No film buff, yet Mahatma influenced cinema : The Tribune India

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Gandhi 150 years

No film buff, yet Mahatma influenced cinema

WHEN India’s first feature film, Raja Harishchandra, was released, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was 7,045 km away from his homeland, carrying out his last political campaign in Durban, South Africa.

No film buff, yet Mahatma influenced cinema

Appeal: Gandhi emerged as a towering moral force in the works of filmmakers such as Dadasaheb Phalke, V Shantaram, Mehboob Khan and Raj Kapoor.



Rasheed Kidwai
Visiting Fellow, Observer Research Foundation

WHEN India’s first feature film, Raja Harishchandra,  was released, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was 7,045 km away from his homeland, carrying out his last political campaign in Durban, South Africa. The lawyer from Porbandar was contemplating his return to India.  

For decades to come, Gandhi’s influence was etched on Hindi cinema. From Dadasaheb Phalke, V Shantaram, Mehboob Khan and Raj Kapoor to more recently, Vidhu Vinod Chopra and Rajkumar Hirani — dozens of filmmakers weaved Gandhian principles and teachings into their celluloid ventures.

Gandhi was highly sceptical of the moral impact of cinema on the masses. It is a delicious irony that the man who could not sit through Ram Rajya — the only film he was made to watch, on June 2, 1944, at Juhu, Bombay — would turn out to be a source of inspiration for a galaxy of filmmakers, known for meaningful cinema.

In 1927, a questionnaire was sent to Gandhi by the Indian Cinematograph Committee. A Bombay daily sought his message on the occasion of the 25th year of Indian cinema. Mahadev Desai, who was serving as his secretary, responded that Gandhi had the least interest in cinema and a word of appreciation should not be expected.

The Mahatma’s impact was evident in the works of Phalke, Shantaram, Mehboob Khan, Raj Kapoor and Hirani that dealt with the core themes of Gandhian ideology — nonviolence, love and sacrifice, Hindu-Muslim unity, the rural-urban divide, rejection of crass commercialism, women’s emancipation and fear of moral decay. It was through these movies that Gandhi emerged as a towering moral force. The Gandhian way was, after all, too dominant an idea for idealistic film-makers not to be swayed by it. 

In the decade that followed the release of the first Indian film (1913-1922), over 90 films were produced in the country. Most of them were based on Indian mythology, an enduring theme that was also used quite liberally by Gandhi in his political and social discourses. In those days, cinema halls did not exist. Films would be screened in the open after sunset, with a tent covering the space where the ‘show’ was held. This arrangement called for considerable courage on the part of the rural folk to watch films, as they had to venture out after dark and return home late at night on foot, in the absence of transport, with no street lights to guide them on their way.

Film historian, distributor, producer and writer Jaiprakash Chouksey claims that during the first phase of Indian cinema, the masses, especially from the working class, were emboldened to conquer their fear of the dark, primarily at Gandhi’s urging, and come out in droves to watch mythological movies in rundown but burgeoning cinema halls. He also insists that the Mahatma’s emphasis on religion and mythology in his political agitation against the British helped generate a lot of interest in the films of that era. Gandhi’s political meetings would begin with multi-faith prayers, a practice that encouraged participants to respect religion and plurality — something that filmmakers of the time leveraged to the hilt.

Filmmaker Khwaja Ahmad Abbas and several others tried their best to convince him and argued that cinema was a force to contend with and could be used to advantage in disseminating his ideas, but Gandhi preferred to rely on the efficacy of the print media for the purpose. 

After cinema found its ‘voice’, Gandhi’s message became bolder and easier to interpret in Hindi movies. The release of the first Indian talkie, Ardeshir Irani’s Alam Ara, on March 14, 1931, would be followed by a serendipitous meeting in London between Charlie Chaplin and Gandhi in September 1931. In 1936, Chaplin produced what was to eventually become a cult classic: Modern Times. Depicting the dehumanising effects of the machine that was increasingly replacing manual labour, the film endorsed, in a way, Gandhi’s opposition to rampant mechanisation.

According to a programme on BBC Radio 4, Making History: Gandhi and Chaplin, the Mahatma was in London to attend the Second Round Table Conference and had refused to stay in a West End hotel, instead choosing to be with people from the working class at Kingsley Hall in East London. The Kingsley Hall Community Centre in Bow was run by Muriel Lester, a Christian pacifist who had visited Gandhi’s ashram in India in 1925. She shared his political beliefs and his idealism.

In her book Entertaining Gandhi, published in 1932, Lester tells the story of the Mahatma’s visit and his meeting with Chaplin. “One of my clearest mental pictures,” she writes, “is of Mr Gandhi sitting with a telegram in his hand looking distinctly puzzled. Grouped round him were secretaries awaiting his answer. As I came in, the silence was being broken by a disapproving voice saying, ‘But he’s only a buffoon, there is no point in going to meet him.’ The telegram was being handed over for the necessary refusal when I saw the name. ‘But don’t you know that name, Bapu?’ I enquired, immensely intrigued. ‘No,’ he answered, taking back the flimsy form and looking at me for the enlightenment that his secretaries could not give. ‘Charlie Chaplin! He’s the world’s hero. You simply must meet him. His art is rooted in the life of working people, he understands the poor as well as you do, he honours them always in his pictures.’ So, on September 22, 1931, at Dr Katial’s house in Beckton Road, Canning Town, the local people were given the double thrill of welcoming both men.”

The Gandhian imprint was also apparent in Hindi films based on women’s emancipation, marking a significant departure from the way the growing industry had progressed till then. Shantaram’s Amar Jyoti (1936) dealt with the heroine’s revolt against her alcoholic husband, marking a trend in a period during which a large number of women had cast off the yoke of social restrictions to take part in the freedom movement. Though it was a period film, the heroine’s resistance to extreme ‘patriarchal’ laws’ was the central theme.

The process of economic liberalisation in the early 1990s introduced certain hedonistic changes in the cinematic preferences of the masses. The Mahatma’s ideal of simple living and high thinking was no longer as abiding an inspiration for the cinema-going public as it had once been. Declining interest was increasingly evident in the low viewership for films on Gandhi. While an earlier film on the Mahatma, Sir Richard Attenborough’s Gandhi (1982), had turned out to be one of the most successful international films ever made, the times were changing. Fourteen years later, The Making of the Mahatma (1996) by Shyam Benegal turned out to be a commercial failure. Kamal Haasan’s Hey Ram (2000), with Naseeruddin Shah in the role of Gandhi, also proved to be a flop. Gandhi, however, would be reinvented and his image resurrected by Rajkumar Hirani. With his film Lage Raho Munna Bhai (2006), the director gave an irresistible contemporary twist to the Mahatma’s message that caught the imagination of the masses.

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