Press Release
Censor Board of India at war with "WAR AND PEACE"
Anand Patwardhan, June 2, 2002
War and Peace
a three hour long documentary by Anand Patwardhan focusing on the
dangers of nuclear war, won two major awards at the recently concluded
7th Mumbai (India) International Film Festival the Best Film/Video
of the festival and the International Jury Award. The video begins
and ends with the ideas of Mahatma Gandhi.
For the last month and a half we made attempts
to get a Censor Certificate but were stalled. What we first thought
to be mere bureaucratic delay may well be something more deliberate.
On 1st June the Sudhir Yardi Memorial Trust had obtained special
permission from the Police and Entertainment Tax Departments to
do a non-commercial screening of our video at the YB Chavan Centre
in Mumbai as it was an award winning film. On May 30, Mr. Singhala,
Regional Officer of the Censor Board, Mumbai rang the Chavan Centre
threatening dire consequences if the screening went ahead.
I phoned Mr. Singhala to find out why special
permission could not be granted for the screening. He denied permission
and stated that the Censor process would take its own time. He also
pointed out that our video would run into trouble because he had
seen the transcripts. I was shocked. Why had the Regional Officer
seen our transcripts before officially constituting an examining
committee? Is that the act of an impartial officer ?
I also pointed out that the Films Division of
India which comes under the Ministry for Information and Broadcasting
had not only awarded our video but had obtained permission to screen
all award winning films and videos of MIFF 2002 in Kolkata on regardless
of whether they had censor certificates. "War and Peace"
was to be their inaugural film on May 31. Mr. Singhala laughed and
said "Let us see how they show the film".
He was right. This Regional Officer has powers
that go beyond his region. I learnt on May 31 that our video had
been withdrawn at the very last minute from the Kolkata festival.
The Films Division could not use the censor certificate argument
here as many films they were showing fell into this category. So
they told the press that our video "had not arrived."
But we have proof that the Films Division signed a receipt for the
video two weeks ago!
I do not blame officials of the Films Division
of anything more than wanting to protect their jobs. They were going
to show "War and Peace" in all sincerity until rudely
stopped by some invisible force. This invisible force has in the
last 15 years taken our country to the abyss. I want this invisible
force to come clean and reveal itself to the public gaze. Let it
openly declare that it does not believe in democracy or in the values
propagated by Mahatma Gandhi. The values of non-violence and religious
tolerance are what "War and Peace" celebrates and hopes
to rekindle in this psychologically and physically scarred region
of the globe.
Anand Patwardhan, June 2, 2002