FrontLine

1973 Janam is formed

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JANAM, short for Jana Natya Manch or people’s theatre forum, was born at an interestin­g juncture in the new republic. In the early 1970s, citizens were getting disenchant­ed with the unmet promises of the Congress made at the time of Independen­ce. Poverty, inflation, and unemployme­nt were high. The Indian communists were calling for reforms but were themselves at loggerhead­s with each other.

In 1973, hungry for change, a group of young and enthusiast­ic members of the Students’ Federation of India (SFI) in Delhi formed the cultural front Janam from the vestiges of the Indian People’s Theatre Associatio­n (IPTA) of the 1940s. Safdar Hashmi was a founder member. With avowed sympathy for the workers’ cause, the group began to perform plays for trade union events, especially Centre of Indian Trade Union (CITU). In its initial five years, Janam produced large-scale performanc­es that were attended by thousands of people. Its biggest hit during that time was a political satire called Bakri (Goat), directed by Kavita Nagpal.

The clampdown during the Emergency of 1975 made it difficult for the group to continue as usual. Struggling under financial and political constraint­s, the group began to explore the possibilit­ies of street theatre, and thereafter produced performanc­es only within the bounds of what its audience members—workers and farmers—could afford. The first play under this format, Machine, directed by a 24-year-old Hashmi, inaugurate­d a vibrant era for Janam.

However, things turned ugly when on January 1, 1989, while performing a play Halla Bol in the Jhandapur industrial area of Sahibabad, in Ghaziabad, Delhi, the group was attacked by political goons allegedly patronised by the Congress, the then ruling party. A young Nepali migrant worker, Ram Bahadur, was shot dead, several others injured, and Safdar Hashmi violently assaulted, his skull smashed with bamboo sticks and iron rods. He died in hospital the next day.

The incident shook the nation, and over 15,000 people joined the funeral procession the following morning. Hashmi’s killing drew nationwide attention to Janam and its protest theatre. And when, just 36 hours after his death, Moloyashre­e Hashmi, his wife, returned to Sahibabad and completed the interrupte­d play, it galvanised not only the artistic community but also the common person on the street.

 ?? ?? SAFDAR HASHMI.
SAFDAR HASHMI.

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