THU OCT 7 2004
7:30 A Time to Rise
Anand Patwardhan, Jim Monro (Canada, 1981)
Although most of Patwardhan's films have focused on South Asia, his social
concerns are international. As a student in North America in the seventies
and eighties,
he protested against the Vietnam War, worked with Cesar Chavez, and made
this film documenting the untenable conditions encountered by Indian immigrant
workers
in British Columbia that provoked the formation of the Canadian Farmworkers
Union. Shot over a period of two years, the film is eloquent testimony to the
progress
of the workers' movement despite the hostile response of growers and labor
contractors to the threat of unionization. - Juliet Clark
Photographed by Martin Duckworth, Kirk Tougas. (40 mins,
Color, 16mm, From the artist)
Followed by:
In Memory of Friends
Anand Patwardhan (India, 1990)
A compelling argument against religious intolerance
and a thoughtful investigation of the uses and abuses of history, this
film considers
the legacy of Bhagat
Singh, a fighter for Indian independence who was hanged in 1931 at age
23. Many Sikh
separatists claim Bhagat Singh as an icon for their cause—an odd fate for
the author of a book titled Why I Am an Atheist. Meanwhile, the
Indian government, celebrating him as a patriot, conveniently forgets his
nascent
internationalism.
Against a backdrop of terrorism and retaliation in Punjab, Patwardhan speaks
with people on all sides of the conflict, from young religious militants
to defenders of Singh's socialist ideals. Recitations from Singh's writings
are
a moving counterpoint
to some of the interviews, which too often reveal a reliance on distorted
histories. - Juliet
Clark
Photographed by Patwardhan. (60 mins, In English
and Hindi with English subtitles, Color, 16mm, From First Run/Icarus)
(Total running time: 100 mins)