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| past events | |||||
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| The Rajasthan Screenings | |||||
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Sanjay Maharishi |
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This
is a report of the screenings organised in Rajasthan by various civil
society organisations in associatiation with
Films For Freedom, Delhi, 2004. Films were shown in Alwar, Bikaner,
Jodhpur, Jaipur, Puggal and Udaipur. The films were Naata, Pani Pe Likha,
Azadi (Freedom), Sunder Nagari (City Beautiful), Development Flows from
the Barrel of Gun, The Buzz of Betrayal, Final Solution, Manjuben Truck
Driver and A Day in the Life of Ponga Pandit. Organising the ScreeningsEarlier I was given to understand that I would be travelling with the organisers of Jan Morcha a body made out of several organisations, but that was not to be because of logistical problems. I therefore had to make my own travel plans and reach destinations on my own. Daytime travel was out of the question. A three-hour bus journey I undertook from Bikaner to Puggal in the afternoon made me feel I was inside a toaster. I vowed never to repeat the mistake. I therefore stuck to my original plan of travelling by night – screening over, I would board a bus for the next place to have a show in the evening and move on. Before the journey I had to contact individuals/ organisations that could possibly lend support. I had strongly felt that we need to establish a presence of CAC, talk about our Archive and most importantly be able to show some films before elections due on the 5th of May in Rajasthan, which is why the effort. Initially it is a bit difficult to organise documentary film screenings; people are not aware of their potential and are wary whether its topicality would be out of context. Several organisations – be they formal, informal or non-governmental - had their own issues and agendas to push. Therefore films in my package had to be put in context and/or demonstrated as to how they would be useful for their audiences. Often this dialogue was on STD or on the mobile - while screenings were on at one place negotiations for the next were underway, and so on. I did not have more than two to three hours for the shows and in that, one had to talk, explain ones intentions, introduce the films and show them. I made sure I showed all the films at least 2-3 times in the entire journey. They say one plus one is eleven. They couldn’t have put it better. I often found myself doing at least two things at the same time - for example, while talking about Vikalp and the Protest Show in Bombay, I simultaneously checked audio/ video connections, projector/ amplifier alignments – correcting tape tracking and disk jumping - to save time. It may have given an effect of effervescent energy and immediacy to the cause but let me assure you that it is not the most elegant thing to do. There is a twofold fear of either missing out an important point or tripping over the wires, or both. Luckily I had no untoward incident. The response to the screenings has been very enthusiastic and encouraging. Not only are audiences waiting for more films to come but there are also people who would happily and energetically get to the business of organising shows. I met many people who said they could organise a monthly or a bimonthly screening programme in their locality, place of work, a community space or even their houses. Also, I felt that the issue of censorship is close to the hearts of people of varied calling. Sikar, Barmer and Ajmer were three places I could not go to due to lack of time but there are groups there who were eager to have screenings. We may be somewhat constrained by the fact that we can screen films either made in Hindi or those that are para-dubbed in Hindi. This I fear is something that the Delhi Group may have to deal with on a long term, sitting plumb in the middle of Cow Belt. If Hindi para-dubs can be made available they can go a long way, else Hindi subtitles too can be very useful only that it would mean we stick to the literate audience. I met with a lot of people during my journey but the most interesting of them was a meeting with a couple of Bajrang Dal activists who wanted to start their new chapter in Puggal (northern Bikaner District). I asked them “It’s such a little village, why would you care to start your activities here”. They were a lively bunch, no fanaticism in their eyes, unlike their worthy brothers in Gujarat and MP. They said it’s like a mission for them. People here did not know about the Bajrang Dal, the RSS, or about threats to Hinduism. They were here to spread the message, start new activities and to build a committed cadre. Ideologies notwithstanding, we were there with similar objectives. “You could start gathering crowds by showing good documentaries”, I suggested to them. I was almost successful in my endeavour, when one of them said he wasn’t sure they were allowed to show films on the first day itself. They also had a definite pattern to implement their agenda. I met them again when I was leaving Puggal. I asked them if they had a good day. They said they could not meet many people but they were not leaving in a hurry… (like me?) Screenings
