Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Envoy rejects filmmaker’s remarks on Kashmir Files as row escalates

- HT Correspond­ents

NEW DELHI/JAMMU: Israeli ambassador Naor Gilon on Tuesday lashed out at Israeli filmmaker Nadav Lapid, the head of the jury at the Internatio­nal Film Festival of India (IFFI), for describing The Kashmir Files as “vulgar” and “propaganda”, and urged him to apologise to his hosts in India.

Lapid triggered a controvers­y on Monday by saying — from the dais during the festival’s closing ceremony — that the film, based on the exodus of Kashmiri Pandits during an upsurge in militancy in the Kashmir Valley in the 1990s, was “inappropri­ate for an artistic, competitiv­e section of such a prestigiou­s film festival”, indicating that it was not up to the standard of the other 14 films in this segment.

Enraged over Lapid’s criticism of “The Kashmir Files”, the internally displaced Kashmiri Pandits (KPS) on Tuesday staged a protest in Jammu and asked him to apologise to the entire community.

The KP community also asked the BJP government to convey in “strongest possible words” its resentment to the government of Israel.

“We are victims of genocide. We were raped and murdered. Our men were brutally butchered and someone from Israel makes an idiotic statement. It doesn’t make any sense on his part...he should apologise. We strongly condemn his statement,” said Asha Koul, one of the protesters.

The film, directed by Vivek Agnihotri and starring Anupam Kher, Mithun Chakrabort­y and Pallavi Joshi, was featured in the Panorama section of IFFI. The Kashmir Files has been backed by the BJP since its March 11 release but has polarised opinions with some experts questionin­g its accuracy.

Gilon took to Twitter on Tuesday morning to criticise Lapid’s stance and said he “should be ashamed”. Gilon demanded an apology from the Israeli director, whose films have won a jury prize at the Cannes Film Festival in 2021, the Golden Bear award at the Berlin Internatio­nal Film Festival in 2019, and a special jury prize at the Locarno Internatio­nal Film Festival in 2011. Israel’s consul general in Mumbai, Kobbi Shoshani, addressed the media along with Kher and described Lapid’s comments as “big mistake”. Shoshani said the remarks were Lapid’s “private opinion” and had nothing to do with Israel. He said, The Kashmir Files is not propaganda but a “strong movie” that gives a voice to the suffering of people of Kashmir.

Kher agreed, and said the controvers­y has brought India and Israel closer. He also called Lapid a

“person who himself is vulgar and an opportunis­t”. Other members of the jury for IFFI also distanced themselves from Lapid’s comments and described them as “his personal opinion”. The most scathing criticism of Lapid came from Gilon, who posted a string of tweets questionin­g Lapid’s comments and highlighti­ng their impact on bilateral relations.

“The friendship between the people and the states of India and Israel is very strong and will survive the damage you have inflicted. As a human being I feel ashamed and want to apologize to our hosts for the bad manner in which we repaid them for their generosity and friendship,” Gilon said.

The envoy described his tweets as an “open letter” to Lapid following his criticism of “The Kashmir Files”. He added, “It’s not in Hebrew because I wanted our Indian brothers and sisters to be able to understand. It is also relatively long so I’ll give you the bottom line first. YOU SHOULD BE

ASHAMED.”

He added, “As a son of a holocaust survivor, I was extremely hurt to see reactions in India to you that are doubting Schindler’s List, the Holocaust and worse. I unequivoca­lly condemn such statements. There is no justificat­ion. It does show the sensitivit­y of the Kashmir issue here.”

Gilon further contended Lapid’s remarks may have been influenced by the director’s views on Israeli politics. He pointed in this context to an interview by Lapid with Israeli news website Ynet. “From your interview to Ynet the connection you make between your criticism of #Kashmirfil­es and your dislike to what is happening in Israeli politics was quite evident,” he said. The envoy received both support and criticism for his remarks on Twitter.

Will stop making films if any event in movie is proved false: Agnihotri MUMBAI: “The Kashmir Files” director Vivek Agnihotri on Tuesday said he will quit filmmaking if intellectu­als, including Israeli filmmaker Nadav Lapid, are able to prove that events depicted in his film are false.

“I challenge the world’s intellectu­als and ‘urban Naxals’ as well as the great filmmaker who came from Israel if they can prove that any shot, dialogue or event of ‘The Kashmir Files’ is not absolute truth, I’ll stop making films...issue as many fatwas as you want, but I’ll keep fighting,” the filmmaker said in a video statement shared on his official Twitter page.

The director, who won the National Film Award for best screenplay - dialogues for 2019’s “The Tashkent Files”, said 700 people were interviewe­d as part of the research for “The Kashmir Files” .

 ?? PTI ?? Members of the Kashmiri Pandit community protesting against Israeli filmmaker Nadav Lapid's remarks on the movie ’The Kashmir Files’ in Jammu.
PTI Members of the Kashmiri Pandit community protesting against Israeli filmmaker Nadav Lapid's remarks on the movie ’The Kashmir Files’ in Jammu.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India