No, this can't be happening in democratic India. Worse still these two documentaries, shot with the emotional velocity of feature films (Inshanallah, Football is particularly elegiac lyrical and inspiring) are faced with censorial issues
Speaking on the Inshallah Kashmir Ashvin states, "People think it's about extremism. It's actually about humanity. It's a companion piece to my earlier film Inshallah Football. "
Apparently a multiplex chain has offered to buy both of Ashvin's documentaries and release them as one film. Provided the censorboard clears them both.
At the moment Ashvin has taken on the censorboard and the Censor Board Of Film Certification (CBFC) has asked him to appear before them explaining his press statements alluding to alleged irregularities in the CBFC. Sighs Ashvin, "I wish I didn't have to be in this unenviable position where I have to make an appearance before the censorboard. They're hauling me up for making certain comments, some general comments I made about corruption.
I don't wish to take on the censorboard. I just want to make the point that there's a lot of subjectivity involved in the decisions which may result in undue coercion. I've already sent the CBFC a long and detailed email on my problems with censoring. I think we should re-examine the rules and laws of our country. "
Ashvin feels the censorboard has made myopic observations on his Inshallah Kashmir. "The CBFC can't seem to differentiate between an independent voice in a film giving a testimony, and the voice of the filmmaker.
They seem to think the voices in a documentary represent the filmmaker's voice. The censorboard doesn't seem to understand the documentary format. Inshallah Kashmir was completed on January 26. Very signifinant, isn't it. At the moment I've not screened it anywhere since it remains banned. "
However Pankja Thakur the CEO of the CBFC has another story to tell. "Inshallah Kashmir has not been banned. It went to the Examining Committee which referred it to the Revising Committee. The Revising Committee will soon re-view the film. This is the standard procedure as prescribed by law to certify films. And the director will be called for a meeting to put his views forward. "
Sources inform us that the CBFC intends to consult experts on the Kashmir issue before taking a decision on Inshallah Kashmir.
Ashvin Kumar adds, "It is very important for the rest of India to understand the issues in Kashmir. The last 20 years of government propaganda about Kashmir has created a one-sided discourse and any opinion that contradicts that discourse is considered anti-national. That's absolutely ridiculous.
We need not one or two films like Insallah Kashmir, but hundreds of such films. It's a very critical issue for our democracy. There're so many issue that have cropped up recently to shake up every liberal-thinking democrat, whether it the Salman Rushdie controversy or Sanjay Kak not being able to screen his film in a private university in Pune.
If common people in India and Pakistan do not have access to the reality in Kashmir then we're in deep trouble. Even my other documentary Inshallah Football shot in Kashmir has been given an ‘A' certificate. There is no basis whatsoever to give an ‘A' certificate to a documentary which has neither violence nor sex. "
When I point out that Ashvin Kumar's two documentaries may have serious political ramifications and hence the ‘A' certificate Ashvin retorts, "Are we saying that under 18s cannot understand the suffering of Kashmir? Inshallah Football is about a young footballer who gets a scholarship to go to Brazil. But the Indian government denies him a passport because his father is an ex-militant.
My documentary is about this kid's aspirations. I've tried to look at the Kashmir crisis from a humanitarian point of view. The description of the French Revolution in textbooks is as disturbing as what is going on in Kashmir. We've detailed descriptions of the violence that Bhagat Singh and Subas Chandra Bose resorted to, to achieve independence.
What is so objectionable about a Kashmiri militant talking about his experiences? In my opinion the ‘A' certificate has been abused by the CBFC to restrict the circulation of Inshallah Football. It's a verdict I had to accept or I'd have to battle for another two years. But if we don't listen to the voices from the Valley, it will be lost to us.
Thanks to the Pakistani influence in Kashmir the gentle Sufi side of Islam is almost lost in the Valley and replaced by anger and militancy. We've bred a generation of hatred in Kashmir. "
Ashvin condemns the concept of censorship. "Cinema is the only artform where a handful of people decide whether we can or cannot have access to a work of art.
My recommendation is to make the censorboard a body to only announce adult content to parents. I'm very happy to challenge the system in my small way. The cinema's role is to depict the changes in society. At the moment we can't do that. Given current censorship 30 years from now we'll look at a very cautious, politically correct cinema. "