Friday, September 14, 2018

Ever Lust Stories by evergreen Directors


Five years ago, we saw ‘Bombay Talkies’ and the gang of four hit back again exclusively for the ‘Netflix’ generation.  This time, we see the movie real time in the Fiji Islands after work. We see how they see people and places. There are four untitled stories done by Anurag Kashyap, Dibakar Banerjee, Zoya Akhtar and Karan Johar weaving Kiara Advani, Vicky Kaushal, Neha Dhupia, Radhika Apte and Bhumi Pednekar around a common motif.



The idea of launching the films on Netflix – a LIVE streaming platform is liberating for the filmmakers, I wish this existed when Kashyap made yet-to-be-released ‘Paanch’ I think, it would be a good idea to launch it legally now.  Coming back to where we began, there are clueless men and strong women fore-playing. The film is apt in a sexually liberated environment and very urban. All the films apart from the common theme ‘lust’ also portrayed how strong willed these women are and all of them exactly knew what they wanted in/from life.



Anurag Kashp’s opens the film with his muse Radhika Apte as Kalindi maam as a carefree, spirited women citing Amrita Pritam and Mahabharata giving a monologue in and out of the screen with the audience, was justifying her ‘acts’ at the same time susceptible by morality and legal arguments of rights and wrongs. Wont get into a spoiler mode as the film was released in June 15 and this is September, been three months already. 

The remaining Lusty stories can be seen at Netflix


Fiji and the Hindostan Via Calcutta

It's over one year for me in this beautiful island country tucked in the South Pacific Islands. After leaving Delhi, had zero idea what Fiji is about. Have lifted information etc. Now, will begin a series where i'll pick up words heavily influenced by Bengal. The place where most Indo -Fijians (forefathers) came from. Hope you will like it.


It’s literally a journey across oceans, mixing diplomacy and friendship with history, culture and civilizational memories. Located thousands of miles away in the South Pacific Ocean, but kindred in spirit, Fiji, a string of 800-plus stunningly picturesque coral islands, is intimately linked with India by over 300,000 persons of Indian origin who have made this Pacific nation their home for over a century.


Early ancestors of Indo-Fijians- Indians had been employed for a long time on the European ships trading in India and the East Indies. Many of the early voyages to the Pacific either started or terminated in India, and many of these ships were wrecked in the uncharted waters of the South Pacific. The first recorded presence of an Indian in Fiji was by Peter Dillon, a sandalwood trader in Fiji, of a lascar (Indian seaman) who survived a ship wreck and lived amongst the natives of Fiji.


First attempt to procure Indian labourers- Before Fiji was colonized by Great Britain, some planters had tried to obtain Indian labour and had approached the British Consul in Levuka, Fiji but were met with a negative response. In 1870 a direct request by a planter to the Government of India was also turned down and in 1872, an official request by the Cakobau Government was informed that British rule in Fiji was a pre-condition for Indian emigration to Fiji. The early ancestors of Fiji Indians came from different regions and backgrounds from India and other neighboring countries. However, most came from rural villages in northern and western India.

In January 1879, thirty-one Indians, who had originally been indentured labourers in Réunion, were brought from New Caledonia to Fiji under contract to work on a plantation in Taveuni. These labourers demonstrated knowledge of the terms of the indenture agreement and were aware of their rights and refused to do the heavy work assigned to them. Their contract was terminated by mutual agreement between the labourers and their employers. In 1881, thirty-eight more Indians arrived from New Caledonia and again most of them left but some stayed taking Indian wives or island women.

Arrival under the indentured system- The colonial authorities promoted the sugar cane industry, recognising the need to establish a stable economic base for the colony, but were unwilling to exploit indigenous labour and threaten the Fijian way of life. The use of imported labour from the Solomon Islands and what is now Vanuatu generated protests in the United Kingdom, and the Governor Sir Arthur Hamilton-Gordon decided to implement the indentured labour scheme, which had existed in the British Empire since 1837. A recruiting office was set up especially around Calcutta and the South, West and North later, especially a lot in rural village areas in different farming regions, land and areas.

