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An Artist in Exile Tests India’s Democratic Ideals

BanglaBhoot

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Maqbool Fida Husain, India’s most famous painter, is afraid to go home.

Mr. Husain is a Muslim who is fond of painting Hindu goddesses, sometimes portraying them nude. That obsession has earned him the ire of a small but organized cadre of Hindu nationalists. They have attacked galleries that exhibit his work, accused him in court of “promoting enmity” among faiths and, on one occasion, offered an $11 million reward for his head.

In September, the country’s highest court offered him an unexpected reprieve, dismissing one of the cases against him with the blunt reminder that Hindu iconography, including ancient temples, is replete with nudity. Still, the artist, 93 and increasingly frail, is not taking any chances. For two years, he has lived here in self-imposed exile, amid opulently sterile skyscrapers. He intends to remain, at least for now. “They can put me in a jungle,” Mr. Husain said gamely. “Still, I can create.”

Freedom of expression has frequently, and by some accounts, increasingly, come under fire in India, as the country tries to balance the dictates of its secular democracy with the easily inflamed religious and ethnic passions of its multitudes.

The result is a strange anomaly in a nation known for its vibrant, freewheeling political culture. The government is compelled to ensure respect for India’s diversity and at the same time prevent one group from pouncing on another for a perceived offense. Ramachandra Guha, a historian, calls it “perhaps the fundamental challenge of governance in India.”

The rise of an intense brand of identity politics, with India’s many communities mobilizing for political power, has intensified the problem. An accusation that a piece of art or writing is offensive is an easy way to whip up the sentiments of a particular caste, faith or tribe, Pratap Bhanu Mehta, an Indian political scientist, points out. He calls it “offense mongering.”

There have been isolated episodes of violence, and many more threats, often prompting the government to invoke British-era laws that allow it to ban works of art and literature. India was among the first countries to ban Salman Rushdie’s novel “The Satanic Verses.”

In March, Taslima Nasreen, a Bangladeshi novelist living in exile in the Communist-controlled state of West Bengal, was forced to leave for several months after a Muslim political party objected to her work.

Meanwhile, in the western state of Gujarat, controlled by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, a political psychologist, Ashis Nandy, was charged with “promoting enmity between different groups.” His offense was to write an opinion article in The Times of India criticizing the victory of the Hindu nationalists in state elections; the case is pending.

“That politics has gotten out of hand,” Mr. Mehta, the political scientist, argued. “It puts liberal democracy at risk. If we want social stability we need a consensus on what our freedoms are.”

Even threats of violence from offended parties are a powerful deterrent. In Mumbai, formerly Bombay, where Mr. Husain lived for most of his life, a recent exhibition on Indian masters did not include his work. Nor did India’s first modern art fair, held in New Delhi in August. The same week in the same city, a small show featuring reproductions of Mr. Husain’s work was vandalized.

Of Mr. Husain’s exceptionally large body of work — at least 20,000 pieces, he guesses — there are three that have angered his foes. Two are highly stylized pencil drawings of Durga, the mother goddess, and Saraswati, the goddess of the arts, both faceless and nude. The third is a map of India rendered as a female nude, her head in the Himalayas, a breast jutting out into the Arabian Sea. Mr. Husain insists that nudity symbolizes purity. He has repeatedly said that he had not meant to offend any faith. But one of his paintings, showing a donkey — to the artist, a symbol of nonviolence — at Mecca, created a ruckus among his fellow Muslims.

Harsh Goenka, a Mumbai-based industrialist and one of the country’s most important collectors, has a similar Husain nude, an oil painting of the goddess Saraswati. As “an average normal Hindu,” he says he is appalled that Mr. Husain is not safe in his country

“Keeping him away is, in a way, showing the weakness of the system, that we cannot protect the rights of the citizen,” Mr. Goenka said. “If he has done a crime, punish him. If he hasn’t, let him live here with dignity and peace of mind.”

Mr. Husain calls the current Congress Party-led government too weak-kneed to offer him protection from those who might harm him. Mostly, though, he cautions against making too much of his case. India, he insists, is fundamentally “tolerant.”

Not least, he said, he has always been a vagabond, sleeping on the Mumbai streets during his impoverished youth, wandering through Europe to study Rembrandt, or bouncing, as he does now, among several lavish apartments and villas here in Dubai — or rather, cruising among them, in one of his five costly thrill machines, including a lipstick-red Ferrari, his current favorite. Mr. Husain is India’s best-paid artist. Last March, at a Christie’s auction, his “Battle of Ganga and Jamuna,” part of a 27-canvas series on the Mahabharata, the Hindu epic, fetched $1.6 million.

“I am working, it’s O.K.,” he said. “If things get all right, I’ll go. If they don’t, so be it. What can I do?”

