https://thereel.scroll.in/850967/an-urdu-poet-her-activist-niece-and-two-faces-of-rebellion-at-lucknows-farangi-mahal

An Urdu poet, her activist niece, and two faces of rebellion at Lucknow’s
Farangi Mahal

Uma Chakravarti’s ‘Ek Inquilab Aur Aaya’, which is showing at the Public
Service Broadcasting Trust documentary festival, is a chronicle of lives
less ordinary.

by  Damini Kulkarni
Published 9 hours ago

Mild-mannered Urdu poet Sughra Fatima and her niece, student activist
Khadija Ansari, are products of the same cultural environment. Born and
raised in Lucknow’s Farangi Mahal, a historically important centre of
Islamic education, they shared a marked propensity for sharp subversion.
But their rebelliousness manifested in vastly divergent ways.

Through the prism of the eventful life stories of Fatima and Ansari, Uma
Chakravarti’s documentary Ek Inquilab Aur Aaya examines the life of women
inside Farangi Mahal and the influence of its environment on them. The
Public Service Broadcasting Trust production also chronicles the impact of
the changing political and cultural ethos of Lucknow, from the Khilafat
Movement in 1920 to the partition of India in 1947, on Farangi Mahal and
its women. Ek Inquilab Aur Aaya is a part of PSBT’s annual documentary film
festival Open Frame, and will be screened at Delhi’s India International
centre on September 19.

In order to establish the environment that the women grew up in, the
documentary dwells briefly on the history of Farangi Mahal, which dates
back to the 17th century. Once regarded as the bastion of Islamic
scholarship, the erosion of the cultural legacy of Farangi Mahal has now
become evident. Yet, Ek Inquilab Aur Aaya does not document its decline.
Instead, it hopes to represent the unheard narratives of women who were
once influenced by the rationalist ideas propounded by its scholars, but
were not given systematic access to education.

Ek Aur Inquilaab Aaya. Image credit: Public Service Broadcasting Trust.
Ek Aur Inquilaab Aaya. Image credit: Public Service Broadcasting Trust.
In its runtime of 66 minutes, Ek Aur Inquilaab Aaya not only sketches
contrasting portraits of female rebellion, but also dwells on the various
consequences of defiance. While Fatima rebelled by penning seemingly
innocuous verses, Ansari openly defied the restrictions placed on her by
joining the Communist Party of India. Forbidden to write when the doctors
suggested that Fatima’s fondness for poetry had led to a mental breakdown,
she succumbed to mental illness in Farangi Mahal. But Ansari, who is
convinced that her aunt was driven to madness because she was never allowed
to exit her home, became one of the first women to leave Farangi Mahal, and
went on to acquire a PhD in Sociology.

The softness of Fatima’s rebellion is documented with wistful black and
white photographs and fond recollections by her family. On the other hand,
Ansari’s sharp defiance is established through a fiery background score,
and admiring testimonies from colleagues.

With visuals of the garments and jewelry that Fatima designed, Ek Inquilab
Aur Aaya elucidates how fragments of personal history insinuate themselves
into objects that are treasured for posterity. The narrative is punctuated
by mostly evocative sequences that dramatise events in the two women’s
lives.

Ek Inquilab Aur Aaya also demonstrates the range of emotions that poetry
has the potential to convey. Fatima’s playful rebelliousness makes its way
into some of her poetry, and her lonely wistfulness is conveyed by the
thumris she wrote. On the other hand, her naat, which is traditionally a
poem written in praise of prophet Muhammed, is a reflection of her
religiousness and piety.

Ek Aur Inquilaab Aaya. Image credit: Public Service Broadcasting Trust.
Ek Aur Inquilaab Aaya. Image credit: Public Service Broadcasting Trust.
Since the women in Ek Inquilab Aur Aaya are vocal about their naivete as
children, their personal journeys seem even more drastic. While Fatima’s
autobiography documents her regret at the mistakes in her early work,
Ansari smiles at her hotheaded teenage years. The most instructive moment
in the documentary features Fatima’s relative reflecting laughingly on her
initial assumption that communism was another religion of its own.

With voice-overs of Fatima’s meticulous autobiography, poetry recitations
by her niece, visuals of a group of women singing, and Ansari’s powerful
and teary reminiscences, women’s voices, in their many incarnations,
dominate the soundscape of the documentary. This stylistic choice is
particularly appropriate since Ek Inquilab Aur Aaya is a study of the
strategies used by women to find their personal voices in an environment
that afforded them limited personal freedom.


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Peace Is Doable

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