Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Now, Gujarat bans Padmavati Padmini’s story in MP textbooks

GROWING NOISE VHP will meet filmmakers to ensure they carry out ‘thorough research’

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an and Hiral Dave Shruti Tomar

NEW DELHI/AHMEDABAD: Gujarat joined Madhya Pradesh in banning controvers­ial Bollywood film Padmavati on Wednesday as the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) backed protesters and said it will tell filmmakers to not hurt Hindu sentiments.

Gujarat chief minister Vijay Rupani told reporters that his government would not allow Padmavati to be released because it hurt the sentiment of the Rajput community.

“There are issues with the film, our sympathy is with those who are protesting against it….” he said. The decision was taken keeping in mind the law and order situation before elections next month in the state, the chief minister added.

The VHP, an affiliate of the RSS, said it will meet filmmakers from January to ensure directors did “thorough research” before making movies so that they didn’t hurt Hindu sentiments or distort the history of India.

“There are sentiments that get hurt, so the film makers must take care not to tamper historical facts,” said Surendra Jain, the internatio­nal joint general secretary of the VHP. “In trying to underplay the excesses by Muslim invaders, pseudo historians subdued the tales of valour of Hindu kings and queens such as Padmavati.”

Padmavati is battling mounting protests by the Rajput community, which claims a distortion of history in the depiction of legendary queen Padmini, who is said to have killed herself to avoid

CM CHOUHAN HAD EARLIER ANNOUNCED THAT A MEMORIAL WILL BE BUILT IN MP AND AN AWARD WILL ALSO BE INSTITUTED IN RANI PADMINI’S NAME

being captured by Muslim emperor Alauddin Khilji. Outfits such as the Shri Rajput Karni Sena are angry over a rumoured depiction of romance between Padmini, played by Deepika Padukone and Khilji, played by Ranveer Singh.

The film’s crew is facing several death threats, including a ₹10 crore bounty for beheading Bhansali and Padukone offered by a Haryana BJP leader. The film’s release was put off last Sunday in the face of the protests.

Madhya Pradesh has already banned the film and states such as Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan have asked the Centre to ensure edits to the movie to not offend sentiments of the Rajput community. Haryana chief minister Manohar Lal Khattar has said his government would take a call on allowing the screening of the film after a decision of the Central Board of Film Certificat­ion (CBFC) – which is yet to see the movie.

In Delhi, Karni Sena chief Lokendra Singh Kalvi, who claims to be a descendant of queen Padmini, appealed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi to bar the film from being screened and ensure that Rajput pride was not hurt.

He also said he hadn’t seen the film but based his outfit’s violent protests on an interview by Singh, where he apparently had hinted at a romantic sequence with Padukone in the film. Bhansali has repeatedly denied any such sequence was shot and several historians have doubted whether Padmini ever existed.

“There is no alternativ­e, but to consign the reel of the film to fire. The film disrespect­s our sentiments,” he said.

But minutes later, he added that his outfit would withdraw the protests if the royal family of Mewar was satisfied with the movie.

A parliament­ary panel has sought a report from the informatio­n and broadcasti­ng ministry and the censor board. BJP leader CP Joshi, who is also a member of the panel, told a news agency the movie should be shown to historians and the descendant­s of the erstwhile royal families, who trace their lineage to Padmavati, before release.

“The panel has referred the matter to the informatio­n and broadcasti­ng ministry and the censor board. It has also asked them to submit a report before November 30,” senior BJP leader Bhagat Singh Koshyari, who heads the panel, said. BHOPAL: The story of Rajput queen Padmini will be taught in Madhya Pradesh schools from next year, chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan said on Wednesday, two days after banning the Deepika Padukone-starrer, Padmavati, that is facing protests by Hindu right-wing groups for allegedly distorting history.

Chauhan made the announceme­nt in Ujjain during a function function organised by the Rajput community to felicitate him for banning the movie in the state.

“People are unaware of the life history of maharani Padmavati. The young generation is being taught distorted history and there is a need to teach them about the great personalit­y of Padmavati,” he said.

Chouhan had earlier announced that a memorial will be built in MP and an award will also be instituted in her name.

The Rajput community has accused the film’s director Sanjay Leela Bhansali of dishonouri­ng the former queen of Mewar, who is believed to have committed ‘jauhar’, the medieval practice in which female royals walked into funeral fires to embrace death over the dishonour of being taken captive.

MP textbooks at present mentions the queen in a chapter on the siege of Chittorgar­h — the capital of Mewar — Allauddin Khilji, who is said to have been enamoured by the queen’s beauty and invaded the kingdom to take her as his wife.

Historians differ on the existence of Padmini, who is said to have been mentioned in a 16th century Sufi epic poem ‘Padmavat. Many say the epic has come to be seen as history despite little evidence.

“I have read all the books of that era, but I didn’t find anything about maharani Padmini. No contempora­ry writer has written a single word about her courage. I have also read all the books of Rajput vanshavali (family tree), but Padmini is missing in it too,” said Bhopal-based historian Rizwan Uddin Ansari.

The opposition Congress called Chouhan’s move a publicity stunt for gaining political mileage. “If the chief minister believes that maharani Padmavati is a ‘Rashtramat­a’ (mother of the nation) since his childhood, why he is he announcing it now? All the steps are being taken to please Rajput community for votes,”congress chief spokespers­on KK Mishra said.

 ?? SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO ?? Founder of Shree Rajput Karni Sena Lokendra Singh Kalvi (centre) Founder at a press conference on the outfit’s objections to the film at the Press Club in New Delhi, India on Wednesday.
SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO Founder of Shree Rajput Karni Sena Lokendra Singh Kalvi (centre) Founder at a press conference on the outfit’s objections to the film at the Press Club in New Delhi, India on Wednesday.

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