Arab Times

Sir tackles taboo in rigid Indian society

Romancing the maid

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CANNES, France, May 15, (Agencies): As a child, Rohena Gera never understood why her family’s live-in nanny, the “woman she loved like a second mother” was kept at arm’s length by her Indian family.

“I didn’t understand why this person who took care of me, who I loved... was so separate.”

In a country where millions of servants sleep on the floor of the homes they work in, the idea that a “master” might fall for the meek low-caste woman who is there to cook and scrub for him seemed “inconceiva­ble”, she said.

But that is the premise of Gera’s new film, “Sir”, an upstairs-downstairs love story of a kind she says has never been seen in an Indian movie.

That the maid is a widow — whose lives can be severely circumscri­bed in India — adds another layer of taboo to the tenderly told tale which premiered at the Cannes film festival Monday.

Young property developer Ashwin and his maid Ratna may live “under the same roof but they are in completely different worlds,” said Gera.

“They do not even speak the same language,” with him coming from the Englishspe­aking Mumbai elite and her a poor villager.

Even if by some miracle he married her, his family and friends might object to sharing a table with her.

Nor would she “be able to sit on a sofa with his sister”, Gera told AFP.

Gera

“Indian society is pretty rigid. It not so much the caste system as class these days which plays out as caste... And we accept it. No one is doing anything actively to challenge it.”

The director saw the divide more starkly when she returned from college in the US. “You see these dramatic inequaliti­es but I didn’t know what to do about it.

“I couldn’t be holier than thou because I am part of the problem,” Gera admitted.

So rather than making “some preachy story or tell people what to think”, instead she spun a subtly revealing study of thwarted love.

It is more Bergman than Bollywood, but as Gera joked, “it does have two dance numbers”.

“As you get older, you begin to realise how love operates, how we allow ourselves to love who we love,” she said.

“They are both victims in a way. He is in his gilded cage of privilege but he can’t live his dreams.”

Ratna the maid, played by rising star Tillotama Shome, is in some ways freer than him, Gera claimed, fired by a fierce determinat­ion to make the best of her circumstan­ces.

“People not familiar with India might think, ‘Oh my god, she sleeps on the floor in this little tiny room,” but in Indian terms she is in a relatively privileged situation for a maid, the director insisted.

“She is earning money and she has her dreams. She is not judging where she sleeps. It is not so different to what happened in England and Europe a few generation­s ago.”

Following those dreams as a widow sets her apart in a country where patriarcha­l attitudes have become more entrenched under the ruling Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party.

Widows are still seen as cursed or bringers of bad luck by some, Gera said.

“They are denied a lot of joy and from wearing certain colours... Even in the supposedly progressiv­e cities I have friends whose mothers lost their husbands in their forties and they never really moved on. You can’t date in India if you are a widow and you have a child. “For a widow to have desire is seen as prepostero­us.” But in the film Ratna — who has been brought up to be docile and deferentia­l, anticipati­ng her employer’s every whim — manages not just to free herself but also her master, without losing her dignity.

“I don’t know how people will take that,” said Gera, who hopes the film will be seen widely in India.

“I think it will make some people extremely uncomforta­ble, which isn’t a bad thing. But I think it will give others hope,” she said.

With two Indian women directors selected for Cannes for the first time ever this year, Indian indie cinema seems to be on the up. “It is a good year for Indian women at a very bad time for Indian women,” Gera said dryly. “Our voices need to be heard.”

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Smriti Irani has been fired as India’s Minister for Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng. She is replaced by her deputy Rajyvardha­n Rathore, but retains the textile ministry portfolio.

Irani, a former actress, had been in the job for only ten months. Rathore, a former profession­al shooter, will be the fourth person to head the I&B Ministry job since 2014, following Arun Jaitley, Venkaiah Naidu and Irani, since July last year.

Irani had been expected to attend the Cannes Film Festival, but her trip was cancelled only two days before her scheduled travel. Indian officials in Cannes explained her absence, and the attendance of Censor Board chief Prasoon Joshi in her place, by pointing to her role in regional elections back home.

Irani’s tenure in the I&B job had been plagued by controvers­ies and problems. A decision to award management of Internatio­nal Film Festival of India in Goa to the National Film Developmen­t Council might have drawn applause if the NFDC had been given more notice and if Irani’s ministry had not interfered with the selection of films - “… Durga” and “Nude” were both dropped from the lineup.

In March, it emerged that public broadcaste­r Prasar Bharati was being starved of funding for two months, in what was perceived as an act of retaliatio­n.

In April, Irani’s ministry proposed legislatio­n that would make fake news illegal. The idea was quickly withdrawn after protests from journalist­s that the new law would be used in a partisan fashion and be the death of news reporting.

The prestigiou­s ceremony to present the prestigiou­s National Film Awards also descended into chaos. When the awards president broke with tradition and decided not to hand out the prized personally, a contingent of 70 film makers organized a boycott.

The ministry also removed Nina Lath Gupta from her position at the head of the NFDC, and accused Gupta of mismanagem­ent. In recent days, following a legal challenge, all accusation­s against Gupta were withdrawn.

Irani, who had previously been a favorite of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, was recently cleared of misreprese­nting her educationa­l qualificat­ions. But taken together with earlier controvers­ies at the Human Resources Developmen­t, Irani has shown herself to be accident prone.

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