And then he quoted the poet Faiz Ahmed Faiz, a Pakistani who went into exile in the late 1970s during President Muhammad Zia ul-Haq’s regime and who wrote about missing the animosity of his enemies as much as the affection of friends. “Of course,” he conceded, “the heart is there.”

On the morning of Id al-Fitr, Islam’s holiest day, Mr. Husain sat in the back seat of his Bentley as it whizzed past a row of construction sites, taking calls from Mumbai on his new iPhone.

Back home on the same day, his granddaughter Rakshanda was getting engaged. It was the first major family function he had missed since his exile. “Such an auspicious day,” he murmured. “Anyway, we will have a ceremony here again.”

In Mumbai, it had been his custom to host an annual Id al-Fitr breakfast for his community, a Shiite subsect that calls itself Suleimanis. This morning, he hosted one here, too, at a community hall with steaming plates of mutton and flatbread. A stream of people came to pay their respects, taking his gnarled right hand, placing it above their eyes, one after the other, then to their lips. Mr. Husain, a master of flamboyance, stood beaming in a green silk jacket embroidered with motifs from his paintings, including several voluptuous, scantily clad women.

He is now working on two ambitious series: one on Indian civilization, to be mounted in London, the second on Arab civilization, which will be exhibited in Qatar.

Here in Dubai, he is at work on a whimsical installation titled “Form Meets Function,” which will incorporate his five luxury cars, including a sound piece he intends to create using their engines.

At sundown, he climbed into the passenger seat of the Ferrari, pounded the dashboard and instructed his driver to hit the gas pedal. The engine revved, and he squealed in delight. He said he had stopped driving several years ago, after cataract surgery.

He does not have a studio in Dubai. There are easels in each of the homes he has bought for his extended clan. He spends a night here, a night there.

One of them is an 11th-floor apartment with spectacular, south-facing views of jagged skyscrapers under construction. It is filled with dozens of small canvases from the 1950s that he had given to a Czech woman he had once intended to marry, though she turned him down.

She found him recently and returned his paintings. “They belong to India,” she told him.

This afternoon, recalling the story, Mr. Husain said he would eventually have to take them home. “Temporarily,” he mused, “they are here.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/09/world/asia/09india.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
 
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Excellent Article. Thank you. If this is what happens to progressive and secular muslims in India, thank God for the two nation theory.
 
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Excellent Article. Thank you. If this is what happens to progressive and secular muslims in India, thank God for the two nation theory.

It didn't work.

Would a three nation theory have suited the muslims of Pre Indep India ?
 
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Excellent Article. Thank you. If this is what happens to progressive and secular muslims in India, thank God for the two nation theory.

That is ones own version of secularism, Hussain should paint his god as nude
then visit either side of partitioned country to face the music. Its easier to point fingers following secularism rather than following it themselves.
 
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Excellent Article. Thank you. If this is what happens to progressive and secular muslims in India, thank God for the two nation theory.

Really? Darkstar?

I wonder what happens to progressive and secular muslims in Pakistan.

Give us a break and get rid of the harp and the halo.
 
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That is ones own version of secularism, Hussain should paint his god as nude
then visit either side of partitioned country to face the music. Its easier to point fingers following secularism rather than following it themselves.

Exactly right.

Strange people are coming to his support on this issue. People who have never had anything to do with freedom of expression of any kind.

Hussain is a great son of India, but he has to first show the audacity to take on the fundamentalists of his community before taking on the other. That will establish his credibility.

Let him paint some of his own famous religious female figures in the nude and then see how the supporters here react.

And not surprisingly, this small issue again acted as a straw to clutch for some who need constant validation of their identity every other day!

What does Mr. Munshi have to say of the hounding out of that brave woman Taslima from Bangladesh? Does he support her forced exile?

I don't support the trauma that Hussain went through but he is also guilty of hypocrisy.
 
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I think its the Indians who wear the halo. Look how they behaved on the Taslima Nasreen issue. First the Islamists in India were after her and then the secularists. Once she left Bangladesh voluntarily the Indians wore a holier than thou attitude and now they have egg on their face.
 
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Oscar academy restores Satyajit Ray's banned film

KOLKATA, Nov 9 (bdnews24.com/Reuters) - The Oscars academy has restored a rare print of a controversial film by India's famed director Satyajit Ray that was banned by Indian censors for glorifying monarchy in a Himalayan kingdom that acceded to India.

Made in 1971, "Sikkim" was about the Himalayan redoubt of the same name ruled by the Chogyals before it acceded to India in 1975 amid some criticism that New Delhi had browbeaten its tiny neighbour. China opposed India's claim on Sikkim until 2005.

Sikkim is now India's second smallest state, wedged between Nepal, China and Bhutan, and is strategically important for New Delhi.

