( As protests against the appointment of Mr Gajendra Chauhan as new
chairman of the Institute gather steam, with students on an indefinite
strike since 12 th June and a joint protest being organised in Delhi on
Tuesday at 11 am in front of I&B ministy in solidarity with the strike,
https://www.facebook.com/events/782809948506325/, here is an open letter
written to the newly appointed Chairman by a FTII student.

Facts are also coming to the fore that not only Mr Chauhan but four of the
eight members nominated under ‘Persons of Eminence’ category to the society
also have saffron connections (
http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/not-just-chief-four-more-in-ftii-panel-pass-sangh-test/#sthash.qvFVJGO4.dpuf)
further demonstrating how the Sangh Parivar is keen to change the very
ethos and nature of these institutions and establish its regressive agenda.)

*An Open Letter to Mr Gajendra Chauhan by a FTII Student*

Dear Mr Chauhan,

I am choosing to address you personally after listening to you respond on
several TV news debates about the recent opposition against your
appointment as Chairman at FTII. I am a student of FTII and part of the
protest.

When we first heard about your appointment we knew little about you except
those of us who had grown up on ‘Mahabharata’ the B.R. Chopra serial. We
then began to look for more information to get to know your background and
work profile. When we did, we saw a huge anomaly in your body of work and
the very principles and aesthetic, FTII stands for. We began to smell a
rat. Given your political affiliations and given the fact that the ruling
party is becoming notorious for making completely irrational and
high-handed appointments since it has come to power, it was clear to us you
were meant to be a puppet of the Government and chosen despite your
capabilities and inspite of your body of work. The protest wasn’t against
you personally, coz we never knew you or about you. You, as we saw, are
unfit for the job (reasons below) but more important than that this is a
strike against the increasing interference of the ruling party to drive
their agenda throughout the country without considering the principles of
democracies and those of the said institutions. I think, this may satisfy
the ‘surprise’ you felt when you heard about the protest before even you
joining. This protest was not about you, Mr Chauhan as an individual. This
may also satisfy a certain insecurity you may have, going by your own
admission of you being a ‘chhota aadmi’, of depriving you of your chance to
shine and become ‘big’. (Given your political affiliations I am sure you
will receive a much better post, as you again by your admission iterated,
that, ‘If you had to use your political power than why FTII, why not a big
and more important post?’ I hope you see the contradictions here, Mr
Chauhan. First you say give me a chance to progress, then you imply FTII
isn’t that important a place to progress with. Strange.)

Now it is comments like these that compel me to write this letter. Because,
now that we have heard you speak, we know you better and now that we know
you we are dead sure you are wrong for this post. Before I tell you why you
are wrong, let me educate you a bit about FTII and what this institution
means to cinema as well. On the way you may learn something about cinema
too, because as you may not be aware, ‘Khuli Khidki’ isn’t exactly cinema.

*What FTII stands for –*

Freedom of thought – We are allowed, encouraged and groomed to think
independently to understand the world around us and our own art without any
agendas, something I don’t see many institutions that can boast of. We are
also taught to respect each other’s opinions as artists. Do you see
yourself being able to encourage that?

Freedom of speech – We are allowed, encouraged and groomed to express our
independent opinions without fear of repercussions, disturbing the status
quo or upsetting power equations. This, you may not know, is a very
important constitutional right of every citizen of India and the
cornerstone of democracy which the ruling party you are associated with is
trying to systematically euthanize.

Individuality and unbridled self-expression – FTII grooms students as
individual artists above their technical domain, constantly keeping in mind
that it is the person who creates and not technology. We are pushed to
develop and express ourselves through our art for constant evolution
irrespective of our specialisations. Having said that, FTII produces the
best technical experts the industry has, on a yearly basis too.

Justice and fairness in all areas to all sections of society based on the
philosophical principles of the Socialist Democracy we are. FTII has always
stood for equality and justice for all irrespective of class, creed or
gender and this has shown in the films it produces. Cinema, you see, is a
wonderful tool of mass communication and if it can be used for propagating
ideas of equality and justice, then why not?! These ideas don’t go down
very well with your political party unfortunately and that is worrisome for
us.

Only film institute in India to have a global perspective on cinema as a
pure aesthetic medium without any mercenary considerations. It is an art
form and it is upheld as one here, without compromises. Cinema here is
taught from the lessons and learnings of world greats by people who
understand it as an art-form, to students who want to become artists not
assembly line film-makers. This requires a certain bent of mind and
commitment to cinematic arts. Do you think you have it?

The only film institute in India that considers cinema as a vehicle as much
of self-expression as much as a mirror to the society we live in. Cinema,
for us, cannot be divorced from a personal voice and the socio-political
context within which we live. Cinema, for us is about comment and
expression not distribution and titillation. Do you understand this
distinction?

