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Friday, 24 November 2017

The politics of Padmavati: Did a mythical queen trigger turmoil in the nation?

A still unseen film about a mythical queen has the nation in turmoil. Where will it end?

Push and shove and slap the filmmaker in January 2017. Vandalise the sets in Nagpur in March. Threaten to chop off the leading lady's nose. Call to behead the two for Rs 10 crore. Attack a cinema hall in Kota. Declare a nationwide bandh.

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The Padmavati versus the politics drama has played out in troubling fashion with threats of Tarantinoesque violence. At the end of Kill Padmavati: Part One, it's the bad guys who win.
The Shri Rajput Karni Sena, a minor group of Rajputs headed by Lokendra Singh Kalvi, presently a BJP supporter and son of the late Union minister Kalyan Singh Kalvi, has temporarily won the battle by forcing the producers, Viacom 18 Motion Pictures and Bhansali Productions, to postpone the film's release.

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The filmmakers insist Padmavati "captures Rajput valour, dignity and tradition in all its glory" and that the film "will fill every Indian with pride". That the blow to Indian cinema comes when the Smriti Irani-led Information and Broadcasting Ministry celebrates Indian and world cinema at the International Film Festival of India in Goa is an irony not lost on anyone.

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With the Sena, Kshatriya Samaj, Bajrang Dal, Rajasthan's royalty and more convinced that the film will distort history and hurt public sentiment, Bollywood finds its creative licence under siege. In an interview to India Today, Kalvi suggests that the Centre is complicit in Padmavati's delay. "The film's release has been postponed because of pressure from the people as well as an active role played by the top leadership, the PM and the I and B minister," he says.

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This isn't the first time the decade-old outfit has locked horns with Bollywood in the name of Rajput pride. In 2008, it was Jodhaa Akbar, targeted for depicting Jodhaa as Akbar's wife. Nine years later, it's Padmavati. "The three-minute trailer gives us an idea of what the film is about. That is enough to express dissent," says Kalvi who hasn't seen the film and doesn't trust Bhansali to show him the final theatrical cut. "Deepika (Padukone, the heroine) is a nalayak (stupid). She challenged us, saying the film will be released at any cost. Now we are determined not to allow the release of the film anywhere."
This time around, the Sena's angry rhetoric has been empowered by the Rajasthan government whose Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje wants a committee of historians, film experts and Rajput community members to scrutinise the film. The UP, MP, Gujarat and Punjab governments have also refused to allow the release of the film until the objectionable material is removed. At the time of writing, Maharashtra and Telangana too were contemplating a ban. In their opposition, there is consensus: Padmavati's release is a threat to law and order as it will hurt Rajput .

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For the concluding Kill Padmavati: Part Two to unfold, one hopefully with a better-ending, the makers have been told to wait until Gujarat votes, according to sources at the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC). At stake is the Rajput vote in Gujarat, amounting to six per cent of the voting population. 

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For the BJP, the growing alliance between the Karadia Rajputs and Patels, traditionally seen as rivals, in the coastal belt of Saurashtra is a worrying development. The Patels, under the leadership of Hardik Patel, have accused BJP state president Jitu Vaghani, a Patidar himself, of not fighting for the community's rights. 

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The Rajputs, meanwhile, believe Vaghani is guilty of arm-twisting tactics and "has an anti-Rajput mindset". Anxiety looms furthermore with both Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh (which has the second highest Rajput population, after Rajasthan), going to polls in 2018.




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