My column ‘Personal Political’ in The News, Pakistan last week, also for monthly Hard News, India
“Chitta-kya?” A masterly tribute to Master-Da
By Beena Sarwar
I want to thank the Indian scientist-turned-filmmaker Bedabrata Pain for his powerful feature film about the 1930 uprising against the British in Chittagong in the part of Bengal that is now Bangladesh.
Beautifully shot and filmed, with stellar acting by a largely amateur cast, and music by Shankar Ehsan Loy, “Chittagong” (2012) has a gripping, non-linear narrative (with nary an item number). Unlike most accounts of the time, Pain’s film does not end with the 1934 execution of Surya Sen (“Master-da”) the schoolteacher who planned the daring raid on Chittagong armory with an army of mostly schoolboys. Their Indian Revolutionary Army (IRA) took over the town for a day as the British fled. Continue reading
Filed under: History | Tagged: Bedabrata Pain, Binod Bihari, British India, Chittagong, Hindu Muslim relations, Indian Revolutionary Army, Jhunku, Master-Da, MIT, peasant uprising, Pritilata Waddedar, Subrata Ghoshroy, Surya Sen, Tebagha movement | Leave a comment »