Ray scholars say the Indian government's fears that the documentary depicted monarchy in a way that undermined democracy -- at a time when Sikkim faced being annexed by either India or China -- was unfounded.

"To imagine Satyajit Ray would glorify monarchy over democracy is utterly wrong because he is the same person who could make films ridiculing monarchy as we see in 'Hirak Rajar Deshe'," said Arup K. De, head of the Society for the Preservation of Satyajit Ray Films.

It was thought that all the prints of the hour-long documentary had been destroyed after it was banned by India.

But one was found at the British Film Institute in 2003 and it was restored digitally frame-by-frame by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Audiences in India can watch "Sikkim" for the first time at the 14th Kolkata Film Festival beginning next week. India lifted the ban about four years ago, Sikkim's art and culture trust said.

"If everything works out, the video version would be shown at the Kolkata Film Festival," Josef Lindner, the academy's preservation officer, told Reuters.

"The 35 mm version would be ready by end of the year."

The academy has undertaken to restore damaged prints of the films of Satyajit Ray, who was awarded a lifetime achievement Oscar in 1992. He received the honour on his death bed in a hospital in Kolkata.

Lindner said Ray's "Shatranj Ke Khiladi" (The Chess Players), made in 1977, would be restored next.

The academy has so far restored and preserved 15 of Ray's feature films and two documentaries, including "Sikkim".

Ray shot to global fame with "Pather Panchali" (Song of the Little Road), "Aparajito" (The Unvanquished) and "Apur Sansar" (The World of Apu) from his "Apu trilogy" -- a coming-of-age narrative describing the childhood, education and early maturity of a young Bengali boy in the early 20th century.

He directed several other films and wrote many books, some of them widely translated into other languages.

bdnews24.com/nj/1244hours

Oscar academy restores Satyajit Ray's banned film :: Style :: bdnews24.com ::
 
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Since our so called esteemed writer has brought Tasleema Nasreen I am posting an article on the same

Taslima Nasreen vs MF Hussein

Syed Ali Mujtaba, Ph.D. - 12/14/2007

There is certain degree of similarity between Taslima Nasreen and MF Hussein; the first has hurt the religious sentiments of the Muslims the later the sentiments of the Hindus. What could have been a rallying point of hurt sentiments has turned out to be a case of mud slinging between the two dominant faiths in India.

The curious part in this is while there is sympathy for the Bangladeshi writer; the Indian Picasso is forced to go into exile. This Talibanisation of Indian society is taking place right in front our eyes and every one seems to be maintaining a conspiracy of silence towards it.

There is little to choose between those who protested on the streets of Kolkatta against Taslima Nasreen and those who have filed cases against MF Hussein. Both seem to belong to the same tribe though they may follow different faith.

The glaring thing in Hussein’s controversy is; Hinduism has started wearing the glasses of the Abramic faith. There is every effort being made to make it its mirror image.

Hussein is not the first person to take liberty with Hindusim. Indian history is littered with instances where Hindu god and goddess are being ‘depicted in objectionable terms’. The Jataka tales that forms the secondary source of Ancient Indian historiography cite many references of such contents.

Even today in the north Indian plains, particularly in the tribal villages, before the Holi festival, youths assemble for musical fest in the evenings and such late night revelries ends up singing words full of eroticism about Hindu god and goddess. Such oral traditions and local custom do not follow the city norm they are in vogue since time immemorial. There is nothing immoral about it.

Then why Hussein is being targeted? Is it because he has a Muslim sounding name? This is a difficult call but persons like MF Hussein cannot be cloaked into any faith. Such characters are above faith. They in fact are national property. The irony is instead of being acknowledged so some self styled Indian Talibans has made him person-non-grata.

It seems the 92 years old Indian celebrity is heading to become another Bhadur Shah Zafar who may bemoan for not getting two meters of land for burial in his own motherland.

There is no doubt that M F Hussein is one of the most respected painters of modern India. If we look at Hussein’s career there is hardly any anti- Hindu content in it. He is definitely is not an anti- Hindu campaigner The odd piece of work could be an aberration in his 90 years career and he should be condoned keeping the best of Hindu traditions.

However, if we analyse Taslima Nasreen, she is a rank anti- Muslim rabble-rouser. There is nothing in her work but anti-Islamic content. That’s the reason she finds favour from the Sangh Privar that has rolled out a red carpet for her.

The UP Chief Minister Ms Mayawati have called the controversy surrounding Taslima Nasreen as ‘Manuwadi’ conspiracy. She feels that the saffron brigade approve of the Bangladeshi writer because her anti Islamic writings messages their ego.

There is little doubt that Taslima Nasreen is an anti- Islam writer. To pedal the label of a feminist Muslim reform writer on her name would be a great misnomer. She should be treated as anti- Islam writer and there should be no qualms about it. Lord's world is big enough to accommodate those who follow the Islamic faith and for those who like to denigrate it.

