Guest guest Posted December 13, 2005 Report Share Posted December 13, 2005 He made Ram India's cultural icon Saurabh Tankha / New Delhi It was in 1942 that an astrologer in Kashmir told Ramanand Sagar that he would change the world. At that time, he didn't even have money to buy milk. Change he did, a nation's identity, churning and frothing up a movement with his epic Ramayan, one that made Hindutva a matter of collective pride and social connectivity. The uninterrupted two-year run of Ramayan marked a turning point in the history of Indian television. He precipitated a "national bandh" Sunday mornings by bringing the gods into every household in India, humanising them and converting our pantheon into a social reference point. Did Ramayan act as a brandwagon to promote Hindutva? Says Arvind Trivedi, who played Ravana in the TV epic, "Hindus always knew about the epic called Ramayan but it was limited by the oral tradition. And though there were Ramlilas in village India, there was never a visual counterpart for urban India, which was slowly opening up to a rapidly homogenising world. Ramayan, the teleserial, made Ram a sophisticated culture icon, something you could have with Sunday brunch and not feel guilty about. There was this strange enthusiasm about being a Hindu all over again. Sagar sahab was a pious man who taught us the lesson of humanity before anything else. He would have loved being proud of weaving a collective consciousness, anything that brought people together, from the north to the south, the entire length and breadth of the country." Author Mridula Sinha, who recently completed a biography on Sita, feels, "Through Ramayan history was created. It laid out the formula for re-establishing sanatan values. Our youth was moving away from our culture and values. Ramayan brought them back." Sagar not only brought awareness and peace among the society through the serial, he also set an example of national integrity. Be it Hindus or Muslims, everyone was in front of the TV at 10 on Sunday mornings." Agrees music director Ravindra Jain who worked with Sagar on Ramayan. "We got numerous letters from Muslim households that their kids had started massaging the feet of elders. Not this alone, it ushered in a revivalism among the youth, they wanted to get back to their roots." Jain, who took over from the legendary music director Jayadeva who fell ill during the making of Ramayan, adds, "I completely agree with the fact that the serial got us back to our tradition and values. Logon mein ek nayee jagriti jag gayee thee Ramayan dekhne ke baad." However, author-writer Manohar Shyam Joshi, who never had a chance to meet the director, is sceptical of Sagar's revivalist streak and feels he was much an unwitting culture crusader. "How could he have thought Hindutva? He had been a Leftist all his life before he planned and made Ramayan. It was only during the making of the serial he started wearing a rudraksh mala. If someone makes an epic or a mythological film, he would have to talk about religion and so did Sagar," he adds. But Babuji, as he was fondly called by peers and his juniors, certainly enjoyed being patriarch of one big happy family. And its values. http://www.dailypioneer.com/indexn12.asp?main_variable=front%5Fpage&file_name=st\ ory5%2Etxt&counter_img=5?headline=He~made~Ram~India's~cultural~icon For any comments, queries or feedback, kindly mail us at feedback or pioneerletters Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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