10 filmmakers return their National Awards
Dibakar Banejee,
Khosla Ka Ghosla (2007)
Oye Lucky, Lucky Oye (2009)
Anand Patwardhan,
Bombay Our City (1984)
Paresh Kamdar,
Rasyatra (1995)
Nishtha Jain,
Gulaabi Gang (2014)
Kirti Nakhwa,
Lost & Found (2008)
Harshavardhan Kulkarni,
Lost & Found (2008)
Hari Nair,
Sham's Vision (1997)
Rakesh Sharma,
Final Solution (2006)
Indraneel Lahiri,
Aamar Katha, Story of Binodhini (2014)
Lipika Singh Darai
Gaarud (2009)
Eka Gachha Eka Mainsha Eka Samudra (a tree a man a sea) (2012)
Kankee O Saapo (dragonfly and snake) (2013)
Filmmaker Dibakar
Banerjee (second from left) speaks during a press conference in Mumbai on
Wednesday. Mr. Banerjee and nine filmmakers, including Anand Patwardhan (third
from left), Nishtha Jain (left) and Paresh Kamdar (right), have returned their
National Awards. Photo: Samrat Chakrabarti
FTII protest:
“I am more afraid today than I was during the emergency
because now there are roving gangs looking to do violence against anyone who
speaks out. If you don't believe in armed struggle, then what do you do? This
is what we have. We want to be a part of the awakening that is happening around
the country, like the scientists and artists and writers returning their
awards,” said eminent documentary filmmaker Anand Patwardhan on Wednesday while
returning his National Award along with 9 others, including Dibakar Banerjee,
Nishtha Jain and Rakesh Sharma.
Expressing solidarity with the FTII students who ended
their 139 day strike on Wednesday, the filmmakers in a joint statement said
that they see the ‘government’s stonewalling of the FTII students’ protest’
within a larger context of appointments of ‘people with narrow visions’ in
other institutions such as the Children’s Film Society and Central Board of
Film certification. They also said, “We stand firmly with the students of FTII
and are determined to not let them shoulder the entire burden of their
protests. They have mounted a historic struggle and we urge others within our
fraternity to come forward.”
Citing the lynching of Mohammad Akhlaq and the murders of
rationalists Narendra Dabholkar, Govind Pansare and M M Kaburgi, the group
voiced concern over the rising intolerance in the country. “People are being
murdered for their beliefs and opinions. There has been no official
condemnation of these groups (by the government) and we question this silence.”
Speaking at the press conference, Nishtha Jain, whose
documentary Gulabi Gang was judged the best film on social issues at the 61st
National Awards in 2014, said, “With much sadness I give up my only 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.” Dibakar Banerjee added, “This is not politically
motivated. It is motivated by my conscience. I am not here out of anger or
outrage. 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. I am here to draw attention of the people.”
He went on to add, the FTII students are asking for the right shikshparampara.
They are not asking for money or more equipment or less exams or quotas or
privileges. Why should they suffer months of indecision, stress and harassment
to go through this?”
Commenting on the decision by the FTII students to return
to classes, Banerjee said, “What more do you expect the students to do? They
didn't burn buses to register their protest. The student union has two duties -
to fight for students rights and to make sure that the student community does
not suffer. They have been extremely mature.” The group stressed that their
appeal is to the people and not the government.
The filmmakers join a growing cohort of intellectuals
expressing concern over the rise of intolerance in the country. The first were
writers who began returning their Sahitya Akademi Awards in early September
following the cold blooded execution, at his home, of 77 year old rationalist,
scholar and Kannada writer, M M Kalburgi. Himself a Sahitya Akademi award
winner, Dr Kalburgi’s murder formed a pattern of killings; those of Govind
Pansare in February 2015 and that of Narendra Dabholkar in August 2014. Common
to all of these murders, apart from their premeditated nature, was the fact
that all three victims were noted rationalists and scholars, who had attracted
the ire of right wing Hindu groups. The writers began returning their awards in
protest of the Akademi’s silence in the face of these killings.
The FTII strike began on June 11, following the
appointment of Gajendra Chauhan, as the Chairperson of the institute, and four
others nominations made to the eight member FTII society, that has much say in
the running of the institute. The appointments surprised many in the film
fraternity since the people selected to head the premier film institute are
virtual unknowns in the film fraternity. Common however to all the appointments
are right wing political affiliations. The students have since questioned the
process by which these appointments were made and demanded that all future
processes be made transparent. The strike lasted a total of 139 days ending on
Wednesday despite no resolution to the crisis.
The statement
Government of India must urgently reveal its commitment to protect the freedom of expression of each citizen.
We, the undersigned, stand alongside the writers who have
returned the country's highest literary honour, and hereby return our National
Awards.
As filmmakers, we stand firmly with the students of FTII
and are determined not to let them shoulder the entire burden of the protests.
They have mounted a historic struggle and we urge others within our fraternity
to come forward and carry this protest forward.
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