THU
OCT 14 2004
7:30 A Narmada Diary
Anand Patwardhan, Simantini Dhuru (India, 1995)
For the government and the elite, the Sardar Sarovar dam in western India is
a triumph of industrialization and “progress.” For the Adivasis (indigenous
people), farmers and fisherfolk living along the Narmada River, it is a disaster.
As the
dam rises, it has flooded thousands of acres of forest and fertile land, displacing
hundreds of thousands of people. Many vow to drown rather than be moved. Combining
politics, ethnography, and environmentalism, the film presents anti-dam protesters
galvanizing a grassroots movement by walking from village to village, along
with beautiful footage of Adivasi rituals and images of the surreal landscape
created
by the dam: submerged temples, drowned trees. - Juliet Clark
Photographed by Dhuru, Patwardhan. (57 mins, In
English and Hindi with English subtitles, Color, Beta, From First
Run/Icarus)
Followed by:
Fishing: In the Sea of Greed
Anand Patwardhan (India, 1998)
Fishing: In the Sea of Greed is an indictment of factory
fishing and other “rape and run” industries that have led
to economic and environmental destruction in India and elsewhere.
Along the
coast
of southern India, huge foreign ships now troll waters that
once supported small fishermen; in Bangladesh, large-scale
shrimp aquaculture
has polluted water and salinated farmland, with the endorsement
of the World Bank. Patwardhan follows members of a fishworkers'
union
as they stage a protest blockade of Bombay Harbor, their
boats dwarfed by the floating factories. As a union song says, they
are struggling
against the tide. Meanwhile, advertising images of happy
Westerners enjoying cheap shrimp dinners make clear what drives the devastation.
- Juliet
Clark
Photographed by Patwardhan. (45 mins, In English and Hindi with English
subtitles, Color, Video, From First Run/Icarus)
(Total running time: 102 mins)