Maharashtra Sikh Group slams Vivek Agnihotri for his upcoming film 'The Delhi Files'

By Lokmat English Desk | Published: April 20, 2022 02:22 PM2022-04-20T14:22:33+5:302022-04-20T14:22:40+5:30

"The Kashmir Files" director Vivek Agnihotri announced his next movie, "The Delhi Files" commenting on this the Maharashtra Sikh ...

Maharashtra Sikh Group slams Vivek Agnihotri for his upcoming film 'The Delhi Files' | Maharashtra Sikh Group slams Vivek Agnihotri for his upcoming film 'The Delhi Files'

Maharashtra Sikh Group slams Vivek Agnihotri for his upcoming film 'The Delhi Files'

"The Kashmir Files" director Vivek Agnihotri announced his next movie, "The Delhi Files" commenting on this the Maharashtra Sikh Association said, filmmakers, should "desist from disturbing the uneasy calm in society." The Kashmir Files was the biggest Hindi blockbuster post-pandemic in the industry. There has been speculations that the new movie 'The Delhi Files' will be based on the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, but the director is still yet to give confirmation on it yet.


The Maharashtra Sikh Association said it expresses "strong reservation against the exploitation and commercialization of unfortunate tragic chapters of humankind like the Sikh riots by people in the name of creative expression and personal profiteering".

Talking on the film Vivek Agnihotri said "I have no idea which organisation is this. I'm an Indian, I live in a sovereign state which gives me full right to express myself in whichever manner I want. I will make what I need to make, what my conscience tells me to make. I am not a servant to anybody's demands or organization."

"I have not even announced what I'm making, why I am making it. People are making assumptions, which they can keep making. But ultimately it is only for the CBFC to decide what kind of film I make and if it should be allowed to release or not," he said.

The association is the nodal body involved in social, cultural, educational sports, and religious activities said Agnihotri "emboldened with the controversy and hype" created by "The Kashmir Files" is intending to "commercialise tragedy of humankind like the 1984 riots".

"There is already polarisation in the society and hatred among various communities and vivid depiction of unfortunate tragic incidents of the history in a commercial way will only foment the ill feelings and fragile peace," it said.

"India is a land of unity in diversity and people professing different faiths have tried to live in harmony and peace with each other and the Sikh community is trying to forget the dark chapter in the history of sikh community," their statement read.

The association said slowly, the wounds are healing and the Sikh community is "trying to forget the past and move ahead".

"Many of the culprits have either died or are behind the bars. Justice has come with delay, but it has come. Even the then Government had apologised for these riots in the Parliament," it said.

"By extracting profits by depicting deaths in gory details will only result in poisoning the minds of the new generation, who might have heard about it but now seeing them on screen will boil their blood, and spread hatred against others... It would be a deliberate attempt to reopen the wounds of the old and vitiate the fragile peace in the society. This is neither correct nor ethical," it added.

"The creative pursuits depicting the teachings of our revered Gurus will send a positive message in the society. Maharashtra Sikh Association joins the voice of Indian diaspora worldwide and the Sikh community in particular in asking the makers of 'The Kashmir Files' to desist from disturbing the uneasy calm in the society," the statement concluded.

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