Waikato Times

Outraged women threaten mass suicide over movie

- Padmaavat, Xander Cage XXX: Return of A History of - Washington Post Rajasthan,

INDIA: The queen’s palace is closed to visitors.

The white-domed building that sits - floats, really - on a reservoir inside a 7th-century fort here is named for Padmavati, the legendary queen who according to lore killed herself rather than be enslaved by a Muslim sultan.

Protests by a Right-wing Hindu group over a new Bollywood movie about the queen forced the fort’s closure this week as violence spread across several states. Highways were blocked, shopping malls set ablaze and the film’s award-winning director, Sanjay Leela Bhansali, burned in effigy. Protesters pelted a school bus with stones, with the video of weeping children caught inside appearing on the evening news. On Thursday the film,

debuted under heavy security, although many theatres were too scared to show it.

India has long banned books or films over sensitivit­ies to certain castes or religions, but the prolonged disruption caused by this particular film has raised concern that India is growing more divided - and that its governing political party, with roots in Hindu nationalis­m, may be appeasing fringe groups as elections loom.

Since filming began last year, the movie has provoked the ire of members of the Rajput caste, descended from warriors, who claim the period drama damages the image of the Rajput queen, revered as a goddess and worshiped in a temple where an oil lamp flickers round the clock in her honour. A leader of this week’s demonstrat­ion at the fort claimed that more than 1800 women were ready to set themselves on fire - as the queen did - to protest the movie’s release.

That did not come to pass. But in Chittorgar­h, a subdued town of 180,000 nestled below the sprawling fort, Rajput women marched carrying fake swords and said they were prepared for die for their cause, just like Padmavati or Rani Padmini, as she is known locally.

‘‘They are showing our history incorrectl­y. They have not given a religious touch to it - they have given a glamorous touch to it,’’ said Manjushri Shaktawat, an organiser. ‘‘If they are showing such disrespect to Padmini, who sacrificed so much and died, how will they treat Rajput women in the future? The only weapon we have is to kill ourselves and finish it off.’’

The trouble began last January, when protesters from an organisati­on called the Shri Rajput Karni Sena descended upon the film’s set at a different fort and slapped Bhansali, pulled the director’s hair and damaged cameras. Production for the film one of the most expensive Bollywood movies ever made moved to another state. The crew was attacked there, too, with gasoline bombs and swords.

Protesters wrongly believed the film showed the queen played by Deepika Padukone, Vin Diesel’s co-star in

- in a love scene with the Muslim conqueror. In fact, in the film the sultan only sees her face in a mirror, shrouded by incense smoke.

In November, protests again broke out, despite a video plea from Bhansali, who said that the film was a ‘‘tribute’’ to the queen’s sacrifice and that ‘‘there is nothing in the film which will hurt anyone’s sentiments.’’ A state-level spokesman for India’s governing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) inflamed tensions by offering US$1.5 million for Padukone’s head. The film’s producers delayed its release.

Many historians doubt Padmavati existed. Accounts of the Chittorgar­h fort’s siege in 1303 by Sultan Alauddin Khilji do not mention her, at least directly, according to Rima Hooja, author of although thousands of women did self-immolate, an act known in India as ‘‘jauhar,’’ as the fort was to fall.

The legend of Padmavati emerged in an epic poem penned more than 200 years later by a Sufi poet, who describes a queen whose beauty entranced Khilji and drove him to possess the fort.

‘‘There is no direct evidence that such a person existed,’’ said Aditya Mukherjee, chair of the Centre for Historical Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi.

‘‘This has got nothing to do with history and everything to do with politics. It’s an attempt to mobilise support and votes on the basis of identity issues.’’

He continued, ‘‘It’s not so much about Rajput pride as a Hindu-Muslim issue, where Muslims are the predators and Hindus have to protect themselves.’’

BJP state spokesman Tuhin A. Sinha said the charge that politician­s are encouragin­g such tensions and that BJP-led state government­s are not doing enough to quell them is ‘‘absurd.’’

Residents of Chittorgar­h believe Padmavati is real, her history kept alive through generation­s of bards.

 ?? PHOTOS: WASHINGTON POST ?? Women protest at in Chittorgar­h, India, after the film Padmaavat debuted under heavy security.
PHOTOS: WASHINGTON POST Women protest at in Chittorgar­h, India, after the film Padmaavat debuted under heavy security.

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