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Film News on July
Making 'Parzania' was a guilt trip:
Rahul Dholakia (INTERVIEW)
By Ashish Mehta, Indo-Asian News Service
New Delhi, July 21 (IANS) Rahul Dholakia, whose stunning "Parzania"
relates a heart-wrenching incident from the 2002 communal
violence in Gujarat, terms his film a guilt
trip.
"I am born and brought up in Ahmedabad. When something like this
(the sectarian strife) takes place, you feel equally
responsible. It (making "Parzania") was a guilt trip,"
Dholakia said.
Sparked off by the burning of a train coach in Godhra in which
59 Hindu passengers were killed Feb 27, 2002, the statewide
violence left at least 1,000 people - a majority of
them Muslims - dead and many more homeless.
Parzania, a young son of a middle-class Parsi couple, went
missing Feb 28, 2002, after a mob attacked a Muslim-dominated
neighbourhood where the family lived.
"It is a true story. This happened to a friend of mine. When I
heard about it from him, I thought this story must be told,"
said Dholakia.
"
The young boy who inspired the film,
called Azar, is still missing and the film ends with an appeal
to help trace him.
The powerful film centres around the struggle his parents -
played by Naseeruddin Shah and Sarika - have made to find the
light of their lives. In the process, it also lays bare
the madness, hate, political machinations that gripped Mahatma
Gandhi's Gujarat for weeks.
Making the film was predictably a challenge.
"Thankfully, there are non-conventional financiers for such
projects. Also, many including Naseer and Sarika worked with
virtually zero remuneration," said the filmmaker.
Moreover, he had to be careful shooting in Ahmedabad that is yet
to recover completely from the aftermath of one of the worst
riots in its history.
"Gujarat doesn't know I shot the film," Dholakia told IANS.
There is a scene showing activists of a radical Hindu group - a
not-so-veiled reference to the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) -
planting saffron flags on Hindu households and
shops run by the majority community in a 'pol', or old-city
neighbourhood, to mark places not to be touched while attacking
the minority community.
Dholakia recalled how they got away with the shoot in the walled
part of the city though the unit was asked if they were from the
VHP.
While the film has earned kudos in the festival circuit - it was
screened in New Delhi Thursday at the eighth Osian Cinefan
Festival Of Asian Cinema where the audience
applauded Dholakia - its commercial release is still facing
uncertainty.
Part of the reason could be the volatile ground it covers.
Though the film, dedicated to the victims of the Godhra tragedy
and the ensuing violence, shows acts of humanity as well as of
terror from either side of the communal
divide, some viewers have alleged it is one-sided and glosses
over the account preferred by a section of the majority
community.
"It is one-sided to the extent that we have sided with the
family. Many people, including Gujaratis, have seen it in
America. Many of them do not agree with certain things.
But they all feel what happened was wrong," Dholakia said.
Dholakia, who left Gujarat for film studies in the US, admitted
he was not sure if the film would be released in India, though
the censor board has now okayed it.
"That was one reason I chose to make it in English. The other
reason was that it deals with a universal issue. Such things are
happening around the world."
Asked if he would like his home state to see this film, he said:
"Why Gujarat, I want to see it released across India".
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