http://thereel.scroll.in/810876/a-devastating-new-documentary-from-odisha-proves-that-witchcraft-is-actually-about-witchhunts

DOCUMENTARY CHANNEL

A devastating new documentary from Odisha proves that witchcraft is
actually about witchhunts

Lipika Singh Darai’s ‘Some Stories Around Witches’ explores the
barbaric practice through three case studies.

Jun 30, 2016 · 01:30 pm
Updated Jun 30, 2016 · 09:53 pm

Nandini Ramnath

Lipika Singh Darai’s documentary Some Stories Around Witches has many
quietly devastating moments, but few are as heart-rending as the one
in which a five-year-old girl in a school uniform says she was accused
by her teacher of turning into a cat at night and sucking the blood of
her fellow students.

Moumita was rusticated from her hostel, and she returned only after
the intervention of the courts. When interviewed for the film, Moumita
has an air of inevitability about her. In a culture in which belief in
witchcraft is widespread and unshakable, Moumita doesn’t seem shocked
that she has been added to a long list of girls and women who are
believed to have the power to cast spells and turn into animals.

Set in the filmmaker’s home state Odisha and shot in the Mayurbhanj
and Keonjhar districts, Some Stories Around Witches reveals how
superstition and ignorance have ruined the lives of many innocent
people. “There is a mystery surrounding tradition and myths about
witchcraft but we should also see it in the light of socio-economic
conditions and politics to understand the complexity of the events,”
said the Film and Television Institute of India graduate.

Ever since the Odisha government passed the Prevention of
Witch-Hunting Act in 2013, two or three cases are reported in the
regional media every month, Darai notes. The uptick in the number of
incidents is possibly a result of better reporting as well as more
rampant score-settling. Women are the typical targets of abuse and
violence, but men are not exempt.

[Video: The trailer of ‘Some Stories Around Witches’.]

The Public Service Broadcasting Trust-funded film follows three cases,
one of which involves the social boycott of a family accused of being
forces of evil. The case study, titled Chicken Meal, makes it clear
that the family is a victim of worldly problems. Simple acts of
supposed transgression – an argument over the use of water in the
fields, cooking chicken before the end of a panchayat-imposed deadline
on the consumption of meat – have snowballed into accusations of
sorcery. The family is kept to the margins and treated with hostility
and suspicion. The charges could fade over time, but the damage has
been done.

Two other widely reported incidents reveal the ease with which people
can be vilified, beaten up and in some cases even killed. With
curiosity that never crosses over into sensationalism and sensitivity
that doesn’t collapse into hand-wringing sentimentality, Darai looks
at the strange case of 16-year-old Niru. In 2012, Niru walked into a
police station with the severed head of her sister’s mother-in-law.
Photographs of Niru holding up the consequence of her moment of
madness were splashed across the newspapers. She served time in a
juvenile home for the killing and is back in her village. Niru
explains her motives to Darai: her victim would constantly harass her
sister over property maters, and would boast of possessing
supernatural powers that had the ability to cause problems and even
take lives.

The third account, called Electric Pole, is of a group of women who
were labelled witches after the sudden death of a young man. One of
them was stripped and strapped to an electric pole, and was freed only
after local police officers managed to convince the mob that the law
would take care of the women.

[Video: A clip from ‘Some Stories Around Witches’.]

The woman who lay for hours in front of curious crowds, which included
children, was reported to have died as a result of her trauma. It
turns out she was alive. The filmmaker tracked her down to an old age
home, where she lives with her deaf husband and sister and struggles
to put distance between herself and her horror.

Darai says she was profoundly disturbed after meeting the woman. “I
went into a depression after meeting the old woman, which delayed the
completion of the film,” said Darai, who has won National Film Awards
for Gaarud (2009), Eka Gachha Eka Mainsha Eka Samudra (2012) and
Kankee O Saapo (2013). The awards were returned in 2015 to protest the
Centre’s crackdown on the FTII student strike.

Darai was contacted by Sashiprava Bindhani, who was one of the
petitioners for the enactment of the law against witch hunting, in
2013. Bindhani, who is now the Odisha State Information Commissioner,
wanted a filmmaker who had the empathy and complexity to tackle the
problem.

Bindhani’s faith in Darai is borne out by the maturity and delicacy
with which she approaches the material. Some Stories About Witches is
bereft of the tabloid sensibility that usually marks investigations
into the ancient practice. Darai and cinematographer Indraneel Lahiri
merge into the rural landscape, whose emerald beauty and neatness
makes it a startling stage for such barbarism.

Darai uses a voiceover to make connections between the overlapping
case studies as well delve into her personal connections with
witchcraft. Darai is from Mayurbhanj, and several years ago, her
mother’s family was similarly ostracised on the basis of unfounded
allegations of sorcery. “My point of view is quite emotional,” Darai
said.

Although Darai is Oriya, she became aware her outsider status as soon
as she started conducting her interviews. “We were like aliens in
these places, and I saw a very different picture,” she said. Darai was
keen on avoiding exoticising the subject, the way they'd been in the
television documentaries she watched as part of her research. “From
the very beginning, I decided that I would only portray the cases as a
humanitarian crisis,” the 32-year-old filmmaker said. “I was also
conscious that I would not name any community in particular.”

The prevalence of witchcraft cannot be reduced to the beliefs of a
particular tribe or caste, the filmmaker emphasises, but is the result
of unchallenged superstition, ignorance, and willful mischief. The
case studies make it clear that the locals are looking for external
factors on which to blame their problems. It’s very easy – and very
effective – to point fingers at inconvenient relatives or vulnerable
men and women.

Darai was also keen on avoiding the earnestness and heavyhandedness
that mark films on such themes. She achieves a balance between
fulfilling the requirements of an investigative documentary and
reaching for a humane approach to an easily misunderstood issue. The
thoughtful interviews and subtle camerawork are especially strongly in
the Chicken Meal and Electric Pole chapters.

However, Darai’s deep investment in Niru’s tragedy does prevent the
filmmaker from probing too deep into the young woman’s motives.
Although questions about Niru’s psychological state are left out, her
case study amply reveals the effects of living in a region that seems
to under an unbreakable spell. A belief in witches surely and
tragically leads a culture of witch hunting. In this contemporary
version of the Dark Ages, Niru has internalised the general moral
code. When confronted with witchcraft in her home, she becomes the
person she fears and hates the most.


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