The final point is whether India should shelter Taslima Nasreen or not? Keeping in mind the great Indian tradition India must give her all the comforts of life that she deserves with a rider she should no more become a public nuisance.

However the fact remains, Ms Nasreen and controversy cannot live separately. Not even two months passes she is back in the news. Earlier her statements in Bhopal hogged the limelight. She was seen spewing venom against Islam on a TV show. In Hyderabad she was showered with petals and flower vases. In Kolkotta it was a free for all.

There are some who argue that the freedom of expression of Taslima Nasreen should not be curtailed at the same time they advocate that freedom to protest against her should not be allowed. Well this is the hypocrisy of the worst kind that’s seen in this debate.

Every one is not a writer and can protest by pen alone, if she has a license to denigrate and abuse others too have the right to protest in whatever means and form is available. Who is at fault the abuser or the protestor? The hypocrisy is the fingers are pointed on the second.

So where do we end up. Taslima Nasreen is an asylum seeker in India. She does not enjoy the fundamental rights that average citizens of this country do. Even then she has been taking the liberty and offending a particular community and disturbing public peace. Will she be allowed to do so? Well if I am the lord and master of this land I would say mend your ways Madam; else keep your suitcase packed.

Syed Ali Mujtaba is a journalist based in Chennai, India. He can be contacted at syedalimujtaba@yahoo.com

Global Politician - Taslima Nasreen vs MF Hussein
 
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I think its the Indians who wear the halo. Look how they behaved on the Taslima Nasreen issue. First the Islamists in India were after her and then the secularists. Once she left Bangladesh voluntarily the Indians wore a holier than thou attitude and now they have egg on their face.

Writer faces threat to life hence she abandons her own country and fled to India, India gives her shelter but she does invite wrath of islamist in India then decides never to return to India leaves India but returns back just in nick of time to renew her six month visa.

But I fail to understand why writer's community in her country keeps quite she should have been offered safe package back to her country.

As atleast she is not involved in Corruption.Probably I see Mossad and RAW hand behind this to only conspire against Bangladesh.
 
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I think its the Indians who wear the halo. Look how they behaved on the Taslima Nasreen issue. First the Islamists in India were after her and then the secularists. Once she left Bangladesh voluntarily the Indians wore a holier than thou attitude and now they have egg on their face.

Lol look at yurself in mirror .. you belong to an extremists society which forced her to leave her own country .
 
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India intimidates and victimizes all brands of artistes. That is probably what makes it secular. :whistle:
 
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That is the reason why so called Bangla artiste take refuge in India ofcourse I am not discussing about so many illegal Bangla immigrants in India.
The said bangla artise went to Europe so as not to return to India but alas did return to India to renew her Visa.

Please take the said Artise back we don't need her.
 
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India is obviously not perfect and faces many challenges like any other liberal democracy. But it is the only beacon of hope for all progressive forces in the region.

The only secular democracy in a region that is ravaged by fundamentalism and regressive ideologies for thousands of miles all around.
 
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ok the topis was abt MF Hussain and as far as the digging up I did, here it goes.

He is a Muslim who paints Hindu goddesses in the nude! and heres what I find the good and bad, first the bad:

1) islamic paintings are strictly no living things! and he violated that.
2) There was a certain cartoon about the prophet sometime back that raised a big question among muslims and that the writer had no right to depict the prophet pbuh in bad light! in fact, there was one section which argued that he is not even muslim (whoevr made that comic strip) and so he has no right to say anything abt islam or its prophets. The same can be said abt Mr.Hussain! he is no hindu and he has no right to damage the image of someone else's gods. Already the image of islam is not very bright in terms of tolerance - why burden with this stuff which in my case is unnecessary.
3) I observe he is obsessed with women, Madhuri Dixit if i am not wrong ( My indian friends here told me about something like this pls correct if untrue) and he seems totally a despo in some respects! - needs a good psych if u ask me!!
4) Art as such does not have to hurt someone else! If expressing oneself is an art then even a terrorist is an artist andd he chooses to express him self by blowing up some place or people! there has to be a line somewhere! just as the famous line goes, your freedom ends where my nose starts!! Just because I am free to go anywhere in the USA (because of visa) I wont be allowed into someone else's house!

The good things:
well, he has tried to test the limits of the boundary btw the "accceptable creativity" and unacceptable creativity!this should serve as what will come to you if u play with someone else's beliefs!
sorry couldnt think of any other good thing though i wish i could write more!!


honestly, whatever he did serves as a bad precedent for peace! why flare communal violenece? hindu's regard thoer goddesses as mothers ( according to my indian frnds) I wouldnt let someone paint my mom in the nude!! plain and simple!
 
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