A film called DEEWAR
Thanks to lockdown following the
corona scare and owing to the mercy of YouTube, I had an opportunity to watch
the Amitabh Batchan starer “Deewar” after a gap of nearly 30-35 years. YouTube is a handy tool to watch and savoir
old and pristine memories. The first
time I watched the film was in the early 80s when I was too young with the
additional handicap of inadequate grasp of Hindi, my home state of Tamil Nadu
being pathologically antagonistic to the national language.
My memories of the movie lasted
primarily because of Amitabh Batchan (AB), who even in that impressionable age
cast a majestic spell. Granting that my grasp
of sociology over the years is inadequate, the film continues to appeal to me
as perhaps the first film to depict and expose the tensions and misgivings prevailing
in the Hindu-Muslim relationship, through the character of Vijay (AB).
The surviving members of the family
of Vijay, his brother Ravi (played by Shashi Kapoor and their mother fall into
hard times owing to the trickery played by the industrial tycoon in whose
industry their father was an employees union leader. The father’s submission to the demands of the
tycoon was being misconstrued as an act of treachery of the cause of workers
and the family leaves the town to live in the city (where else Bombay, of
course) because of the antagonistic attitude of the fellow workers.
More than the character of AB in the
film, the depiction of Hindu & Muslim relationship scores over. The film significantly diverges from the
usual depiction of this relationship in other films. Specifically, Vijay starts as a (Hindu) god repellent boy, though the
character was not developed to the extent of an atheist. He refuses to enter the temple when his mother
takes him along with his brother. Ravi (who
joins the police and, therefore, a good guy) goes in whereas Vijay (a coolie in
a go down and possibly prone to become a
bad guy).
Vijay, who remains a god repelled
coolie till the end of the film, first comes into contact with a Muslim inside
the go down. The muslim chacha notices
the copper label (numbered 786) pinned on the shirt of Vijay and explains the
holiness of the number attached to Islam by saying its significance is similar
to the insignia “Om” to the Hindus. The old man advises Vijay to keep the
number plate safe. The copper plate did
protect him from near death encounters on a couple of occasions. Thus, the two
features which take him closer to Islam are his near atheistic to the Hindu god
and his juxtaposition with working class Muslims. His death occurs of a gunshot sustained at
the hands of Police, when he fails to retrieve the copper plate after an
encounter.
We have seen Hindu and Muslim
characters in Hindi films played by brothers or dual roles played by the same
hero or in close proximate and cordial relationship in a community setting. Deewar
is perhaps is the first film which seeks to draw the two communities in such
close proximate relationship in the character of a hero. The other
distinguishing understated portrait in the film is that a repulsive attitude
towards Hindu god / temple is supposed to bring a Hindu closer to the Muslim.
The loss of the protective copper
plate bearing the number 786 signals the collapse of the noble person and death
at the hands of the foe (police). The
extremities attached to the insignia and their meanings are of great
significance in the present circumstance but were not drawn on earlier
occasions.
Be that as it may, the end draws a
more significant encounter. Vijay, after
sustaining gun shot at the hand of the police, enters the precinct of the
temple and launches into rhetoric of trials and tribulations of life which had
let him down repeatedly and dies. This
signifies his home coming. What does the
loss of a life saving copper plate and his home coming imply? The unpalatable and irredeemable conclusion
which is sought to be driven home is that the embrace and inclusion into the
Hindu fold is possible and desirable only when the polluting encounter with
Islam is broken and delegitimized.

