Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
Bollywood

That Scar Is Permanent, Saeed Mirza On Modi's Gujarat Legacy

IANS, 15 Jun, 2018 01:54 PM
  • That Scar Is Permanent, Saeed Mirza On Modi's Gujarat Legacy
He has been called an angry radical, an anarchist and a lot of other things but multiple award-winning director of films, documentaries and television serials, Saeed Akhtar Mirza is, in his own words, a leftist Sufi. His third book, billed as "a personal history of our times", bears this out.
 
 
"Memory in the Age of Amnesia" (Westland/222 pages/Rs 499) opens with an essay titled "The Gujarat Legacy", in which Mirza lashes out at Prime Minister Narendra Modi -- without naming him -- and sets out to remind his readers of the "scar" that, although permanent, seems to have been overlooked.
 
 
"A man has been installed as the Prime Minister of my country," Mirza writes in the opening chapter of the 222-page book, "who represents a political and ideological mindset that I oppose and find deeply disturbing."
 
 
"His contentious and questionable journey to the pinnacle of power has been documented thoroughly and no amount of wizardry of words and convoluted arguments by admiring political pundits and fans and his own, personal amnesia of what he did to arrive at where he is, can erase that history. The scar is permanent," the 74-year-old notes. 
 
 
Mirza, who divides his time between Mumbai and Goa, nonetheless recognises the fact that Modi "was democratically elected by the people of our country".
 
 
But, Mirza reflects, he swept to power with "such a force that any semblance of a credible opposition has almost completely vanished".
 
 
"His invincibility -- backed by a money-and-media juggernaut -- has since then been at times upstaged and has even faltered in some crucial elections," he writes.
 
 
But this book is not just about Mirza's observations on the current state of affairs; it is rather a recollection of memories that he has lived with and that have shaped his life.
 
 
"The painful conclusion that I draw from his victory was that for the people of India, at least to the 31 per cent who voted for him vehemently, his background didn't matter. For them it was simple: What happened, happened (in Gujarat in 2002).
 
 
"The country had to move on and there was no future in looking over one's shoulder at the past. For these people, it was a memory erased or overlooked," Mirza writes.
 
 
He then goes on to express his shock over those who did not vote for "this demagogue" and asks why couldn't they see the avalanche coming.
 
 
But four years have rolled by since Modi assumed office as the Prime Minister. What is it that Mirza is trying to get at?
 
 
In what he calls an attempt to "jog our collective memories", Mirza travels down memory lane to the time when India became a Republic with a written constitution and our founding fathers defined the nation to the people of India and to the world.
 
 
From here, Mirza moves to "the slow dismantling of the institutions" that, according to him, began within 15 years of our Independence.
 
 
"What followed for the next 30 years were a series of manufactured riots and conflagrations that left the nation reeling," he notes.
 
 
He then trains his guns at the Congress party, which was the dominant party in the initial years of independence when "the seeds of long-term disaster" were sown. Accusing the Congress of harnessing "quite a few right-wing warlords", Mirza contends that it was their "greed for short-term gains" that has led the country to where it is now.
 
 
But is he just imagining these things, another conspiracy theory?
 
 
"I don't think so. I believe we are living in a world where the present looms so disconcertingly large it leaves us little time for reflection. It seems our memory span is getting shorter and what fills our information matrices so often is meaningless trivia," he asserts in the book. 

MORE Bollywood ARTICLES

Kapil Dev Urges Media To Show Stories Of Soldiers

India's first World Cup winning skipper Kapil Dev, who was commissioned into the Territorial Army (TA) as an honorary lieutenant colonel in 2008

Kapil Dev Urges Media To Show Stories Of Soldiers

Unfair To Critique Swara Bhaskar's Right To Express: Tillotama Shome On Padmaavat Open Letter Row

Unfair To Critique Swara Bhaskar's Right To Express: Tillotama Shome On Padmaavat Open Letter Row
illotama was amongst the first few celebrities to speak up for Swara following the wrath she faced on social media after sharing her opinion of "Padmaavat".

Unfair To Critique Swara Bhaskar's Right To Express: Tillotama Shome On Padmaavat Open Letter Row

WATCH: Sushmita Sen Giving Everyone Major Fitness Goals With Her Videos

WATCH: Sushmita Sen Giving Everyone Major Fitness Goals With Her Videos
Sushmita Sen is taking fitness to a new level by making the ceiling, "the new floor"

WATCH: Sushmita Sen Giving Everyone Major Fitness Goals With Her Videos

Atif Aslam & Neha Kakkar In Vancouver For Mother's Day Concert !

Atif Aslam & Neha Kakkar In Vancouver For Mother's Day Concert !
KVP Entertainers is bringing them together for a Musical Bonanza on Mother's Day as they perform their evergreen songs at Vancouver's iconic Queen Elizabeth Theatre 

Atif Aslam & Neha Kakkar In Vancouver For Mother's Day Concert !

Watch Video: US Families Book Entire Theatre, Dance To Ghoomar Dressed As Padmavati

Watch Video: US Families Book Entire Theatre, Dance To Ghoomar Dressed As Padmavati
A family in San Francisco Bay Area reportedly booked an entire theatre and watched Padmaavat dressed in Padmavati-like dresses.

Watch Video: US Families Book Entire Theatre, Dance To Ghoomar Dressed As Padmavati

Pretty Low And Sick: Swara Bhaskar Responds To Vivek Agnihotri’s Tweet On Her Padmaavat Criticism

Pretty Low And Sick: Swara Bhaskar Responds To Vivek Agnihotri’s Tweet On Her Padmaavat Criticism
Swara Bhasker has condemned filmmaker Vivek Agnihotri as "low and sick" after he suggested the actress take a trip to Bastar, Chhattisgarh to understand "how the 'real vagina'" feels like.

Pretty Low And Sick: Swara Bhaskar Responds To Vivek Agnihotri’s Tweet On Her Padmaavat Criticism