Dubai Telegraph - India's Hindu hardliners jump on Kashmir blockbuster

EUR -
AED 4.102936
AFN 77.459209
ALL 99.457975
AMD 432.778937
ANG 2.014982
AOA 1037.198836
ARS 1075.462107
AUD 1.637702
AWG 2.010723
AZN 1.896412
BAM 1.957567
BBD 2.257397
BDT 133.610576
BGN 1.967095
BHD 0.420956
BIF 3240.766592
BMD 1.117068
BND 1.443677
BOB 7.725834
BRL 6.060991
BSD 1.118089
BTN 93.516982
BWP 14.711012
BYN 3.658936
BYR 21894.534621
BZD 2.253583
CAD 1.51451
CDF 3207.102402
CHF 0.945106
CLF 0.037685
CLP 1039.834343
CNY 7.868957
CNH 7.865561
COP 4652.867874
CRC 579.176012
CUC 1.117068
CUP 29.602304
CVE 110.361631
CZK 25.09773
DJF 199.096109
DKK 7.459401
DOP 67.11516
DZD 147.697258
EGP 54.203943
ERN 16.756021
ETB 128.672268
FJD 2.455148
FKP 0.850713
GBP 0.838751
GEL 3.049838
GGP 0.850713
GHS 17.609655
GIP 0.850713
GMD 76.520298
GNF 9660.63171
GTQ 8.642567
GYD 233.866865
HKD 8.701854
HNL 27.734781
HRK 7.594958
HTG 147.340329
HUF 394.325395
IDR 16862.310423
ILS 4.193842
IMP 0.850713
INR 93.28429
IQD 1464.608618
IRR 47020.184922
ISK 152.323096
JEP 0.850713
JMD 175.656948
JOD 0.791665
JPY 158.837019
KES 144.22468
KGS 94.14088
KHR 4537.973401
KMF 493.018125
KPW 1005.36065
KRW 1485.761989
KWD 0.340516
KYD 0.931732
KZT 535.488455
LAK 24688.058616
LBP 100120.360598
LKR 340.334086
LRD 223.60779
LSL 19.480105
LTL 3.298412
LVL 0.675704
LYD 5.325711
MAD 10.842591
MDL 19.510432
MGA 5037.455838
MKD 61.670102
MMK 3628.193592
MNT 3795.79733
MOP 8.97552
MRU 44.25794
MUR 51.251405
MVR 17.158436
MWK 1938.706188
MXN 21.561716
MYR 4.671621
MZN 71.324681
NAD 19.480105
NGN 1831.914005
NIO 41.146764
NOK 11.711141
NPR 149.618968
NZD 1.787354
OMR 0.430023
PAB 1.118089
PEN 4.197394
PGK 4.438966
PHP 61.937515
PKR 310.954552
PLN 4.274947
PYG 8727.720029
QAR 4.076069
RON 4.974525
RSD 117.085522
RUB 103.440971
RWF 1505.731882
SAR 4.191907
SBD 9.279414
SCR 14.899487
SDG 671.918347
SEK 11.341279
SGD 1.439918
SHP 0.850713
SLE 25.521993
SLL 23424.35363
SOS 638.970916
SRD 33.347817
STD 23121.054172
SVC 9.782741
SYP 2806.667024
SZL 19.465218
THB 36.952903
TJS 11.884819
TMT 3.909738
TND 3.386365
TOP 2.61629
TRY 38.074039
TTD 7.59979
TWD 35.674679
TZS 3042.560594
UAH 46.331582
UGX 4151.672326
USD 1.117068
UYU 45.930216
UZS 14243.726675
VEF 4046637.851088
VES 41.058342
VND 27412.851
VUV 132.620568
WST 3.124956
XAF 656.537735
XAG 0.035844
XAU 0.00043
XCD 3.018932
XDR 0.828633
XOF 656.537735
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.630082
ZAR 19.542269
ZMK 10054.950521
ZMW 29.096607
ZWL 359.69547
  • CMSC

