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Dasavatharam
says a whole lot of things: questions beliefs,
explores theories, offers explanations and entertains.
The messages that one can take home from Dasavatharam
are many, most of them are obvious while there
seem to be a few that are hidden in layers of
humor. The existence of God or otherwise is a
subject that Kamal has often touched upon and
so there is no way that this escaped anyone’s
notice, especially with the debate between Kamal
and Asin during the climax. The story itself is
a warning about how funding research for biological
weapons can be a dangerous game, there is an environmental
message that Vincent Boovaragan raises, that of
illegal sand quarrying and the movie at many places
touches upon various ways in which the world is
being self-detrimental; George Bush’s idea
of the nuclear bomb being the panacea to all kinds
of problems etc…..
But
maybe the most profound of all messages is something
that was so subtly said that it went unnoticed.
Even if it was noticed it has gone without mention
or
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discussion
till now. One cannot be quite sure about whether Kamal,
the scriptwriter, intended to give such a context. But
it has happened and even if it is unwitting, this is
an issue that is being considered by some of our country’s
leading thinkers as something that demands immediate
attention.
It takes place
in the scene involving Balram Naidu (RAW) and Kalifulla
Khan, when the latter is rounded up at his house with
Christian Fletcher and Govind just having got away.
The tall man is suspiciously surveyed by the RAW officer
from top to bottom (that is a long way) and his connections
to some of the world’s most notorious terrorists
units is being assumed nonchalantly, the officer also
issues orders for the entire street to be arrested and
questioned for suspected terrorist links. Kalifulla
Khan says ‘Why is it anyone and everyone who prays
in a Dargah is looked upon as a terrorist?’ In
the movie, this dialogue is greeted amidst laughter
as all of Balram Naidu’s previous wisecracks are
irresistibly funny, especially ‘Lighthouse’.
The message that the dialogue gives is straightforward:
Why are Muslims suspected in the aftermath of any terrorist
attack? India has suffered many incidents of bombing
in the last few years and while the seriousness of these
cannot be downplayed, there is widespread discontent
over the way such cases are handled. This is not just
a personal view, but an accumulation of views that have
been appearing very regularly all over the country.
It is a fact known to all that the hands behind the
Bombay, Delhi, Hyderabad and Jaipur blasts are yet to
be cuffed but what we do not know is that hundreds of
Muslim youth have been behind or are still behind bars
for one fault- being a Muslim. ‘Conciliatory arrests’
are made immediately after any untoward incident to
appease authorities and to assure the public that action
is being taken, but who pays the price? It is not only
in India that such incidents of an entire community
being labeled as terrorists takes place: The whole world
changed post 9/11. Yes, it is true that militant outfits
that were behind all these heinous acts are all Islamic
but that does not make every Muslim a terrorist. There
is no better man than Kamal to have given this message
because he is a person who has experienced the tendency
to view a Muslim suspiciously first hand. Remember the
incident in Canada in 2002 when Kamal was held back
at an airport? He had gone there to consult a make up
artiste about his get-up in Anbey Sivam- he was sporting
a beard and as airport authorities later explained,
that made him look like a Muslim. If a thing as unimportant
as a beard can get a person detained at an airport then
imagine what religion can do. Maybe that incident formed
the seed of this subtle message given by Kalifulla Khan.
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