THE
DOMESTIC CRUSADERS
July 15-16
Berkeley
more info
A two-act play about a Pakistani-American family in the
aftermath of 9/11
The Domestic Crusaders chronicles the cultural, political, and
religious conflicts of a fictional modern Pakistani American
Muslim family
living in post 9/11 America. Its blunt, no-holds barred authentic
depiction focuses on one day in the life of one family composed
of six unique members, who convene at the family home for a birthday
celebration. With a background of 9-11 and the scapegoating of
Muslim Americans, the humor, tensions and sparks fly among the
three generations. The day culminates in an intense family battle
as each "crusader" struggles to assert and impose their
respective voices and opinions while still attempting to maintain
and understand that unifying thread that makes them part of the
same family.
WAR & PEACE
/
JANG AUR AMAN
A Film by Anand Patwardhan
June 8th
San Francisco
more
info
Filmed over three tumultuous years in India,
Pakistan, Japan and the USA - WAR & PEACE / JANG AUR AMAN is an epic
documentary journey of peace activism in the face of global militarism
and war. Triggered by macabre scenes of jubilation that greeted nuclear
testing in the Indian sub-continent, WAR & PEACE / JANG AUR AMAN is
dramatically framed by the murder of Mahatma Gandhi. Fifty years after
his death memories of Gandhi seem like a mirage that never was, created
by our thirst for peace and our very distance from it.
MIGRITUDE:
Spoken Word by Shailja Patel
Jun 21st
San Francisco
more info
MIGRITUDE explores global themes; heritage, war, freedom, by making intimate
family treasures public. Similarly, it expresses universal experiences of
colonized peoples through the journeys of Shailja’s own diasporic Indian
family. Three cross-continental migrations shape the story: the early 20th-century
migration of Indians to East Africa; the mass expulsion and emigration of
East African Indians to the global North from the 1970s onwards, and Shailja’s
own emigration from Africa, to Europe, to the US. The sequence maps her personal
transitions as a migrant: from survival to self-expression, invisibility
to activism, model minority to radical artist.
INDO-PAK
PEACE SOLIDARITY MARCH
San Francisco,
May 15th
more
info
Join the South Asian community in the SF Bay Area and show your solidarity
to the marchers in India and Pakistan, who are threading across the subcontinent
on a 6-week mission of establishing people-to-people contact, negating the
tendencies of distrust, hatred and enmity, and spreading the message of peace
and harmony. The march begins at Mission St/16th St and ends at Gadar Memorial
Hall in Japantown.

NOTORIOUS INDIAN HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSER
DENIED ENTRY INTO US!
3/18/05
Coalition of thirty five human rights organizations
wins first victory
The American State department decision to deny Mr. Narendra
Modi, the Chief Minister of Gujarat and chief architect of the Gujarat
pogrom of 2002, a diplomatic visa and to revoke his existing tourist/business
visa based on the International Religious Freedom Act is a landmark victory
for the Coalition Against Genocide (CAG).... read
more
ALI
KAZIMI'S CONTINUOUS JOURNEY
WINS BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE AUDIENCE AWARD AT SFIAAFF
3/17/05
Continuous Journey is a complex tale of hope, despair, treachery and tragedy.
It is a revealing Canadian story with global ramifications set in a time when
the British Empire seemed omnipresent and its subjects were restless and seeking
self-determination. In 1914, Gurdit Singh, a Sikh
entrepreneur based in Singapore, chartered a Japanese ship, the Komagata Maru,
to carry Indian immigrants to Canada. On May 23, 1914, the ship arrived in
Vancouver Harbour with 376 passengers aboard: 340 Sikhs; 24 Muslims and 12
Hindus. Many of the men on-board were veterans of the British Indian Army and
believed that it was their right as British subjects to settle anywhere in
the Empire they had fought to defend and expand. They were wrong... read
more
APA
ARTISTS 4 TSUNAMI RELIEF EVENT RAISED OVER $2800 FOR
RELIEF EFFORTS IN INDONESIA AND SRI LANKA
2/3/05
We are working with the Global Greengrants' Funds
to disburse all funds collected directly to the following
community-based groups in the two hardest hit areas: WALHI – Indonesian
Forum for Environment (Indonesia), KSKBA - Solidarity Coalition
for Humane Disaster Relief (Indonesia) and Saviya Development
Foundation (Sri Lanka) more
info
PLEASE
SUPPORT ASIAN TSUNAMI RELIEF EFFORTS
12/27/04
It is time to give and give
generously. As the death toll climbs past 150,000 and the
world comes to grips with the devastation caused by the
deadly Indian Ocean tsunamis, numerous organizations across
Asia are stepping up to organize relief and rehabilitation.