    0.0650

    25.12

    +0.26%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    25.01

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    13.4

    -0.3%

  • SCS

    -0.8000

    13.31

    -6.01%

  • BCC

    7.6300

    144.69

    +5.27%

  • NGG

    -1.2200

    68.83

    -1.77%

  • RIO

    2.2700

    65.18

    +3.48%

  • AZN

    0.3200

    78.9

    +0.41%

  • GSK

    -0.8100

    41.62

    -1.95%

  • BCE

    -0.4200

    35.19

    -1.19%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    6.93

    -0.29%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    10.06

    -1.69%

  • RELX

    0.7600

    48.13

    +1.58%

  • BTI

    -0.3100

    37.57

    -0.83%

  • BP

    0.3300

    32.76

    +1.01%

  • RBGPF

    60.5000

    60.5

    +100%

India's Hindu hardliners jump on Kashmir blockbuster
India's Hindu hardliners jump on Kashmir blockbuster

India's Hindu hardliners jump on Kashmir blockbuster

Indian Hindu hardliners have jumped on an explosive new film endorsed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the mass flight of Hindus from Kashmir 30 years ago to stir up hatred against minority Muslims.

Text size:

"The Kashmir Files" is the latest Bollywood offering -- more famous for its song-and-dance love stories -- to tackle themes close to the political agenda of Modi's Hindu nationalist government, critics say.

Released last month and already one of the country's highest-grossing films this year, it depicts in harrowing detail how several hundred thousand Hindus fled Muslim militants in Indian-administered Kashmir in 1989-90.

Authorities have made entrance to the film tax-free in many states, with police and others given time off to go watch.

Numerous videos shared on social media and verified as genuine by AFP have shown people in cinemas calling for revenge and for Muslims to be killed.

One clip shows Swami Jeetendranand, a Hindu monk, leading a crowd in nationalist and anti-Muslim chants.

"We think that we are safe, but we are safe as long as they don't attack us," he rails.

"(Muslims) are not only dangerous to India but to the whole world."

- Fact or fiction? -

Muslim-majority Kashmir, split between India and Pakistan since 1947, has a bloody past.

Three decades of insurgency -- with Pakistan's backing, according to New Delhi -- and a heavy-handed response by the Indian military have killed tens of thousands of people, mostly Muslims.

Around 200,000 Kashmiri Hindus -- known as Pandits -- fled after the violence began in the late 1980s. Up to 219 may have been killed, according to official figures.

Redressing this "genocide" and "exodus", as right-wing Hindu groups call it -- likening it to the Holocaust -- has long been a central theme of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party.

In 2019, his administration -- often accused of marginalising and vilifying India's 200 million Muslims -- revoked the region's partial autonomy and imposed a vice-like security blanket.

But Sanjay Kaw, a Kashmiri Pandit journalist who himself fled in the 1990s, said the movie makes no allusion to the persecution of the region's Muslim community either before or since.

"One of my relatives was shot dead... barely 300 meters away from our home," Kaw told AFP.

"The movie only talks about the exodus part, and only refers to the failure of the state but not the things that led to the situation."

- BJP agenda -

The movie's director Vivek Agnihotri, an avowed Modi fan, told AFP that he wanted to give "some dignity to the people who have been hurt".

"Nobody asked Steven Spielberg why there were a few violent reactions to 'Schindler's List'," he said, referring to the 1993 movie on the Holocaust that was widely acclaimed as historically accurate.

"Give (people) the right to react the way they want to react. As long as they are not hurting anybody physically, I think it's fine," Agnihotri added.

But the film "certainly has an agenda", said documentary filmmaker Sanjay Kak, as it "strongly feeds into the current Islamophobic discourse in our society".

"I think the film makes those goals (of the BJP) quite explicit: which is basically about setting up Kashmir as a kind of ideological pole for their vision of a new resurgent Hindu India," he told AFP.

- Modiwood –

Modi has hit back against the criticism, saying a "whole ecosystem is trying to silence the person who made the film and tried to reveal the truth".

The world's largest democracy has a long history of film censorship, but detractors say the industry has come under increased pressure to make films that dovetail more with the BJP's narrative.

In 2019, the hagiographic "PM Narendra Modi" about the premier's life story, was too much even for the Election Commission, which delayed its release until after a vote that year.

The same year saw the gung-ho "Uri", a blockbuster based on India's 2016 "surgical strikes" on militants across Pakistan that critics said also played thick and fast with the facts.

It was just one of a string of recent military-themed movies that have been nationalistic, all-guns-blazing stories of heroics by soldiers and police -- usually Hindus -- against enemies outside and within India.

"Most Indians think what happened in 'Uri' is what they saw in the film," Kak said.

"In the same way what they see in this film becomes the story of Kashmir."

F.Damodaran--DT