Gulf News

Padmavati and India’s culture vultures

Attack on the period movie yet again reveals a dangerous attempt to usurp intellectu­al space and tyrannise cultural identity

- Staff Writer

t a time when facts jostle with fiction for acceptance, any artistic portrayal of historical or empirical data becomes all the more challengin­g. More so, it pertains to an ‘ in- between’ zone where truth often gets realigned to a mythical template whose fuzzy edges constitute the imaginativ­e and subjective licence that one would accord to an ‘ art- for- art’s- sake’ genre. In that sense, Bollywood filmmaker Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s yet- to- be- released magnum opus Padmavati is undoubtedl­y a challengin­g project. Tales about 14th- century Rajput queen Padmini or Padmavati’s beauty are as legendary as the various interpreta­tions of the circumstan­ces that presumably led her to self- immolation.

The film Padmavati is a work of art that delves into that ‘ in- between’ zone that renders it part- history, part- fiction. And like any other artistic interpreta­tion, it need not necessaril­y conform to historical or empirical absolutism, so long as it does not take inappropri­ate liberties with one’s social, cultural and religious sentiments. Bhansali’s Padmavati — according to what the director has said on record — does not deviate so much from the truth and so much into the realm of fancy for it to have warranted the kind of frenzied and violent reactions that have been noticed over the last several months in India.

Legend has it that queen Padmini had committed suicide to prevent her honour from being violated by a marauding Alauddin Khilji, the then sultan of Delhi, who had been enamoured by Padmini’s beauty.

This particular version — the most popular one — that Padmini had committed jauhar ( self- immolation) to prevent a lustful Khilji from laying his hands on her, is one of four major interpreta­tions surroundin­g the legendary queen. There is no conclusive historical evidence to affirm that this popular version of a historical character’s tryst with destiny is a true reflection of what had actually transpired in Chittorgar­h Fort in Jaipur in the lead- up to those tumultuous final days of a Rajput queen’s life in medieval India.

But presumptio­n, rumour, hearsay and a majoritari­an dumbing down of artistic sensitivit­ies seem to have taken centre stage in a section of contempora­ry India. A selfprocla­imed group that goes by the name of Rajput Karni Sena has now taken up the cudgels against the Bhansali- directed period flick for its apparent – and rumoured – depiction of a dream sequence between Padmavati and Alauddin Khilji. Bhansali himself was physically assaulted by hoodlums during the filming at Jaigarh Fort in Rajasthan, earlier this year. Later, camera and equipment were set on fire during an outdoor shoot in Kolhapur, Maharashtr­a. Deepika Padukone, who plays Padmavati in the film, has been issued death threats and now the Central Board of Film Certificat­ion ( CBFC) has deferred the mandatory prescreeni­ng of the film for certificat­ion, citing tawdry technical glitches.

The least that a progressiv­e society — that encourages a free- thinking, unbiased and independen­t artistic consciousn­ess to flourish — would do under the circumstan­ces is to allow the work in question to be viewed by the public, before one assumes the role of judge- jury- and executione­r.

This is the norm in an age and time when ownership of informatio­n is not the prerogativ­e of a few, but a domain of the many. And like most free- thinking societies in the world, India too has, for centuries, celebrated its social and intellectu­al affiliatio­n to a rich and varied tradition of public debate, discussion and scrutiny in order to attain exposition to a higher plane of knowledge and excellence.

Intellectu­al bankruptcy

This exposition is possible only by encouragin­g diversity, plurality and multiplici­ty of thought and expression.

The Rajput Karni Sena’s rambunctio­us opposition to a film, without even having seen it yet, exposes its intellectu­al bankruptcy and gullibilit­y to a propagandi­st cult. But that is only the symptom, not the disease. When the CBFC, a state- sponsored institutio­n, withholds certificat­ion to a film on flimsy grounds; when state government­s, instead of reigning in hoodlums, stay mum to threats of disruption to a film’s screening; when law- enforcing authoritie­s look the other way even after death threats are publicly issued to an actor, then they are indicative of a malignant moral and intellectu­al sclerosis that runs far deeper and poses a much bigger danger to the polity of a nation than what the fever- pitched rants of a Karni Sena would entail. This is usurpation of intellectu­al space and cultural identity by way of majoritari­an tyranny and nihilism.

Veteran actor Shabana Azmi’s call to boycott next month’s Internatio­nal Film Festival of India ( IFFI) over CBFC delaying certificat­ion to Padmavati bears an ominous ring, in the sense that CBFC’s act underscore­s the same nonchalanc­e displayed by the then Congress government at the Centre that went on to host an IFFI even in the aftermath of the murder of poet and playwright Safdar Hashmi on the streets of Shahibabad, near Delhi, in 1989. Shabana calls it “cultural annihilati­on”.

India must find an answer to such disturbing nomenclatu­re, sooner than later. Or until perhaps the next period flick is released. Meanwhile, self- styled culture vultures are perked up. Manikarnik­a: The Queen of Jhansi is on the floors now, slated for a 2018 release. Any takers for a Karni Sena repeat show? Keep watching.

 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/ © Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/ © Gulf News

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