We urge all individuals in the U.S. and elsewhere to support
them by donating generously.
For a list of recommended
organizations for charitable contributions, click
here.
SHARED
HISTORY AND DIVERSE CULTURES
FIND VOICE AT TRAVELING FILM SOUTH ASIA 2004
3/01/04
Showcasing the groundbreaking work and emerging talent of non-fiction
filmmakers from South Asia, Traveling
Film South Asia 2004 debuts on March 12 as the only festival of
its kind in California. Organized by Ekta and Friends of South Asia (FOSA),
in collaboration with Himal Association, the festival offers Bay Area filmgoers
a rare opportunity to view a selection of 19 compelling documentaries that
chart the shared history and complex lives of the people of the sub-continent.
Covering a wide range of important political, social, and economic issues and
giving voice to many of the region’s people—women, religious minorities,
and indigenous communities—the films focus the lens on life in contemporary
South Asia, while celebrating its rich cultural diversity. Representing filmmakers
from Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and Pakistan, this year’s festival is
a compilation of award-winning and thought-provoking films that include a selection
of films from the 2003
Film South Asia (FSA) festival in Nepal, six films that screened at the
recently concluded World Social Forum in India, and two films by the internationally
acclaimed Pakistani filmmaker, Sabiha Sumar. The event runs from March 12-21
in San Francisco and from March 26-28 in Milpitas.
As
the only such event solely dedicated to supporting contemporary
South Asian non-fiction films, TFSA 2004 provides a unique
platform for filmmakers to exhibit new works that examine
critical and often provocative issues. This year’s
festival is particularly noteworthy because it screens
three films that were censored by the recent Mumbai International
Film Festival due to their anti-establishment content.
The rejection of the films spawned a massive protest in
the documentary film community, with over 170 Indian filmmakers
threatening to boycott the festival [see Vikalp:
Films for Freedom website]. In a political climate
that threatens freedom of expression, festivals such as
TFSA 2004 play an important role in advocacy and social
change. For this reason, Film South Asia—the festival
that TFSA draws upon—has gained a deserving recognition
in the international community as a world-class festival
that gives voice to visionary documentary filmmakers. Since
its beginnings in 1997, Film South Asia has traveled to
more than 45 international venues.
TFSA
2004 will be held over three weekends in March at two Bay
Area venues: at the Mission Cultural Center, San Francisco,
during March 12-14 and March 19-21, and at the India Community
Center, Milpitas, during March 26-28. The March 12 program
opens at the Mission Cultural Center at 7 p.m. with a screening
of Amar Kanwar’s, A
NIGHT OF PROPHECY (India, 2002). One of the films censored
at the recent Mumbai International Film Festival but shown
at the World Social Forum, this poetic documentary travels
through different parts of India to reveal how poetry and
music can unify a nation’s people even in the face
of severe conflict and oppression. The program continues
with the groundbreaking RESILIENT
RHYTHMS (India, 2002), a dynamic and truthful portrayal
of India’s caste system and the Dalit response to
their marginalization. Gopal Menon, known for his compelling
and acclaimed documentary, Hey Ram: Genocide in the Land
of Gandhi, directed the film.
