No crying halt to communal riots

Strange   ironies hit each   day.  Sangeet  Som, one of  the accused  cum suspect in the  2013   riots of  Muzaffarnagar, is  getting   some  sort of  special  protection   by the  establishment!

In fact, correct me if  I’m wrong; but today all it  requires  is  to  be  in the   Right  Wing fold and  then  with that  certificate tucked  in  your   inner  or  outer folds  you  could utter or  mutter or  execute any  possible   unthinkable !  This trend is   gaining   graph and   yet   there is   no crying halt. You could   kill and  rape and    utter  nonsense  in the   midst of   communal  rioting ,    but   because of    double   standards  in  vogue  you’d  be    not  just   left untouched but even  garlanded   during   meets and   provided   special  protection so that   your  limbs   remain  untouched  ! 

Shubradeep  chakravorty  passes  away

New Delhi based   journalist turned documentary film maker Shubhradeep   Chakravorty passes   away. Monday   brought along   the news of the passing away of the   New Delhi filmmaker   Shubhradeep   Chakravorty . I had  met   him and   his  wife  Meera for  an interview  soon  after he had  made  the  documentary, After  The  Storm, focusing      on  7   young Muslim  men who had  been  jailed  with  terror  charges  and  later    proven  innocent  and  acquitted from the  various  courts .Acquitted  after  being  ruined on every possible  front  .No  apology  from the  establishment of the  day and  nil compensation  for  ruining  their  lives  and with that  of  their  families  .  I  recall   Shubradeep’s    this  particular comment  - “ these  7  are  a small number  … at least one  thousand   innocent  young  Muslim men    could  be   sitting    jailed in  India  ,  implicated  with  terror  charges on their  heads…” 

Shubradeep  had come   across   as  not  just  very  well informed   about the   ground  realities   but  also  passionate   about  film  making .  A  former  journalist  he   focused    on   film making as , perhaps ,   this  medium   could  portray  and  project   much  more  . In fact,  last  autumn ,  soon after the  Muzaffarnagar  riots ,    he and  Meera  had    traveled   extensively  in that  belt  ,  coming up with  yet  another  startling    documentary   on  the   grim   ‘ political  truths’    behind  those riots  .   This  documentary, En  Dino  Muzaffarnagar, ran into   trouble with  the   establishment  and    banned  after  the   initial screening in  April  at    Mumbai’s   Prithvi  Theatre   .Later    it  was    refused clearance for screening by the Central Board  of  Film Certification (CBFC). His application to the Film Certification Appellate Tribunal (FCAT) against the CBFC decision was also turned down. Shubradeep     did not give up.  He was determined to   fight   the “gagging order on the film by the Modi   establishment.”

Quite  obviously  he   was    under  tremendous  strain and  stress    and  with that    suffered   brain haemorrhage and  slipped into coma    .He  died  this  Monday, August  25 . Shubradeep   died  young  .He   was   42   .He  would  have  definitely   made  several  more powerful  documentaries  ;   he  was  equipped with  the   zeal and     grit to  expose  the   realities of the   day  . Now  his  widow    Meera   should  carry on  the  legacy  and  show   his   documentaries    to  a larger  audience .

Another   journalist turned filmmaker who   had died young

 Images of   Pamela Rooks resurface,   as I   sit and re-read Khushwant Singh’s   ‘Train   to Pakistan’   . Pamela    died young. In  fact, in 2005  she’d   met    with  a  freak  car accident    in New Delhi’s  Vasant  Kunj  area  . And   with that  accident she  had  slipped into coma  and  lay  in that  coma condition for  over    4  years. She‘d died   in the autumn of    2010 When she was   52 years old.

I had  met  Pamela  Rooks several times  at  Khushwant  Singh’s   home  ,  when she  was making a    film  based  on his  novel  -  Train to Pakistan. Of course, before  I’d met  her ,   I’d  known  she  was  a  journalist  turned  documentary film maker  .And its  said that  during  one of the  journalistic   assignments  ,  which  took  her to interviewing  Conrad  Rooks  , that she  fell in love with that  famous  film  director  ( who had  made /directed the film -  Siddhartha ) . Intense  love  affair   between   Pamela  Juneja  ( that  was her  maiden  surname    )  and   Conrad  Rooks, which  led  towards  marriage. The two got  married   but the  marriage  didn’t  last  long. The couple   had a son, who after the  marriage  broke, went to  live with the  father.

 

Later  Pamela  had  found a companion   in  Richard  Holkar, from the  princely state of   Indore, he  is    the  son of the  Maharaja of Indore , Shivaji  Rao  Holkar. The  two, Pamela and  Richard,  were  always  together  …I’d spotted them always together  at  parties, receptions  , book  launches  and  , of course    , at  Khushwant’s  home .

Pamela Rooks  and  Richard  Holkar   seemed  to have a  certain chemistry  about them  ,  a certain   rapport  ;   though  he  looked the  simple  and the  no - fuss  sorts ,  whilst  she  looked  somewhat  tight and  arrogant .  So much so that  once   I  overheard  this  bit of   conversation   :     when  a  journalist   wanted to interview  Pamela    , he  thought  its  best to  request  Richard   if  he could ask her   on his  behalf .And this  when she  was  sitting   right there ,  in the  same  room. When the journalist    repeated his request  , Richard  rather  too nervously  said ,   “Please  ask  Memsahib  herself.”   The  word  ‘memsahib’  seemed  somewhat  amiss in these  times  , but she  turned  around  confidently ,   absolutely  unfazed  and  gave  time for the   interview  .

She was   confident and   suave and sophisticated. And, ah, yes, attractive and well groomed.  And she  seemed  happy  in  Richard’s   company  …attired in Western  attires  and  not really  in any of the famed   Maheshwari  saris   .Why  I am  bringing in this    , is  because   she   and Richard     had  also  focused   attention to  Richard  Holkar’s  ancestral  place  -   Ahilya Fort in   Maheshwar  .  They  wanted to  bring   focus on the   Holkar’s   ancestral  little   erstwhile  kingdom , with all its   aspects   , including  those  hues and  forms  of  the  traditional weave  , those  traditional  saris   coming   back  on the  circuit  .

Pamela Rooks   died young .No, not   unsung. Not  the  typical   Bollywood filmi   types ,  she  was  well  known  on  Delhi’s  circuit . Perhaps , she  could  have  made  several more  full -fledged  feature  films  ,  if she had  shifted  base to  Mumbai  or  if she’d  started her   film  making  career  somewhat  earlier  …    in those  earlier years of her  film making career she   had  concentrated only  on  documentaries .Its  later  she’d  begun  focusing on  feature  films .  And  in between  it all   she ‘d  been writing  and also  traveling and also focusing on  her  partner  Richard’s  ancestral  territory and those  ethnic  offshoots  to  it .