Albuquerque Journal

Correcting history

Documentar­y reveals the overlooked life of activist Kasturba Gandhi

- BY ADRIAN GOMEZ JOURNAL ARTS EDITOR

Cynthia Lukas’ journey is coming full circle. The filmmaker will premiere the documentar­y, “Kasturba Gandhi: Accidental Activist,” at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 19, at the Santa Fe Film Festival.

“Being selected to the Santa Fe Film Festival means the most to me because I’ve been showing my films here for years,” Lukas says. “I’m thrilled to come back and show what I’ve been working on for the last five years.”

Lukas says the documentar­y is the first feature film on Mahatma Gandhi’s wife and reveals informatio­n about her and her husband that only a few Gandhi scholars have known.

The narrator is acclaimed actor of film and television, Naveen Andrews.

Lukas began the film while she lived in Santa Fe. The production took the filmmaker to India, South Africa and U.K. as she filmed at Gandhi sites, and interviewe­d Gandhi relatives and scholars. She worked with Santa Fe-based editor Molly McKinley.

In 2019, Lukas moved from Santa Fe to Kansas to care for her 93-yearold mother and completed the documentar­y. She has dedicated it to her mother, Margaret Lukas, now 96.

“When I was co-producing two documentar­ies on Gandhi’s life, I was stunned to learn there was no feature film about her, who was with him every step of the way,” Lukas says. “I made it my mission to correct history.”

Born in 1869, she was the wife of 62 years to an icon of the 20th century, whose disciples include Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela. But Gandhi, the Master of Nonviolenc­e, credited her with teaching him about nonviolenc­e. Then she became one of the first women activists in modern history, creating a legacy for women today to follow by taking action in their communitie­s for freedom and human rights.

The film’s subtitle, “Accidental Activist,” references how unlikely this true story is.

When Kasturba Gandhi was growing up in a small traditiona­l Indian village in the late 19th century, she expected to become a traditiona­l Indian wife and mother. But when her parents married her to Mohandas Gandhi at the age of 13, her life was turned upside down. She became a wife and later a mother, and then a woman who led a march of women for women’s rights, and going to prison in 1913.

“The biggest obstacle from a technical point of view is there isn’t a lot of archival photograph­s of her,” Lukas says. “I was extremely fortunate that the Gandhi Foundation was able to give me footage of her. They wanted me to make the definitive biography of her.”

The documentar­y is slated to premiere on PBS beginning March 1 in honor of Women’s History Month.

 ?? COURTESY OF CYNTHIA LUKAS ?? “Kasturba Gandhi: Accidental Activist” will have its U.S. premiere at the Santa Fe Film Festival on Sunday, Feb. 19. The film tells the story of Kasturba Gandhi.
COURTESY OF CYNTHIA LUKAS “Kasturba Gandhi: Accidental Activist” will have its U.S. premiere at the Santa Fe Film Festival on Sunday, Feb. 19. The film tells the story of Kasturba Gandhi.

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