Please read about the documentary "The Final Solution" produced by Rakesh Sharma who defends the Muslims in India. Rakesh uses the title "The Final Solution" to explain how the Hindu majority in India believes that the biggest problem in India is the Muslims living there and that the "Final Solution" to the problem is to eliminate all Muslims in Iindia (and than probably the other minirities). I have the documentary in my collection and can make you a copy. You can watch it live here (pls bookmark it) but viewer discretion is advised as there ain't no "Amn Ki Asha" in here:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=29364588351777769#
Also share it your friends, especially the ones who have a soft corner for India.
This documentary produced by Rakesh Sharma shows the absolute brutality of conflict by the Hindu majority against the Muslims and other minorities in India which recieves virtually no mainstream press in the United States.
Click link to watch:
Final Solution - Massacres in India
Final Solution - Massacres in India
Jun 19, 2006 - 2:29:42
Shows the absolute brutality of conflict in India which recieves virtually no mainstream press in the United States.
--
Browse more videos on Google Video
http://rakeshfilm.com/finalsolution.htm
Final Solution 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/ violence as "those who forget history are condemned to relive it".
Director's Statement
"Post-911, we live in a world where politics of hate and intolerance has gained mainstream acceptance, even grabbed centrestage. The right-wing seems to be tightening its stranglehold across Europe and USA, a nationalism being fuelled by the anti-immigrant/anti-Moslem rhetoric. The 'War on Terror' dominated the electoral discourse in the US presidential elections, with both candidates promising to hunt 'em and kill 'em better than the other. In a world where it has become legitimate to use fictitious intelligence to justify the bombing of innocents in Iraq, where it has become acceptable to launch precision bombs and rockets against non-"embedded" journalists, where shameless politicians divide up oil wells and farm out reconstruction contracts for their $ 36 million bonuses, where babies are killed and mutilated as acceptable "collateral damage", where suicide bombers and terror attacks claim hundreds of innocent lives, we face a
challenge greater than ever before.
We have earlier lived through many dark periods in history, often justifying our barbarism by using similar rhetoric. Hate, despair, destruction and tragedy can not possibly help create harmonious societies and a democratic world.
During the making of this film, I noticed shocking parallels between India 2002-2004 and Germany of the 1930s - State-supported genocidal violence against Moslems in Gujarat and its continuing impact – segregation in schools, ghettoisation in cities and villages, formal calls for economic boycott of Moslems and attacks on intelligentsia by right-wing Hindutva cadres.
Unchecked and unchallenged, the rapid rise of politics of hate and intolerance could very well be the forerunner of a 21st century Endlosung – the Final Solution."
More about the Film
Part 1: Pride and Genocide deals with the carnage and its immediate aftermath. It examines the patterns of pre-planned genocidal violence (by right-wing Hindutva cadres), which many claim was state-supported, if not state-sponsored. The film reconstructs through eyewitness accounts the attack on Gulbarg and Patiya (Ahmedabad) and acts of barbaric violence against Moslem women at Eral and Delol/Kalol (Panchmahals) even as Chief Minister Modi traverses the state on his Gaurav Yatra.
Part 2 : The Hate Mandate documents the poll campaign during the Assembly elections in Gujarat in late 2002. It records in detail the exploitation of the Godhra incident by the right-wing propaganda machinery for electoral gains. The film studies and documents the situation months after the elections to find shocking faultlines – voluntary ghettoisation, segregation in schools, formal calls for economic boycott of Moslems and continuing acts of violence.
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 (http://www.freedomfilmsindia.org), 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.
Awards
Wolfgang Staudte award & Special Jury Award (Netpac), Berlin International film festival (2004)
Humanitarian Award for Outstanding Documentary, HongKong International film festival (2004)
Montgolfiere d'Or (Best Documentary) & Le Prix Fip/Pil' du Public (Audience award), Festival des 3 Continents at Nantes (France; 2004)
Best Film, Freedom of Expression awards by Index on Censorship (UK; 2005)
Silver Dhow, Zanzibar International film festival (2004)
Best documentary, Big MiniDV (USA; 2004)
Special Jury Award, Karafest (Karachi; 2004)
Special Jury Award, Film South Asia (Kathmandu; 2005)
Human Rights Award, Docupolis (Barcelona; 2005)
Special Jury Mention, Munich Dokfest (2004)
Special Jury Mention, Bangkok International filmfest (2005)
Nominee, Best Foreign Film, Grierson Awards (UK; 2004)
Best Documentary/Short Film, Apsara Awards(India;2006)
Special Award by NRIs for a Secular and Harmonious India (NRI-SAHI), NY-NJ, USA (2004)
Special Award by AFMI, USA-Canada (2004)
Special Jury Award, Worldfest 2005 (Houston)
Special Jury Award, Mar Del Plata Independent film festival (2005; Argentina)
Screened at over 80 international film festivals.
