THE ASIAN AGE 10 FEBRUARY 2002
www.asianageonline.com
We are not your monkeys: VHP angry with Patwardhan
BY KOUNTEYA SINHA
He is one of India's greatest documentary filmmakers with films like Business
As Usual on fund raising for Bangladesh refugees, Waves Of Revolution on
the anti-corruption
movement in Bihar which led to a state of emergency being declare in India,
Prisoners Of Conscience on the political prisoners in India before, during,
and after the emergency, the award-winning A Time To Rise on the efforts of
Indian immigrant farm-workers in Canada to form a union, and In Memory Of Friends
on the efforts of a group of Sikhs and Hindus to rebuild communal harmony in
strife-hit Punjab, to his credit. ' But the filmmaker now seems to have annoyed
many
with his direct investigative subjects.
The VHP is up in arms against award-winning documentary filmmaker Anand Patwardhan
and has called for the withdrawal of his films We are not Monkeys and In the
Name of God, from being screened at the American Museum of National History,
on the condition that it distorts history and shows Hinduism in poor light.
The two documentaries, which were filmed prior to the demolition of the Babri
Masjid, focuses on the campaign waged by VHP to destroy the Masjid and tries
to unravel what motivated the Hindu group in demolishing the 16th century mosque
in Ayodhya, said to have been built by Babar, the first Mughal Emperor of India.
VHP branch of America in a letter to the director of public affairs of the
museum, Elaine Charnov, said the documentaries "would not only mislead
the viewer because of gross distortions of facts but also help . advance politically
motivated Marxist agenda."
Declaring Mr Patwardhan as a "self-proclaimed Marxist whose agenda appears
to be to manipulate rightly or wrongly every social, religious or cultural
issue and present it as a class struggle between haves and have nots or between
dalits and upper caste people and then offer Marxist ideology as a solution
to resolve the dispute" general-secretary of the Parishad, Gaurag G.
Vaishnav said "In one of the videos, Mr.Patwardhan had
attempted to demonstrate that Rama, the main character in the epic Rarnayana,
was an Aryan who enslaved Dravidian people and called them his monkeys. "
The documentary is creating artificial division among the people of India,
imposed on racial lines," the letter said.
In the second documentary, the letter says, "he attempts to distort
the history of India and blame's a large segment of the Hindu population for
the destruction of the Babri structure which was not a mosque
even by the standards of Islam. It totally ignores the entire history behind
the structure and attempts to create division among Hindus and Muslims of India."
" We fail to understand how these two documentaries relate to the objective
of
the exhibition," Mr Vaishnav wrote.
However, Directorate of Film Festival
sources revealed the films in question were very well appreciated in all the
film festivals it has been screened in. Kay Armatage of the Toronto Film Festival
had said, "The screen is electric with religious fervour,
masses of people swarming through the streets, gathering in rallies, or violently
rioting. This is investigative cinema documentary at its dynamic best." Another
critic had written, "Hard-hitting, provocative, revealing look
at secularism in India under siege from militants on both sides. Patwardhan
explores this tragedy is this lucid, courageous film that allows supporters
of both sides to have their say. A documentary well worth seeking out."
Directorate sources said Mr Patwardhan has consistently created thought provoking
movies during his 20-year-plus career.
Petition in support of screenings at the AMNH