‘Dear Swara, Continue To Feel Like A Vagina’, LAMBASTS Team Padmaavat!
Swara Bhasker invited a controversy, a day back, as she posted an open letter to Sanjay Leela Bhansali, slamming Padmaavat. And now the song writers of the film, Siddharth and Garima, have replied to her letter and given a stern reply to the actress...
Swara
Bhasker, wrote an open letter to Sanjay Leela Bhansali, a day back, addressing
the issues she has with his later offering, Padmaavat.
Swara
penned some 2000 up words to express her dismay but the crux of the letter
was that she felt reduced to a vagina after seeing the magnum opus as according
to her the filmmaker has ‘glorified’ cruel practices such as sati and jauhar in
his film.
Of
course, the actress’ letter started a debate on social media, with some lambasting
her for the over-reaction to a historic film and some appreciated Swara
for bringing out a point.
Among
those who have taken major offence to Swara’s letter are the song writers of
Padmaavat, Siddharth-Garima. They have been associated with Bhansali since his
film, Ram-Leela and of course, could not take the slamming lying down.
The
writer duo has blasted Swara for blowing feminism out of ontext and has accused
her for being the biggestroad-block
in the path of ‘feminism’.
We produce the
open letter as penned by the writers:
“Feminism: The advocacy of woman’s rights on the ground
of the equality of the sexes.
Deepika Padukone In Padmaavat
Now that’s the
dictionary definition of the word. But how can anyone advocate about ‘equality
of the sexes’? A woman has a vagina, the door to life. It has the power to
procure ‘life’, which no man, however hard he tries, can ever do. The question
of equality is settled there, once and for all.
There are some
film-makers, artists, actors who feel they are the torch-bearers of ‘feminism’
in the new-age cinema.
So here is what
the ‘true’ & ‘real’ depiction of feminism in recent films – A woman,
betrayed by the lover/groom picks up a bottle of alcohol and walks the streets
while an old ‘hindi’ song plays in the background…she managed to something that
men have been doing when betrayed. So that’s equality. Men – 10 women – 1 (the
films have just begun to become progressive so please don’t mind the score).
Just forgot to mention, in the same movie a dialogue goes – “Jab aadmi
aurat se pareshaan hota hai ye daaru hi usey sahara deti hai. Isi liye shadi ke
baad har mard peeta hai, biwi chillaati rehti hai par aadmi ka gham kaun
samjhe” (This is the gist of the
dialogue, not the exact dialogue)
In a recent short
film, a woman, tired of doing the daily chores in the kitchen, pulls a chair
and begins to sip on juice (a la her husband and other ‘men’). Equality
achieved. Men-10… women – 2
In another film a
daughter smokes and shares a cigarette with her father (which only a boy could
do till now) is lauded and celebrated as feminism. Equality again. Men -10
Women – 3
Deepika Padukone As Rani Padmini
Now coming to the
people who found Padmaavat regressive and found their feminism challenged by
it.
Did they feel
like a ‘vagina’ when Rani Padmaavati almost orders her husband, who obliges, to
throw out the lecherous priest? She takes a decision, as a vagina.
Did they feel
like a ‘vagina’ when Rani Padmaavati decides to show her face to Khilji in a
mirror? Though it was her decision, as a vagina.
Did they feel
like a ‘vagina’ when Rani Padmaavati goes to ‘rescue’ her husband who had been
abducted? Again, a decision against the system, as a vagina.
They must have
felt like a ‘vagina’ when she chose ‘fire’ over ‘rape’? It was her ‘call’, her
‘decision’ as a vagina. Right, wrong, strong, weak is up to you to interpret as
a ‘penis’ or as a ‘vagina’.
The word feminism
is so misused and so mis-interpreted off late that it feels like an abuse. To
women, to the ‘vagina’… to the great feminine power. To the only gender that
has the power to procure life.
Shahid Kapoor And Deepika Padukone In Padmaavat
Films, ads,
opinions that portray women doing things that men do are lauded and celebrated
as ‘feminist’. Feminism is reduced to women smoking, drinking, gambling etc on
screen. Abey aadmi toh hamesha se ‘fucked-up’ rahe. Ab auratein
equality ke chakkar mein ‘fucked-up’ ho gayi. Ho gaya feminism. Men – 10. Women
-10. Lo daal lo equality jahan daalni hai.
Yes, women were
repressed and India was patriarchal, it still is. But feminism is not about
women doing things that men do.
Feminism is about
taking a stand. Taking a decision and standing by it. About having the freedom
to choose. It’s a thought that gives you freedom to just be. Not become equals
or equally chutiyatic (wait
that’s ‘vaginal’) as another gender.
When you took
your whole family and cook for the film, didn’t you know it is going to end
with a jauhar? Why act so surprised? Oh because you wanted him to include a
comment on the practice? Ok then… as if the number of disclaimers were not
enough. It’s the story of womens’ valour and their brave, harsh, radical
decision. Their choice. That my dear is feminism. The power to be able to
choose.
What perhaps was
a victory for the filmmaker was the blinding of khilji as he entered the fort
precincts, by burning embers thrown at him by the women. Such was the power of
their fire within that they didn’t let the enemy lay their hands upon
themselves. Why make them small and guilty of an act that they chose to protect
themselves in the face of lynching and a life of slavery? Why judge that day
from 700 years ago with ‘what would I do today’? It’s a film based in the 13th
century when women preferred and chose death to rape.
Then don’t watch
historicals, here or abroad. A ‘gladiator’ would perhaps shake your
sensibilities of a slave in today’s context! Or a Troy might again make you
feel like some other body part… A squishy liver perhaps. Since we cant
appreciate art, lets violate it. With karni sena on one side and the vaginas on
the other. Lets demand jauhar from the makers and feel victorious with
sensationalising it with our judgements and parameters.
It was
Padmavati’s choice and free will to not give herself up to Khilji. The question
about life after rape does not arise. She, out of her free will, chose to
embrace the fire rather than the tyrannical Alauddin. How is that any less
empowering? It was a matter of choice and not forced upon them by their
husbands! So, Padmavati was not a ‘rape victim’ who was so shamed that she
didn’t have a right to live, as you make it out to be in your letter. Amazing
what you all make it into. Was your open letter about Padmaavat or the
regressive ‘Bhoomi’?
And factually
speaking – ‘Sati’ was a practice (forced tradition) where women self-immolate
themselves (mostly by force, sometimes by will) after the husbands’ death.
Similar tradition called ‘Saka’ was observed by men who face a certain death in
the battlefield. ‘Jauhar’ is only and only out of free will. As a woman. And as
a ‘vagina’.
So people who
feel like a ‘vagina’ after watching Padmaavati, should continue to feel like a
‘vagina’ for they would never understand the power it has. The power to create
and run the world. Such people are the biggest road-blocks for ‘feminism’.”
Do you feel Swara
Bhasker was right in condemning Padmaavat? Or just like the writers
(Siddharth-Garima), you too think, feminism was taken out of context?
Image Source: instagram/padmaavatthefilm & instagram/swarabhasker