The Leonidas, a labour transport vessel, disembarked at Levuka from Calcutta on 14 May 1879. The 463 indentured workers who disembarked were the first of over 61,000 to arrive from South and East Asia in the following 37 years. The majority were from the districts of eastern and southern provinces, followed by labourers from northern and western regions, then later south eastern countries, they originated from different regions, villages, backgrounds and castes that later mingled or intermarried hence the "Fijian Indian" identity was created. The indentured workers originated mostly from rural village backgrounds.

Indira Gandhi visited the Pacific nation 36 years ago in 1981.



The visit will have a special emotive resonance for the vibrant Indo-Fijian community, who act as bridge-builders between the two countries. India’s tryst with Fiji started when Indians were brought in as indentured labourers in 1879 to work in sugarcane plantations by the British in the island nation. Between 1879 and 1916 around 60,000 Indians were brought to Fiji. Called girmitiyas, after the name of the indenture agreement entitled girmit, the persons of Indian origin now comprise 37% of the 849,000 population (2009 estimates). The Indo-Fijians now permeate every sphere of life in Fiji and have enriched their adopted homeland with their multi-faceted talents. Be it business, politics, culture or entertainment, Indo-Fijians have left their indelible stamp. Mahendra Pal Chaudhry has the unique distinction of becoming Fiji's first Indo-Fijian prime minister after he won the elections in 1999. The community has integrated well with the Fijian way of life, but has retained vital cultural and spiritual bonds with the land their ancestors left behind decades ago.

Do let me know, what do you think of this blog post. Vinaka Vakalevu.




Monday, June 11, 2018

My second year IN FIJI

With a kiss let set out for an unknown world. FIJI

Seems like reborn, time to learn and unlearn things in life. Came here with a blank slate nine months ago.

I am definitely more Indian than ever and shall come back to my motherland with one more layer of patriotism. Feel more Indian here than I ever felt back in Bharat.



With less than 6 Indians in the new company I joined in August 2017, I was the 3rd recruit. Get surprised, amazed, shocked and awed all together at the same time everyday. Seems like life has definitely something else stored for me, which I don't know yet. This is a paveway and that's mysterious. 

Need to share (express) more through this platform in days to come. Rekindle the passion and start living for the heart and not just the stomach (paapi pet).

Vinaka

Thursday, March 8, 2018

Women's Day in a life of a Millennial

Pic Source: PWC-18
20's are a great time to spread those legs out on your sofa and munch a packet of Cheetos while thinking of what to wear to that party that awaits you on Friday night, and if you are edging out over the last few years of your 20s and find yourself living and working in a country like India, bless you because you won't run out of issues you "feel for" any time soon. I don't mean it in a bad way, but this is the best time to be a millennial in India. Every day comes wrapped with newer issues to fight for, and guess what, you have an audience for all your thought streams. Now writing a personal blog is fun for me, because this is only time I don't search the web for parallel narratives and sub-texts. No Huffington Post or Newyorker quotations will bore you. 

As I make my way through the crowded metro in New Delhi, I can't help but notice the growing number of women now working in my city, and women of all types, the saree connoisseurs, the fresh out of college girls, some with their headphones carefully plugged in to miss the chatter.
Pic Source- Quora
Back in 2007 things were different, we didn't have ladies compartment because there were lesser women working in the city, today we have pink autorickshaws and WiFi enabled cabs because of the growing working women population. In the wake of this not so subtle movement what does a 28-year-old woman think of Women's day and its relevance?

To begin with, I have conflicting thoughts about this "day" which I am sure most of my girlfriends also have primarily because I find the concept of celebrating a gender a little too amateur, I cannot undermine the dialogue that it's creating for sure, I am aware that these dialogues would mean a great deal to the women living in a small town in Udaipur who are now slowly foraying into the outside world in pursuit of sustainable livelihood opportunities . I have had the luck of knowing some of their stories and trust me you, women's day is for them first before you claim it for yourself. Fast forward 2018, now I am an urban woman of color from India living in a country that is not mine and far more progressive than the country of my birth, I can't stop feeling the daunting impression of patriarchy around my neighborhood. Sure the women here wear skirts for veils or traditional attire and have boisterous laughs but the men still drive the cars, so now I am back to my personal conflict zone that is my brain while i try to process all that information in my head.