About the Director
Rakesh Sharma began his film/TV career in 1986 as an assistant director on Shyam Benegal's Discovery of India. His broadcast industry experience includes the set up/ launch of 3 broadcast channels in India: Channel [V], Star Plus and Vijay TV. He has now gone back to independent documentary film-making.
His first independent film Aftershocks: The Rough Guide to Democracy won the Best documentary film award at Fribourg, Big Mini-DV and Jeevika (India) and won 8 other awards (including the Robert Flaherty prize) at various festivals in USA and Europe during 2002-03. It has been screened at over 100 international film festivals.
Both Final Solution and Aftershocks were rejected by the government-run Mumbai International filmfest (MIFF) in 2004 and 2002 respectively.
Press
Interview with Rakesh Sharma
Berlinale Catalogue
"Post-Godhra, hate still threatens: Filmmaker"
Hindustan Times, Apr 15, 2004
"Indian movie shines at Hong Kong festival"
Times of India, Apr 15, 2004
"Polling strings"
Shanta Gokhale, Mid-Day, Feb 17, 2004
"A miss at MIFF, accolades at Berlinale"
Kalpana Sharma, The Hindu, Feb 17, 2004
"Mumbai reject finally shines in Berlin"
Times of India, Feb 17, 2004
"Rakesh Sharma's film wins accolades at Berlin film fest"
IndianTelevision, Feb 16, 2004
"Women from minority community still traumatised"
Piali Banerjee, Times of India, Dec 16, 2003
"The ride is less bumpy"
Shubhra Gupta, Sep 29, 2003, The Hindu Business Line
Print Downloads
Synopsis (PDF)
Press Blurbs (PDF)
--
"The compassion we impart to those who can give us nothing is the true measure of who we are."
- Rick Tringale
"A knowledge of the existence of something we cannot penetrate, of the manifestations of the profoundest reason and the most radiant beauty - it is this knowledge and this emotion that constitute the truly religious attitude; in this sense, and in this alone, I am a deeply religious man."
- Albert Einstein
"I have learnt silence from the talkative, toleration from the intolerant, and kindness from the unkind; yet strange, I am ungrateful to these teachers"
- Khalil Gibran
"Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent."
- Victor Hugo
"Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities."
- François-Marie Arouet "Voltaire"
"If a man like Muhamed (pbuh) were to assume the dictatorship of the modern world, he would succeed in solving its problems that would bring it the much needed peace and happiness."
- George Bernard Shaw
"Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give the appearance of solidity to pure wind."
- George Orwell
"Do not worry that children never listen to you; worry that they are watching you"
- Robert Fulghum
"The accomplice to the crime of corruption is often our own indifference"
- Bess Myerson
"Civilization begins with order, grows with liberty, and dies with chaos."
- Will Durant
"Education is a progressive discovery of our own ignorance."
- Will Durant
"Democracy is a form of government that substitutes 'election by the incompetent-many' for 'appointment by the corrupt-few'."
- George Bernard Shaw
"Democracy is a device that ensures we shall be governed no better than we deserve."
- George Bernard Shaw
"May you live every day of your life."
- Jonathan Swift
"Pity the nation... that welcomes its new ruler with trumpeting, farewells him with hooting, only to welcome another with trumpeting again."
- Khalil Jibran
"In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends".
- Dr Martin Luther King, Jr.
"Those who danced were thought to be quite insane by those who could not hear the music."
- Angela Monet
"Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains."
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau
"Every man is guilty of all the good he did not do."
- Voltaire
"The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or religion but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence. Westerners often forget this fact, non-Westerners never do."
