Patwardhan may go to court to force telecast
by DD
BY UTPAL BORUPUJARI, Asian Age, 10/4/97
New Delhi, April 9: For Anand Patwardhan, it has become a routine to fight
through, and for, his films. The recent telecast of Patwardhan's Ram ke Naam,
a hard-hitting documentary on the build-up of religious frenzy leading to the
demolition of the Babri Masjid is only a small battle won for him.
" I think I will have to take the same legal recourse to get my Father,
Son and Holy war telecast over Doordarshan," says the self-confessed "non-neutral" documentary
filmmaker about his 1995 National Award winning documentary. "It (Doordarshan)
has not learnt any lesson - at least for the last three films of mine, I had
to go to the court, and though I won all the cases, the films reached the viewers
only four to five years after they were made," says Patwardhan.
The telecast of Ram ke Naam in the early part of March, expectedly raised a
political maelstrom as the BJP took the matter to the floor of Parliament,
strongly protesting against what they called "mere fabrications which
hurt the religious sentiments of millions." The 1993 National
Award winning film, which Justice A P Shah of Bombay high court described as
a condemnation of "those who are intolerant and those who have spread
hatred in the name of God", is just another feather in the self-taught
filmmaker's much-decorated cap. Patwardhan looks at his latest victory with
a glimmer of hope, "at least we have some kind of democracy, the government
and the establishment might not like a film, but they indirectly recognise
it when an independent jury appointed by it gives the work an award. Of course,
they then get scared to show it over the national network fearing their activities
will get exposed before the people, and hope that the filmmaker will remain
content by showing his work in festivals and to an elite audience who anyway
are not affected by happenings on the ground."
He therefore fights in all fora available, including legal, to take his films
to people who matter, the people who are actually affected by political and
so-called developmental events. Patwardhan, who has been an activist ever since
he was a student in the US where he participated in anti-Vietnam war demonstrations,
makes his motive behind making films clear.
" Right from the beginning, I have been making film's that are related to
some social cause or the other I am associated with," says the filmmaker
who made his first film, Waves Of A Revolution on Jayaprakash Narayan's social
movement. And it was with this film that Patwardhan's tryst with controversy
also began when the film had to go underground with the clamping of Emergency
in 1975. That tryst continues. His last film, A Narmada Dairy, a stark documentation
of the anti-Narmada dam movement led by Ms Medha Patkar under the banner of Narmada
Bachao Andolan, was dropped unceremoniously from the 1996 Mumbai International
Documentary Festival at the last moment. But even then he is satisfied. He defines
his beliefs, saying that his latest work will highlight the plight of traditional
fisher men with the coming in of modern fishing trawlers. "Those who think
they are making neutral films do not realise that their works are affected
by their own class and cultural background if nothing else," he says.
Patwardhan, who has made three other films says more films against communalism
should be made. (PTI)