Reflecting
the current political situation in India, religious fundamentalism
and the need for tolerance was a powerful and recurrent
theme explored by many of the films. In GODHRA
TAK: THE TERROR TRAIL (India, 2003), director Shubradeep
Chakravorty investigates the Godhra train burning and subsequent
rioting that killed 2000 Muslims in Gujarat, India in February
2002. Chakravorty retraces in chilling detail the route
of the first batch of kar sevaks from Gujarat to Ayodhya
and back and carefully reconstructs the terror they unleashed
en route leading to the Godhra fire and the riots that
followed. In a climate of increasing religious divides,
directors Jayasankar and Monteiro provide a glimmer of
hope in their film, NAATA – THE
BOND (India, 2003). The film is a moving tale of two
friends who work on promoting communal harmony in Bombay’s
largest slum. Naata was one of the films removed from the
Mumbai International Film Festival, but shown at the World
Social Forum in Mumbai in January 2004.
From
body image to struggling for personal freedom in a male-dominated
society, some of the most outstanding films of the festival
focus on women’s issues. SKIN
DEEP (India, 1998), by Reena Mohan, is an exploration
of body images and self-perception among contemporary urban,
middle class women in India. The film is a playful, engrossing,
and articulate rendering on women’s complicated and
contradictory relationships with their bodies. SWARA – A
BRIDGE OVER TROUBLED WATER (Pakistan, 2003), by Samar
Minallah, is a hard-hitting commentary on the Pakhtun practice
of giving minor girls in marriage to an “enemy family” in
reparation for serious crimes committed by male members
of the girl’s family. The issue is now before the
Pakistan’s Supreme Court and Minallah is hoping that
legislation is brought soon to ban the practice of “swara.” Also
from Pakistan, is director Sabiha Sumar’s film, DON’T
ASK WHY (1999). Based on a diary, the film takes us
into the life of Anousheh and provides a moving account
of the dreams and fears of a 17-year-old girl growing up
in a conservative and patriarchal society. Most of Sumar’s
films are banned in her native country.
Two
films from Bangladesh reveal that the nation’s freedom
struggle of the 1970s continues to be an important theme
for its filmmakers. In WORDS
OF FREEDOM (MUKTIR KOTHA) (1999), directors Tareque
Masud and Catherine Masud tell the story of musicians traveling
through refugee camps and war zones during the Liberation
War in 1971. The film blends documentary and fictional
genres in a musical structure to follow the birth of a
nation and the ideals of secularism and tolerance on which
it was founded. In TALE
OF THE DARKEST NIGHT (SHEI RATER KOTHA BOLTE ESHECHI) (2001),
director Kawsar Chowdhury recreates the horror of the massacre
by the Pakistani army in Dhaka University. The film won
the Second Best Film Award at Film South Asia 2003.
Other
important themes explored in the films include the harmful
effects of migration, displacement of rural and indigenous
communities due to large development projects, and environmental
degradation.
Ekta and Friends of South Asia (FOSA) present the festival, in collaboration
with Himal Association. Ekta is a local nonprofit organization that provides
a platform for social change through art, dialogue, and education within
the South Asian community. FOSA is a Bay Area group that works towards
a peaceful, prosperous, and hate-free South Asia. Located in the Kathmandu
Valley region of Nepal, Himal Association is a nonprofit organization
whose goal is to raise awareness of local, national, and international
issues among Nepali people. Festival co-sponsors include the Center for
South Asian Studies (University of California at Berkeley), the Department
of Cultural and Social Anthropology at the California Institute for Integral
Studies, the India Community Center, and SF Station.
For a complete list of films and show
times, further information, or to purchase tickets online,
visit http://ektaonline.org/tfsa or
email tfsa@ektaonline.org.
Tickets per show are $6 online ($9
at the door) at the Mission Cultural Center. For screenings
at the India Community Center, tickets are $5 (at the door
or online).
A festival pass that covers films at both venues can be
purchased online for $25.

|
A
REPORT TO EKTA and CAC DONORS ON THE REHABILITATION
OF THE SURVIVORS OF COMMUNAL VIOLENCE IN GUJARAT 4/22/03
click
here |