- Samuel P. Huntington (author The Clash Of Civilisations)
If you love somebody, let them go.if they return, they were always yours. And if they don't, they never were.
- Khalil Gibran
-
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=29364588351777769#
Also share it your friends, especially the ones who have a soft corner for India.
This documentary produced by Rakesh Sharma shows the absolute brutality of conflict by the Hindu majority against the Muslims and other minorities in India which recieves virtually no mainstream press in the United States.
Click link to watch:
Final Solution - Massacres in India
Final Solution - Massacres in India
Jun 19, 2006 - 2:29:42
Shows the absolute brutality of conflict in India which recieves virtually no mainstream press in the United States.
--
Browse more videos on Google Video
http://rakeshfilm.com/finalsolution.htm
Final Solution 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/ violence as "those who forget history are condemned to relive it".
Director's Statement
"Post-911, we live in a world where politics of hate and intolerance has gained mainstream acceptance, even grabbed centrestage. The right-wing seems to be tightening its stranglehold across Europe and USA, a nationalism being fuelled by the anti-immigrant/anti-Moslem rhetoric. The 'War on Terror' dominated the electoral discourse in the US presidential elections, with both candidates promising to hunt 'em and kill 'em better than the other. In a world where it has become legitimate to use fictitious intelligence to justify the bombing of innocents in Iraq, where it has become acceptable to launch precision bombs and rockets against non-"embedded" journalists, where shameless politicians divide up oil wells and farm out reconstruction contracts for their $ 36 million bonuses, where babies are killed and mutilated as acceptable "collateral damage", where suicide bombers and terror attacks claim hundreds of innocent lives, we face a
challenge greater than ever before.
We have earlier lived through many dark periods in history, often justifying our barbarism by using similar rhetoric. Hate, despair, destruction and tragedy can not possibly help create harmonious societies and a democratic world.
During the making of this film, I noticed shocking parallels between India 2002-2004 and Germany of the 1930s - State-supported genocidal violence against Moslems in Gujarat and its continuing impact – segregation in schools, ghettoisation in cities and villages, formal calls for economic boycott of Moslems and attacks on intelligentsia by right-wing Hindutva cadres.
Unchecked and unchallenged, the rapid rise of politics of hate and intolerance could very well be the forerunner of a 21st century Endlosung – the Final Solution."
More about the Film
Part 1: Pride and Genocide deals with the carnage and its immediate aftermath. It examines the patterns of pre-planned genocidal violence (by right-wing Hindutva cadres), which many claim was state-supported, if not state-sponsored. The film reconstructs through eyewitness accounts the attack on Gulbarg and Patiya (Ahmedabad) and acts of barbaric violence against Moslem women at Eral and Delol/Kalol (Panchmahals) even as Chief Minister Modi traverses the state on his Gaurav Yatra.
Part 2 : The Hate Mandate documents the poll campaign during the Assembly elections in Gujarat in late 2002. It records in detail the exploitation of the Godhra incident by the right-wing propaganda machinery for electoral gains. The film studies and documents the situation months after the elections to find shocking faultlines – voluntary ghettoisation, segregation in schools, formal calls for economic boycott of Moslems and continuing acts of violence.
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 (http://www.freedomfilmsindia.org), 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.
Awards
Wolfgang Staudte award & Special Jury Award (Netpac), Berlin International film festival (2004)
Humanitarian Award for Outstanding Documentary, HongKong International film festival (2004)
Montgolfiere d'Or (Best Documentary) & Le Prix Fip/Pil' du Public (Audience award), Festival des 3 Continents at Nantes (France; 2004)
Best Film, Freedom of Expression awards by Index on Censorship (UK; 2005)
Silver Dhow, Zanzibar International film festival (2004)
Best documentary, Big MiniDV (USA; 2004)
Special Jury Award, Karafest (Karachi; 2004)
Special Jury Award, Film South Asia (Kathmandu; 2005)
Human Rights Award, Docupolis (Barcelona; 2005)
Special Jury Mention, Munich Dokfest (2004)
Special Jury Mention, Bangkok International filmfest (2005)
Nominee, Best Foreign Film, Grierson Awards (UK; 2004)
Best Documentary/Short Film, Apsara Awards(India;2006)
Special Award by NRIs for a Secular and Harmonious India (NRI-SAHI), NY-NJ, USA (2004)
Special Award by AFMI, USA-Canada (2004)
Special Jury Award, Worldfest 2005 (Houston)
Special Jury Award, Mar Del Plata Independent film festival (2005; Argentina)
Screened at over 80 international film festivals.
