Rahul Bose pleads for change
in livelihood laws:
Indo-Asian News Service, Jan 27,
2004
Rahul Bose, the poster boy of Indian art
house cinema, launched the Jeevika documentary festival here
Thursday with an impassioned plea to help change the laws
that end up enforcing poverty on small entrepreneurs.
The second annual two-day festival, organised by the Centre
for Civil Society (CCS), showcases 15 documentaries by professional
and amateur filmmakers on the legal, regulatory and bureaucratic
practices that constrain the poor from earning an honest living.
Bose, who has just returned from a relief mission on the Andaman
Island that was badly hit by the Dec 26 tsunamis, said: "Livelihood
is the basic unit of self-respect. When you deny someone's
right to livelihood, you are destroying his self-respect.
"As a country we need to think about that and learn to
respect the services that others provide for us."
The actor's work for a network of NGOs in the tsunami devastated
Andaman and Nicobar Islands has brought him face to face with
the paralysing effects of lost livelihoods.
He said: "India has a reactive consciousness. We respond
emotionally - and generously - to tragedies of great magnitude.
But we have to become a country with a more consistent social
consciousness."
Referring to the sorry plight of the city's 500,000 street
vendors, 99 percent of whom are victims of extortion because
they do not possess legitimate licenses, Bose called for a
policy change in laws that hinder the fundamental right to
earn a living.
"A Pakistani entrepreneur takes one third of the time
taken by an Indian to set up a small business. Surely then
something is wrong with the livelihood policies of our democratic
nation," he said.
The actor joined the signature campaign, initiated by the
CCS, to raise awareness about the country's crippling regulatory
laws and bring them to the attention of top-level policymakers.
Talking about the proliferation of documentary filmmakers
in India, Bose said: "It is time to think about the documentary
form vis-à-vis this country."
With 300 to 400 digital theatres coming up in the country,
Bose believes there is a huge scope for documentary filmmakers
to make an impact on the mainstream, provided they are aggressive
enough.
"Multiplexes will soon be starving for content and documentaries
can fill that gap," said the actor. "Perhaps documentaries
will have to ride piggy-back on more commercial features for
some time.
"Hindi films are becoming shorter these days, so there
is usually a 20-minute slot at the beginning when exhibitors
might agree to show a documentary.
"But filmmakers will have to take a less apologetic stance
with regard to advertising before the Indian documentary genre
produces something comparable to 'Fahrenheit 9/11',"
he said.
Asked if he had any writing projects in progress, Bose told
IANS that he has just resumed writing a long delayed film
script. "I'll speak about it when it's nearer completion,"
he said.
Bose has several new releases in the pipeline - including
what he called "a quasi-Bollywood movie" titled
"Silsiley" as well as more art house films like
Aparna Sen's "15th Park Avenue" and Buddhadeb Dasgupta's
"Kal Purush".
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