Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

FIGHTING FREE

- KumKum Dasgupta kumkumdasg­upta@hindustant­imes.com

“Aman was reduced to his immediate identity. To a thing. Never treated as a mind… a glorious thing made of star dust”. Hyderabad Central University (HCU)’s Dalit scholar Rohith Vemula’s suicide note lit a fire across India’s varsity campuses in 2016.

Even as HCU simmered over the administra­tion’s inept handling of the case and discrimina­tion against Dalit students, protests erupted in two other premier public varsities — Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) and Delhi University (DU) — over the arrest of student leader Kanhaiya Kumar on charges of sedition.

Earlier this year, students in DU clashed with rightwing groups over their right to free speech. In September, Banaras Hindu University (BHU) students held fierce protests against the university administra­tion’s failure to act on a case of molestatio­n and victim-shaming.

Such ferment on campuses gave Yousuf Saeed, an independen­t filmmaker, archivist and author, an opportunit­y to capture not just the belligeren­t mood but also the issues that are enraging students.

“The immediate trigger for Campus Rising was the 2016 JNU incident when some TV channels showed students seeking aazadi... it was assumed their slogans were anti-India,” Saeed says.

The New Delhi-based director felt their demand for freedom was seen from a very narrow perspectiv­e; he felt it was a result of deep dissatisfa­ction on issues such as “casteism, feudalism, religious fundamenta­lism and corruption”. These underlying causes, Saeed felt, were underplaye­d by the media and so students were condemned as “anti-national”.

“I started looking at the concept of freedom in university spaces and interviewe­d students,” Saeed says. “Freedom can never be a standalone concept. So discussion­s moved into issues of discrimina­tion and suppressio­n of thought.”

After speaking to students of seven universiti­es, Saeed says he began to feel that educationa­l institutes inculcated patriarchy and nepotism, and that India’s falling quality of education and research was also linked to the lack of freedom of speech and the shrinking space for debate.

Interestin­gly, for Saeed, the film became a recalibrat­ion of his own views.

“When I was in university, I was disdainful of students who participat­ed in pol- itics and leadership. I couldn’t figure out how they found time to study. This has probably been the thinking of many people who consider universiti­es or colleges as institutio­ns for career-making,” he says. But, he realised, political participat­ion by students is critical.

Campus Rising is also different from Saeed’s existing body of work, which has revolved around culture and science. He did 45 episodes of Doodarshan’s science programme Turning Point.

Earlier films included Khayal Darpan, exploring the developmen­t of classical music in Pakistan post-1947, and Khusrau Darya Prem Ka, a modern-day docudrama on 14th-century poet-composer Amir Khusrau Dehlavi.

He is the prime mover behind Ektara, a collective of media and art profession­als based in Delhi, and Tasveer Ghar, a digital archive for materials produced by South Asia’s exciting visual sphere.

The life of a documentar­y filmmaker, Saeed says, remains difficult. “We are always caught between marketing and production,” he says.

“If I put out 20 proposals, only 3 will manage funding. Indians don’t appreciate documentar­ies due to lack of exposure, so viewership is limited.”

Filmmaker and festival organiser Sanjay Joshi feels that movies such as Campus Rising are critical for a ‘new’ audience.

“Many would say that the film does not capture the views of the ‘other side’. But this is an artist’s response to what is happening and raises important questions on caste, gender and the education system,” says the national convener of the Cinema of Resistance Initiative.

“Thanks to digital technology, we can screen these films in small towns and villages... spark discussion­s… and that’s a huge, huge bonus.”

 ??  ?? A still from the documentar­y Campus Rising, by Yousuf Saeed (above right).
A still from the documentar­y Campus Rising, by Yousuf Saeed (above right).
 ?? BURHAAN KINU / HT ??
BURHAAN KINU / HT

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