About the Director
Rakesh Sharma began his film/TV career in 1986 as an assistant director on Shyam Benegal's Discovery of India. His broadcast industry experience includes the set up/ launch of 3 broadcast channels in India: Channel [V], Star Plus and Vijay TV. He has now gone back to independent documentary film-making.
His first independent film Aftershocks: The Rough Guide to Democracy won the Best documentary film award at Fribourg, Big Mini-DV and Jeevika (India) and won 8 other awards (including the Robert Flaherty prize) at various festivals in USA and Europe during 2002-03. It has been screened at over 100 international film festivals.
Both Final Solution and Aftershocks were rejected by the government-run Mumbai International filmfest (MIFF) in 2004 and 2002 respectively.
Press
Interview with Rakesh Sharma
Berlinale Catalogue
"Post-Godhra, hate still threatens: Filmmaker"
Hindustan Times, Apr 15, 2004
"Indian movie shines at Hong Kong festival"
Times of India, Apr 15, 2004
"Polling strings"
Shanta Gokhale, Mid-Day, Feb 17, 2004
"A miss at MIFF, accolades at Berlinale"
Kalpana Sharma, The Hindu, Feb 17, 2004
"Mumbai reject finally shines in Berlin"
Times of India, Feb 17, 2004
"Rakesh Sharma's film wins accolades at Berlin film fest"
IndianTelevision, Feb 16, 2004
"Women from minority community still traumatised"
Piali Banerjee, Times of India, Dec 16, 2003
"The ride is less bumpy"
Shubhra Gupta, Sep 29, 2003, The Hindu Business Line
Print Downloads
Synopsis (PDF)
Press Blurbs (PDF)
--
"The compassion we impart to those who can give us nothing is the true measure of who we are."
- Rick Tringale
"A knowledge of the existence of something we cannot penetrate, of the manifestations of the profoundest reason and the most radiant beauty - it is this knowledge and this emotion that constitute the truly religious attitude; in this sense, and in this alone, I am a deeply religious man."
- Albert Einstein
"I have learnt silence from the talkative, toleration from the intolerant, and kindness from the unkind; yet strange, I am ungrateful to these teachers"
- Khalil Gibran
"Music expresses that which cannot be said and on which it is impossible to be silent."
- Victor Hugo
"Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities."
- François-Marie Arouet "Voltaire"
"If a man like Muhamed (pbuh) were to assume the dictatorship of the modern world, he would succeed in solving its problems that would bring it the much needed peace and happiness."
- George Bernard Shaw
"Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give the appearance of solidity to pure wind."
- George Orwell
"Do not worry that children never listen to you; worry that they are watching you"
- Robert Fulghum
"The accomplice to the crime of corruption is often our own indifference"
- Bess Myerson
"Civilization begins with order, grows with liberty, and dies with chaos."
- Will Durant
"Education is a progressive discovery of our own ignorance."
- Will Durant
"Democracy is a form of government that substitutes 'election by the incompetent-many' for 'appointment by the corrupt-few'."
- George Bernard Shaw
"Democracy is a device that ensures we shall be governed no better than we deserve."
- George Bernard Shaw
"May you live every day of your life."
- Jonathan Swift
"Pity the nation... that welcomes its new ruler with trumpeting, farewells him with hooting, only to welcome another with trumpeting again."
- Khalil Jibran
"In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends".
- Dr Martin Luther King, Jr.
"Those who danced were thought to be quite insane by those who could not hear the music."
- Angela Monet
"Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains."
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau
"Every man is guilty of all the good he did not do."
- Voltaire
"The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or religion but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence. Westerners often forget this fact, non-Westerners never do."
- Samuel P. Huntington (author The Clash Of Civilisations)
If you love somebody, let them go.if they return, they were always yours. And if they don't, they never were.
- Khalil Gibran
-
__,_._,___
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Gujranwalafun@Aol.com
Gujranwala@windiowslive.com