If you ask me what women's day truly means to me i would tell you it should be a day where women must finally support women, not because she is your friend or you like her better than that other girl who couldn't find to meet you because she was running errands all day and you never bothered to open your heart to her issues, or because she is your mother. You must support other women because she is you. she braves that metro line because she chooses to not look at herself with empathy and it truly is about time that "women's day" becomes about women and not just the society's field day of posting lovely captions and content. 

Pic Source- Pinterest
I will confess, I have judged freely most of my 20s on how other women dressed and talked, and sometimes I still do , as guilty as I feel but when I step back and see the same women living a dignified(interpretations are free) life on her own terms my heart bleeds for I know I have sinned. This year I have decided to do away with flashy, sometimes untrue captions and write a blog instead because just four lines cannot do justice to what I truly think about this day. I feel a great deal about this day and so should you. So now that I am done writing, I wish you a great day ahead ladies and don't forget to catch up with each other this evening because at the end of the day all we truly have is each other.

The writer is Ronisha Bhattacharyya

Communications Expert
















Sunday, February 4, 2018

Rani Padmini, Padmaavati or Padmaavat

BHANSALI MOVIE DELAYED AND LAUNCHED UNDER FEAR. 

Yet to understand why so much cry over a historical event by a variety of sections in our society? FOR all kinds of reasons best known to their circuit of intellectuals, or not.
 The film poster made by Sanjay Leela Bhansali with the original name "Padmaati" outside a cinema hall in Nadi,Fiji Islands, South Pacifica region. 


Note: Noone is supposed to get offended because this post is to inform and make a protest (if needed) after having all the information in place, not before that).
Chor Minar near our place in South Delhi was built during Allaudin Khilji period. Around 800 years ago.


Few points to be noted.

1. Almost forgot who Allaudin Khilji was.
2. Mild remembrance of the story of the Queen Rani Padmini  (until the movie happened)
3. Forgot the name of our Rajput king Raja Ratan Rawal Singh of Chittor (before Wikipedia ing it until late night last night)
4. Remembered every protest by the Karni Sena a fringe noisy group claiming to be the bearers of Hindustani hindutva (the last being a debate between Arnab Goswami and another Karni Sena guy who kept on garraowling "abey sun le. Angrej" on live RepublicTV).

So, despite being tad lengthy (could have cut the flab out by 40 minutes ) the performance by trio Deepika, Shahid and Ranbir packed a punch or two. 
The expression of mise en scène
perfects the description. 
Again what were they protesting about, before even watching the film. The movie Taran Adarsh says may make money over 200 crore but what motivation it gives to small independent film makers in future? Anurag Kashyap' s "Paanch" is yet to see the official light as I write. The film was a fine piece of art threads of imagination weaved into a fine story. A good job done by the team. Nowhere it has gloried the Mughals or demean the Rajput.  So why the Halla  that our PM Modi had to intervene and give a go ahead for releasing the film (delayed by two months)? Should the movie be renamel as Padmaavati and not Padmaavat? 

According to this well researched blog.
https://www.esamskriti.com/e/History/Indian-History/Rani-Padmini-And-Alauddin-Khilji-1.aspx
(Rani Padmini was a princess of Jaisalmer or of Sinhala, a village near Sojat in Pali district of Rajasthan. In the history of Rajasthan there are many references which indicate that Rani Padmini was the 11th wife of Rawal Ratan Singh among his fifteen wives, as polygamy was prevalent among Rajput rulers then.)


It reads that Raja Ratan crossed seven seas to get the Sri Lankan Princess. Geographically you need to reach  Lanka, and starting from Chittor you take a ship from the south of Gujarat and keep going down over the Arabian Sea until late you reach Kerala and turn left. That's it. I doubt the Queen was from Sri Lanka. We can only imagine now. 

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

#Rebooting in Suva- Fiji

As if all your memory  (virtual) just got lost or taken away. And you got to start from scratch.  So be it. SFS.

As a friend said. You become stronger. 
#reboot


Pic source : Pacific_Travel guides

The Pacific Harbour Area, Fiji





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