it is really a shocking news but for M F  Husain , it is the only solution left 
for him after years of struggle. The sangaparivar and RSS tried all methods to 
throw him out of the country . Whenever Mr.Husain attends a public function or 
exhibit his works , he was attacked by sangaparivar. No wonder why Mr Husain 
took this decision.
 
Really a sad day for India .
 
 
 
 
 
 


--- On Fri, 26/2/10, farida m <faridain...@gmail.com> wrote:


From: farida m <faridain...@gmail.com>
Subject: [GreenYouth] Fwd: [issuesonline_worldwide] The most shocking day in 
the cultural life of India
To: greenyouth@googlegroups.com, greenleft_discuss...@yahoogroups.com
Date: Friday, 26 February, 2010, 8:28 AM





---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sultan Ibrahim <sultanofpe...@yahoo.com>
Date: Thu, Feb 25, 2010 at 9:59 PM
Subject: [issuesonline_worldwide] The most shocking day in the cultural life of 
India
To: bahu...@yahoogroups.com, arki <arkitectin...@yahoogroups.com>



  



THe greatest artist of our time, facing legal cases in 900 courts in the 
country and fanatical attacks, has been lost to the cultural India. Once again 
we understand painfully that we are not governed, in essence, by the modern 
secular and socialist Constitution of India, but by Manusmriti of the dark 
ages. Sultan

THe Hindu, 25 Feb 2010

M. F. Husain gets Qatar nationality



N. Ram



New York: M. F. Husain, India’s greatest and most celebrated artist,
has been conferred Qatar nationality – something that is very rarely
given. The artist gave me this news from Dubai early Wednesday morning
by reading out the few lines he had written on a black-and-white line
drawing that he released to The Hindu. 
“Honoured by Qatar nationality” but deeply saddened by his enforced
exile and the need now to give up the citizenship of the land of his
birth, which he has lovingly and secularly celebrated in his art
covering a period of over seven decades. India does not allow dual
citizenship, even though it has instituted the category of the
‘Overseas Indian Citizen.’ Mr. Husain will no doubt seek to acquire OIC
status after completing the due procedures.
It is important to note that Mr. Husain did not apply for Qatar
nationality and that it was conferred upon him at the instance of the
modernising emirate’s ruling family.
Since 2006, when the Hindutva hate campaign against him escalated,
Mr. Husain has been living in Dubai, spending his summers in London. He
travels freely except to India, where he faces legal harassment and
physical threats, with the system impotent and not committed to
enabling his return. Though the Supreme Court has intervened on the
right side, it was too little, too late. The Congress-led government,
it is clear, has done no better than the preceding BJP-led governments
in protecting Mr. Husain’s freedom of creativity and peace of mind. 
Almost 95, the artist works a long day, producing large canvasses
and life-size glass sculptures. Never has he been as commercially
successful as he is today. His work now is mostly towards two large
projects, the history of Indian civilisation and the history of Arab
civilisation. The latter was commissioned by Qatar’s powerful first
lady – Sheikha Mozah bint Nasser al Missned, wife of the emirate’s
ruler, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani. The works will be housed in a
separate museum in Doha. 
While being a rare honour, Mr. Husain’s impending change of
nationality brings to a close one of the sorriest chapters in
independent India’s secular history. Mr. Husain’s time of troubles
began in 1996, after a Hindi monthly published an inflammatory article
on his paintings of Hindu deities done in the 1970s. This led to a slew
of criminal cases, filed in far-flung places, which alleged in the main
that the artist had hurt the feelings of Hindus through his paintings.
Mr. Husain estimates that there are 900 cases against him in various
courts of India. He has been harassed by fanatical mobs. Exhibitions of
his work have been vandalised. All this has created a fear of
exhibiting his work in India. 
I have personally accompanied Mr. Husain to court proceedings in
Indore and have first-hand experience of the harassment and terror he
faced from bigoted mobs. I received him in Mumbai on his return from
the first of his temporary exiles and saw what insecurity and
uncertainty this creative genius had to endure in rising India. It is
ironical that a country whose religious art often portrays nudity and
even overt sexuality, as in the case of the Khajuraho sculptures and
the murals and frescoes of south Indian temples, has grown so
intolerant as to drive into permanent exile its most famous artist. 
I know no one more genuinely and deeply committed to the composite,
multi-religious, and secular values of Indian civilisation than M. F.
Husain. He breathes the spirit of modernity, progress, and tolerance.
The whole narrative of what forced him into exile, including the
shameful failure of the executive and the legal system to enable his
safe return, revolves round the issues of freedom of expression and
creativity and what secular nationhood is all about.
The conferment of Qatar nationality is an honour to Mr. Husain, to
his artistic genius, and to the India-rooted civilisational values he
represents. Nevertheless, it is a sad day for India.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


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