I'm sharing this film on the blog in the context of the recent propaganda being issued by the communal right-wing parties in the Indian news media projecting Narendra Modi as a likely candidate for India's Prime Ministership. That, if happens, I maintain will be an unconscionable Ethical Catastrophe.
Final Solution by Rakesh Sharma
is a study of the politics of hate. Set in Gujarat during the period
Feb/March
2002 - July 2003, the film graphically documents
the changing face of right-wing politics in India through a study of
the 2002 genocide of Moslems in Gujarat. It specifically examines political
tendencies reminiscient of the Nazi Germany of early/mid-1930s. Final
Solution is anti-hate/anti-violence as “those who forget history are
condemned to relive it”.
Final
Solution was banned in India by the Censor Board for
several months. The ban was lifted in Oct.'04 after a sustained campaign
(an online
petition, hundreds of protest screenings countrywide, multi-city
signature campaigns and dozens of letters to the Government sent by
audiences directly).
A pirate-and-circulate campaign
was conducted in protest against the ban (get-a-free-copy-only-if-you-promise-to-pirate-and-make-5-copies).
Over 10,000 free Video CDs of the film were distributed in India during
this campaign, which ended in Dec. 2004. Final Solution was offered
free to Anhad for their campaigns; it was included in their anthology
titled "In defence of our dreams". Subscribers of several journals/mags
also got a copy of the film free of cost. These included Communalism
Combat (Ed : Teesta Setalvad and Javed Anand), Samayik Varta (Ed :
Yogendra Yadav), Janmat and several smaller journals.
Final Solution was rejected by the government-run Mumbai International Film Festival, but was screened at 'Vikalp: Films for Freedom', organised by the Campaign Against Censorship. Rakesh Sharma has been an active member of the Campaign since its inception.
Rakesh has been working on distribution of the film on a full-time basis since March 2004. Formally, about 21,000 video CDs and 4,000 DVDs of the film have been distributed. Informal circulation estimates ( post the pirate-and-circulate campaign) put the number somewhere between 40,000 to 100,000 copies. The film is now being dubbed in Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada and Tamil. An additional 25,000 video CDs of the language versions are expected to be released soon.
Final Solution was rejected by the government-run Mumbai International Film Festival, but was screened at 'Vikalp: Films for Freedom', organised by the Campaign Against Censorship. Rakesh Sharma has been an active member of the Campaign since its inception.
Rakesh has been working on distribution of the film on a full-time basis since March 2004. Formally, about 21,000 video CDs and 4,000 DVDs of the film have been distributed. Informal circulation estimates ( post the pirate-and-circulate campaign) put the number somewhere between 40,000 to 100,000 copies. The film is now being dubbed in Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada and Tamil. An additional 25,000 video CDs of the language versions are expected to be released soon.
The film has been screened on BBC, NHK, DR2, YLE and several other channels. It is yet to be shown on Indian television.
(source: http://rakeshfilm.com/finalsolution.htm)
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