and Responses My first stop was at Bikaner where the show was organised by the well-known poet Harish Bhadhani and the columnist/writer Nandkishore Acharya at the Ajit Foundation premises. The story about Harish Bhadhani is that if you get down at Bikaner and ask any five randomly picked rickshawallas about Harish Bhai's (or Kaviraj's) house, at least one of them will take you there directly without any further directions and may even charge you less money than what is due. I thought it was a popular story but did not venture to try it. While looking for his house I asked an STD/PCO owner for the poet's residence. He took me in his shop, put on the AC and asked for a cold drink to be brought for me. Perfect stranger. Meanwhile I wondered at the power of rhyme. Poetry touches you in a way that prose does not and journalism cannot even dream to. About a hundred people attended the screening at Ajit Foundation. Let me also add that I was showing films exactly on the day and time Dharmendra and Sunny Deol were in Bikaner. This was unplanned, of course; else I would have avoided these dates. For a sleepy town like Bikaner the presence of a couple of celluloid He-Men would be a distraction. Nevertheless we had a great show and spirited discussions. Apart from the subjects thrown up by the films, discussions ranged from the issue of censorship to communalisation and trivialisation of politics. Another interesting point of discussion was aesthetics in agitational films. Are they judged by the same rules of narrative or do they have a special category? The next screening was in Puggal, about two hours north of Bikaner. Another two hours drive north from here and you would be safely inside Pakistan. Puggal is a large village and I was invited to show films here by Shanti Maitri Mission an organisation that fights for land rights of people displaced by the Rajasthan Canal. Here I showed Pani Pe Likha (a film on the history of Narmada agitation). In the beginning people gasped at the mere sight of so much water. Could there be a problem when there is so much of standing, nay, flowing water? Later as the story revealed itself it became clear as to what the problem was. SMM activists said they would find it easier to talk of collective action, its repercussions and ways to handle the State after seeing/showing the film. On my way to Jodhpur I met a person in the bus who had been at the screening the previous evening in Bikaner. We got talking and he said after the film shows he had to get back to office. He worked in the land records department. I was surprised; he must have reached his office past nine in the night. He said some army people had come to his office and they wanted records of the past 40 years of a tehsil neighbouring the border. So late in the night, I asked. He said they wanted to evacuate legitimate landowners and shoo the rest away. And why would they want to do that, I asked. So that they could start laying land mines, was the nonchalant answer. Perhaps it is a standard peacetime activity or perhaps this current amicable relation with our neighbour is only till elections. Which one, I wondered? Shows in Udaipur were organised by a spirited duo, Pradnya and Himanshu Pandya of the People’s Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL). They had already conducted press briefings and informed everybody well in advance. Shows were held at Fateh Memorial Hall, a prime place in the centre of the city. Screenings were held over two days. There have been right wing attacks here recently at the Kala Mandal (a tribal art centre) by VHP/Bajrang Dal and the issue of censorship therefore is high on the minds of people. There was a call for more screenings and a proactive action against vandalism and bigotry. Shows in Jaipur were organised by Kavita Srivastava and Shiv Kumar Gandhi (both of PUCL). Shiv is a painter/illustrator and has recently completed an experimental film ‘The Miles Between’ a well-made first film that juxtaposes sound and picture in a unique way, almost throwing them at each other violently and creating a new meaning. He showed his film after the screenings were over to a limited intimate audience. I must say that it is a good vibrant film screening culture that one has been able to initiate in most of the cites/towns one went to. At one place somebody wanted to show a fresh copy of Kiarostami’s ‘Ten’ as part of the screenings. Watching movies was in the air and everybody wanted to participate. At another place a participant wanted a poetry session in the middle of two films. I thought it was a great idea. I showed films wherever they could be organised, in large auditoria (and smaller ones), in a library, in community halls, NGO office premises, hotel rooms, bedrooms and once in a madarsa. Showing films can be fun. Organising the screenings can be tedious especially if you have to start from a scratch. But once it is underway you can actually sit back and enjoy. Usually I travel only while shooting or recce. For screenings on the other hand, I had no pressing urgencies on my mind, no production hassles, no camera rentals, no light boys etc., therefore, I could sit back and enjoy once screening logistics were taken care of. One grows a certain affinity towards the films you are showing although one may not have made them. I think that is important, without that it is not possible to show films. Also practice makes perfect. I have a better idea of the package I would carry when I go the next time. Most importantly, while watching films with different audiences and in different locations one could, if one is alert, get new ideas for films that one would want to make someday or a script that one has been working on. There is a lot to learn from the plus and minus of the films one is showing, again, if alert. Therefore, I urge everybody - begin screenings. Begin randomly, with whatever films you get, even if you don’t like some of them. Study their effects on various audiences and later you could work out a package that you could carry. Begin at home if you can’t go out, or at a friend’s place. Begin anyway. The audiences are ready; the organisers for the screenings are ready and waiting. Let us do our bit and strike while it is hot. |
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