Final Solution (2004 film)

Final Solution is a 2004 documentary film directed by Rakesh Sharma concerning the 2002 Gujarat riots in the state of Gujarat in which 254 Hindus and 790 Muslims were killed. Hindu right wing organizations were responsible for these riots, who claimed that their actions were in fact a "spontaneous response" to the demise of 70 Hindu Pilgrims in the Godhra Train Burning by a mob on 27 February 2002. But as the film proceeds with victims continuing to come forward and share their experiences, a more unsettling possibility seems to emerge- that far from being a spontaneous expression of outrage. The makers of the film claim that the violence had been carefully coordinated and planned.

Final Solution
Directed byRakesh Sharma
Running time
218 minutes
CountryIndia
LanguagesGujarati
Hindi
Urdu

An official estimate states that 254 Hindus and 790 Muslims were killed during the riots, with 223 more missing and rendered more than 100,000 muslims as refugees.

The documentary consists mostly of interviews, with both Muslims and Hindus, of multiple generations, and both sexes, with different views regarding the causes, justifications and the actual events of the violence that occurred, as well as their prospects for the future.

Synopsis

Part 1: Pride and Genocide deals with the carnage and its immediate aftermath. It examines the patterns of pre-planned genocidal violence (by right-wing Hindutva cadres), which many claim was state-supported, if not state-sponsored. The film reconstructs through eyewitness accounts the attack on Gulbarg and Patiya (Ahmedabad) and acts of barbaric violence against Muslim women at Eral and Delol/Kalol (Panchmahals) even as Chief Minister Modi traverses the state on his Gaurav Yatra

Part 2 : The Hate Mandate documents the poll campaign during the Assembly elections in Gujarat in late 2002. It records in detail the exploitation of the Godhra incident by the right-wing propaganda machinery for electoral gains. The film studies and documents the situation months after the elections to find shocking faultlines – voluntary ghettoisation, segregation in schools, formal calls for economic boycott of Muslims and continuing acts of violence.

Screenings and censoring

The movie was initially banned in India in 2004 for alleged fears that massive communalism and radicalism would be ignited by the film. The Censor Board's ruling itself was a violation of the Indian Supreme Court rulings on this specific issue.

Final Solution was banned in India by the Censor Board for several months. The ban was lifted in Oct.'04 after a sustained campaign (an online petition, hundreds of protest screenings countrywide, multi-city signature campaigns and dozens of letters to the Government sent by audiences directly).[1]

A Pirate-and-Circulate campaign was conducted in protest against the ban (Get-a-free-copy-only-if-you-promise-to-pirate-and-make-5-copies). Over 10,000 free Video CDs of the film were distributed in India during this campaign, which ended in Dec. 2004. Final Solution was offered free to Anhad for their campaigns; it was included in their anthology titled "In defence of our dreams". Subscribers of several journals/mags also got a copy of the film free of cost. These included Communalism Combat (Ed : Teesta Setalvad and Javed Anand), Samayik Varta (Ed : Yogendra Yadav), Janmat and several smaller journals.

Final Solution was rejected by the government-run Mumbai International Film Festival, but was screened at 'Vikalp: Films for Freedom', organised by the Campaign Against Censorship.[2] Rakesh Sharma has been an active member of the Campaign since its inception.

A pilot movement to copy-and-redistribute the movie was held, briefly to protest the censoring of the movie screenings. The film has been screened on BBC, NHK, DR2, YLE and several other channels. It is yet to be shown on Indian television.

Awards for Final Solution

  • National Film Award – Special Jury Award (non-feature film) in 2005
  • Wolfgang Staudte award (now rechristened the Golden Bear for Best Debut), Berlinale [3]
  • Special Jury Award (Netpac), Berlin International film festival [4]
  • Humanitarian Award for Outstanding Documentary, HongKong International film festival
  • Montgolfiere d’Or (Best Documentary) & Le Prix Fip/Pil’ du Public, Festival des 3 Continents at Nantes (France)
  • Best Documentary, Apsara Awards (Indian Film industry awards)
  • Best Film, Freedom of Expression awards by Index on Censorship (UK)
  • Silver Dhow, Zanzibar International film festival
  • Human Rights Award, Docupolis (Barcelona)
  • Special Jury Award, Mar Del Plata Independent film festival (Argentina)
  • Special Jury Awards, Karafest (Karachi), Worldfest (Houston) and Film South Asia (Kathmandu)
  • Special Jury Mentions, Munich Dokfest and Bangkok International filmfest
  • Nominee, Best Foreign Film, Grierson Awards (UK)
  • Special Award by NRIs for a Secular and Harmonious India (NRI-SAHI), NY-NJ, USA
  • Special Award by AFMI, USA-Canada[5][6]

See also

  • India: The Modi Question ― 2023 two-part BBC documentary series about Narendra Modi and his relationship with the Muslim minority

References

Sources

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