The China Mail - India's Hindu hardliners jump on Kashmir blockbuster

USD -
AED 3.672983
AFN 69.500471
ALL 84.401218
AMD 383.679913
ANG 1.789699
AOA 916.999814
ARS 1331.347202
AUD 1.537302
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.696907
BAM 1.684894
BBD 2.018979
BDT 121.693509
BGN 1.677875
BHD 0.377046
BIF 2948.5
BMD 1
BND 1.286457
BOB 6.924982
BRL 5.462102
BSD 0.999927
BTN 87.794309
BWP 13.488635
BYN 3.291393
BYR 19600
BZD 2.008606
CAD 1.37424
CDF 2890.00019
CHF 0.80631
CLF 0.02485
CLP 974.849833
CNY 7.18315
CNH 7.185645
COP 4048
CRC 506.308394
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 95.250331
CZK 21.074031
DJF 177.719763
DKK 6.401205
DOP 60.999876
DZD 130.333089
EGP 48.445502
ERN 15
ETB 138.174986
EUR 0.85782
FJD 2.2564
FKP 0.751467
GBP 0.74888
GEL 2.693685
GGP 0.751467
GHS 10.550117
GIP 0.751467
GMD 72.500572
GNF 8674.999892
GTQ 7.673256
GYD 209.215871
HKD 7.84935
HNL 26.350275
HRK 6.4631
HTG 131.221544
HUF 341.559874
IDR 16354.1
ILS 3.4298
IMP 0.751467
INR 87.7121
IQD 1310
IRR 42124.999932
ISK 122.479752
JEP 0.751467
JMD 159.805649
JOD 0.708996
JPY 147.427973
KES 129.504164
KGS 87.449914
KHR 4009.999759
KMF 422.517366
KPW 899.94784
KRW 1384.769735
KWD 0.30548
KYD 0.833337
KZT 537.310733
LAK 21600.000093
LBP 89549.999641
LKR 300.839518
LRD 201.000134
LSL 17.769736
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.435058
MAD 9.061964
MDL 16.984635
MGA 4434.99991
MKD 53.007232
MMK 2099.311056
MNT 3591.43546
MOP 8.085189
MRU 39.897294
MUR 45.640083
MVR 15.392268
MWK 1736.500989
MXN 18.609499
MYR 4.230076
MZN 63.959738
NAD 17.769753
NGN 1530.100369
NIO 36.750216
NOK 10.17677
NPR 140.468735
NZD 1.68607
OMR 0.38451
PAB 0.999978
PEN 3.556504
PGK 4.140502
PHP 57.156496
PKR 282.550292
PLN 3.66595
PYG 7489.759085
QAR 3.640503
RON 4.353198
RSD 100.470941
RUB 80.000429
RWF 1441.5
SAR 3.752478
SBD 8.217066
SCR 14.635841
SDG 600.514208
SEK 9.60338
SGD 1.28489
SHP 0.785843
SLE 23.097406
SLL 20969.503947
SOS 571.485453
SRD 37.036022
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.25
SVC 8.749252
SYP 13001.372255
SZL 17.770267
THB 32.369873
TJS 9.350099
TMT 3.51
TND 2.880503
TOP 2.342098
TRY 40.6519
TTD 6.779208
TWD 29.918026
TZS 2480.000181
UAH 41.60133
UGX 3569.997889
UYU 40.128017
UZS 12524.999717
VES 128.74775
VND 26225
VUV 119.124121
WST 2.771506
XAF 565.126968
XAG 0.026428
XAU 0.000297
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802143
XDR 0.704914
XOF 565.503684
XPF 102.67499
YER 240.449555
ZAR 17.80672
ZMK 9001.198524
ZMW 23.025264
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    22.95

    -0.52%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • RBGPF

    1.0800

    76

    +1.42%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    23.54

    +0.13%

  • BCC

    -3.8500

    82.92

    -4.64%

  • NGG

    0.0200

    72.3

    +0.03%

  • SCS

    0.0300

    15.99

    +0.19%

  • GSK

    -0.5700

    36.75

    -1.55%

  • RIO

    0.3900

    60.09

    +0.65%

  • RELX

    -1.7800

    48.81

    -3.65%

  • BTI

    0.5600

    56.4

    +0.99%

  • RYCEF

    0.1300

    14.48

    +0.9%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    13.34

    +0.6%

  • AZN

    -0.8800

    73.6

    -1.2%

  • VOD

    0.2000

    11.3

    +1.77%

  • BCE

    -0.3100

    23.25

    -1.33%

  • BP

    0.2800

    33.88

    +0.83%

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."

E.Lau--ThChM