Now you may say, you will uphold all these principles. Fine, we may
consider your earnestness to get your ‘chance’ but what about the fact that
one must understand these principles to execute them? Your body of work and
now more importantly, your responses, clearly show you don’t. If you still
don’t get it, let me tell you why you are wrong for this post –

You have no connection whatsoever with FTII to understand this space. You
are not an alumnus nor have you worked or associated professionally with
students or artists from here. I doubt you have even visited this place
ever. You may say you will learn on the job, but Sir we aren’t talking
about hiring an intern. YOU are supposed to be guiding US, deciding our
future. Without knowing what this place is all about, how will you?

You have nothing in your body of work that shows any kind of affiliation to
the philosophy or aesthetics of cinema we practice here. If you haven’t
studied or practiced then you don’t understand, you see. Then how will you
show us the way ahead? How will you approve, disapprove and draft policies,
make decisions, appoint people to take our learning forward in the way it
should be done?
You have nothing else in your body of work to show any kind of inclination
to arts and aesthetics, or an intellectual or questioning bent of mind.
This especially, is disastrous for both of us. You may not know, but the
key ingredient in learning and teaching, especially of arts and aesthetics
is a constantly questioning mind.
And because of these three points above, your political affiliation
troubles us a lot. Because a fourth standard student can see why you are
not fit for this post but the Government of India has handed it to you on a
platter. Hence, even if you are sincere this very lack of understanding can
easily make you a pawn in the hands of the Govt to push their decisions on
to the institution. In that case, for your own peace of mind and job
security with your bosses I think this could be unhealthy for you. Why
would you want a job where you can’t prove your own mettle as you so badly
seem to want to do? Please seriously re-consider and withdraw.

*If we talk of pure heritage, the post of the Chairman has been held by the
following* – (Please google them if you don’t know of them and you will
know more about why you are wrong for this place.)

*Adoor Gopalkrishnan* – Director, writer and producer, FTII alumnus and 16
National Awards, Padma Shri, Padma Vibhushan and Dadasaheb Phalke awardee.
(The last, you may not know, is the highest honour conferred in the field
of cinema.) If awards don’t cut it for you, it doesn’t for some of us
either, then maybe the fact that he started the ‘New Cinema’ movement in
Kerala that synthesized the mainstream and so-called art cinema for a wider
appreciation of cinema as an artform.

*Shyam Benegal* – Director, writer, faculty at FTII before he became the
Chairman twice. 12 National Awards, Padma Shri, Padma Vibhushan and the
Dadasaheb Phalke Lifetime Achievement Award recipient. His films have been
nominated at Cannes, Berlin and Moscow in competition sections. But more
importantly he was a huge influence and constituent of the parallel cinema
movement in India which changed the shape of cinema forever.

*Girish Karnad* – Actor, director, writer, playwright, recipient of 9
National Awards, Padma Shri, Padma Vibhushan, Sahitya Akademi and Janpeeth
Award (highest literary honour of India). He marked the blooming and
maturing of Kannada literature in the sixties.

*U.R.Ananthamurthy* – Novelist, playwright, poet and literary critic, Padma
Bhushan, Sahitya Akademi, Jnanpeeth awardee. Finalist of the Man Booker
prize. He had no association with cinema and we protested his appointment
too despite holding his body of work and the power of his intellect in high
regard.

*Saeed Mirza* – Director, writer, novelist, producer, FTII alumnus, 3
National Awards winner and a very important film-maker whose films gave
impetus and shape to the parallel cinema movement of the 70’s.

And now some GK about FTII in the last decade, actually just last two years
is enough. I wouldn’t have taken the pain but I read you mention somewhere
that Rajkumar Hirani was the last film-maker of reckoning FTII produced.
Not so long ago, in 2009, ‘Vihir‘, a terrific Marathi film was chosen at
Berlin in the competition section and it was made by an FTII alumnus. Last
year, in 2014,‘Killa’, a Marathi film has won the Crystal Bear at Berlin.
And you know, the director was a cinematography student here, by the way.
He also shot ‘Masaan’ which won two awards at Cannes this year. Yes, two.
And to talk mainstream, he has also shot the soon-to-release Ajay Devgan
starrer ‘Drishyam’, and this guy is hardly in his early thirties. Another
film in competition this year at Cannes was ‘Chauthi Kooth’, made by
another FTII alumnus. For God’s sake our diploma films have been selected
in competition at Berlin this year, ‘Kamakshi’ being a case in point. Oh by
the way, ‘Chitrashala’, another short film selected at Berlin this year is
made by Amit Dutta, an FTII alumnus again, and an avant-garde and important
film-maker of our times.

(If you can, please note how your reference points are so mainstream that
you are not even aware of the wonderful and important work FTII alumni have
been doing and which have even made recent headlines.)

I can go on, Sir. But I think I have explained myself in so much detail
that you must have got the point. And in case you didn’t, it proves once
again why you just aren’t right for this post. Apologies but we can do
little about that except protest until you step down.

Thank you

Most Sincerely

An FTII student

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