not
trespass on his pet subjects, the economy and foreign policy.
Whatever the reasons, the fact is that the present government
despises writers, scholars, artists and filmmakers. That is the melancholy but inevitable conclusion one must draw from the choices it has made in these fields.
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