Kirtichankra: Patriotism as Jingoism
C.S Venkiteshwaran
http://venkiteswaran.blogspot.com/2006/09/kirtichandra.html


It is one thing to be proud of one's land and yet another being
jingoist about it. But our films, obsessively tied to the
'hero-villain' black and white format, always invariably indulge in
jingoism when they claim to be dealing with 'patriotism'. It is indeed
interesting to see whether any discourse or narrative of patriotism is
possible at all without it positing an 'other', the enemy. It is the
lurking presence of the enemy that makes 'us', it is 'their' threat
that invokes us to stay together and assert ourselves. Without 'them',
'we' are impossible. Running through all the post-Kargil 'patriotic'
films in India is this jingoism. Major Ravi's film 'Kirti Chakra' is
the latest addition to this genre from Malayalam.

In all these films, the enemy is invariably Pakistan, which in turn
'automatically' means Muslims. So the narrative gradually turns out to
be actually targeting the 'enemy within' rather than without. Here,
the 'nation' 'naturally' comes to mean 'Hindustan' (literally), and
one need extend this logic too long for patriotism to turn into Hindu
pride. So naturally all the villains are the treacherous Mussalmans,
who never belong/ed 'here'. Interestingly, in Kirtichakra only women
among the Muslims seem to share (or realize) the nationalist fervour
of the 'heroes', the men are easy preys to the cause of violence and
bigotry. While the Hindus sacrifice their lives for the nation and
'the people', Muslims do that only for their religion. So nationalism
comes 'naturally' to the former while it has to be imposed on the
other.

Like any other 'war movie', Kirtichakra is also a male buddy movie,
with the women only appearing as brief interruptions in the manly
world of risks, adventure and action. On 'this side', they are
charming objects patiently and proudly waiting at home for their
heroic partners, and on the 'other side', they are gullible victims to
the fanatic designs of men and religion. This pattern is yet another
polemical formula for female characters - the romantic-innocent love
or the preys and the victimized. While the 'heroes' love and adore and
protect their women, the 'villains' use and abuse them. The worlds of
women and men are neatly divided into the home and the world. The
valiant Mahadevan (Moahanlal) loses his wife and kid in a terrorist
attack, will still head the larger family of the nation. Jai, his
buddy loses his own life trying to save his boss, but his widow will
dedicate their child from their little family to the larger one of the
nation. Such simplistic formulae are the stuff jingoism sustains
itself with.

Significantly, all great films dealing with war are essentially
anti-war movies. They assert life and point at the futility of
violence and war. On the other hand, jingoistic movies of all
varieties, whether it be Hollywood, Bollywood or Malayalam, thrive
upon enmity, strife, violence and division. It feeds upon martyrs and
violence, and finds it impossible to narrativise joy and peace.
Exactly why a film like Kirtichakra makes one sad despite all its
other merits like casting (impressive performances by Mohanlal and
Jeeva), breezy editing and camera work. Because its pro-war jingoism
makes it a painful viewing experience, as a result, in the name of
patriotism what it glorifies is hatred and bigotry.

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