on the occasion of the 138th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi
Nazariya Drishti-Natarani Film Club Presents
Stalin K's documentary film

INDIA UNTOUCHED - Stories of a People Apart
Winner of One Billion Eyes - Documentary Film Festival Award.
After six months traveling to Hyderabad, Pune, Chennai, Delhi, Mumbai
and Madurai, the film is coming back to Ahmedabad.

Date - 2nd October
Venue - Natarani, Usmanpura
Time - 8:15 pm

About India Untouched
108 minutes/Hindi, Bhojpuri, Gujarati, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu,
Malayalm with English sub-titles.

This film is perhaps the most comprehensive look at Untouchability
ever undertaken on film. Director Stalin K. spent four years
traveling the length and breadth of the country to expose the
continued oppression of 'Dalits,' the 'broken people' who suffer under
a 4000 year-old religious system. The film introduces leading
Benares scholars who interpret Hindu scriptures to mean that Dalits
'have no right' to education, and Rajput farmers who proudly proclaim
that no Dalit may sit in their presence, and that the police must seek
their permission before pursuing cases of atrocities. The film
captures many 'firsts-on-film, ' such as Dalits being forced to
dismount from their cycles and remove their shoes when in the upper
caste part of the village. It exposes the continuation of caste
practices and Untouchability in Sikhism, Christianity and Islam, and
even amongst the communists in Kerala. Dalits themselves are not let
off the hook: within Dalits, sub-castes practice Untouchability on the
'lower' sub-castes, and a Harijan boy refuses to drink water from a
Valmiki boy. The viewer hears that Untouchability is an urban
phenomenon as well, inflicted upon a leading medical surgeon and in
such hallowed institutions as JNU, where a Brahmin boy builds a
partition so as not to look upon his Dalit roommate in the early
morning. A section on how newspaper matrimonial columns are divided
according to caste presents urban Indians with an uncomfortable truth:
marriage is the leading perpetuator of caste in India. But the film
highlights signs of hope, too: the powerful tradition of Dalit
drumming is used to call people to the struggle, and a young Dalit
girl holds her head high after pulling water from her village well for
the first time in her life.

Spanning eight states and four religions, this film will make it
impossible for anyone to deny that Untouchability continues to be
practiced in India.

Stalin K: Stalin K. is a human rights activist and award-winning
documentary filmmaker. In recent years, he has become known for his
pioneering 'participatory media' work with urban and rural
communities, in which local people produce their own videos and radio
programs as an empowerment tool. He is the Co-Founder of DRISHTI-
Media, Arts and Human Rights, Convener of the Community Radio
Forum-India, and the India Director of Video Volunteers. He is a
renowned public speaker and has lectured or taught at over 20
institutions ranging from the National Institute of Design and the
Tata Institute of Social Sciences in India, to New York University and
Stanford and Berkeley in the US.

Reply via email to