Thursday, May 14, 2026
ADVT 
India

SGPC, Sikh Groups See Red In 'Nanak Shah Fakir' And Sikh-Related Films

Darpan News Desk, 13 Apr, 2015 11:37 AM
    Bollywood and other films showing anything to do with the Sikh religion or portraying characters as Sikhs are running into trouble with the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), the mini-parliament of Sikh religion, and other Sikh groups.
     
    The latest controversy is over the film "Nanak Shah Fakir", which portrays the life and times of Sikhism's founder Guru Nanak Dev and his family and is to be released on April 17. The SGPC has sought a ban on the release of the film, which garnered a lot of appreciation at the Cannes Film Festival and the Sikh Film Festivals at Toronto and Los Angeles.
     
    Produced by Harinder Singh Sikka, a Sikh, the film's release is being objected to by the SGPC, the Akal Takht and radical Sikh groups like the Dal Khalsa and All India Sikh Students Federation (AISSF).
     
    "The said movie (Nanak Shah Fakir) is an assault on the fundamental tenets of the Sikh religion. Sikhs cannot allow denigration of their religion in pictorial or other forms," Dal Khalsa leader Kanwarpal Singh told IANS.
     
    SGPC president Avtar Singh Makkar has shot off a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and union Information and Broadcasting Minister Arun Jaitley, pointing out that the film violated Sikh tenets which did not allow the portrayal of the Guru and his family by human beings.
     
     
    Though Sikka claimed that the whole episode is driven by some "political agenda", Makkar refuted him saying that the SGPC never cleared the film.
     
    "What is happening now is plain politics and pressure tactics by fringe elements who were also against the release of 'Chaar Sahibzaade'," Sikka said in a statement. Directed by Harry Baweja, "Chaar Sahibzaade" was a 2014 animated historical film on the sacrifices of the sons of the 10th Sikh guru, Gobind Singh.
     
    This is not the first time that a film has run into trouble with the SGPC, Akal Takht - the highest temporal seat of Sikh religion - and fringe Sikh groups.
     
    In recent years, the SGPC has even objected to films which have been cleared by the Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC), better known as the Censor Board.
     
     
    The films that have run into trouble in recent years include "MSG - The Messenger" (2015) of controversial godman Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh of Dera Sacha Sauda sect, "Singh is Kinng" (2008), "Son of Sardar" (2008) and "Jo Bole So Nihal" (2005).
     
    In May 2005, "Jo Bole So Nihal" shows were hit by blasts in two cinema halls in New Delhi. The film had Sunny Deol, son of famous yesteryear actor Dharmendra, who belongs to a Sikh family, playing the lead.
     
    One of the biggest blockbusters of recent years, "Singh is Kinng" had Akshay Kumar as a turbaned Sikh protagonist throughout the film. Some Sikh bodies though did object to the way his beard was cut in the film.
     
    Top male actors Salman Khan, Ajay Devgn, Sanjay Dutt and Saif Ali Khan have played Sikh characters with turban and beards in Hindi films. Ranbir Kapoor, whose mother Neetu Singh comes from a Sikh family, followed suit in "Rocket Singh".
     
     
    The SGPC, which is not against the portrayal of Sikh characters, does want that any film concerning the religion should be shown to its committee.
     
    "Any reference to the Sikh religion and portrayal of Sikhs should be done in a proper manner. This should be cleared by the SGPC," Makkar said, adding that the SGPC wanted that the Censor Board should have at least two of its (SGPC) nominees so that controversies are avoided.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Rahul seeks partnership between business and poor; says BJP balloon will burst

    Rahul seeks partnership between business and poor; says BJP balloon will burst
    Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi Wednesday challenged the perception that the BJP was most likely to win the Lok Sabha election and said "this balloon will explode".

    Rahul seeks partnership between business and poor; says BJP balloon will burst

    'Tehsin Embraced Terror When He Was 18'

    'Tehsin Embraced Terror When He Was 18'
    Indian Mujahideen's operational head Tehsin Akhtar, now in police custody, embraced terrorism when he was only 18 years old. Such was his passion that his handlers immediately inducted him into the banned outfit

    'Tehsin Embraced Terror When He Was 18'

    First Look: Sand artist pays tribute to lost Malaysian Flight MH 370

    First Look: Sand artist pays tribute to lost Malaysian Flight MH 370
    Sand artist Sudarsan Pattnaik Tuesday paid tribute to the passengers and crew members of the lost Malaysian airliner by creating a sand sculpture on the beach of Puri, his home town in Odisha.

    First Look: Sand artist pays tribute to lost Malaysian Flight MH 370

    It will be Kejriwal vs Modi in Varanasi

    It will be Kejriwal vs Modi in Varanasi
    In what will be the mother of all battles in the coming election, AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal announced Tuesday he will take on BJP's prime ministerial nominee Narendra Modi from this Hindu holy city.

    It will be Kejriwal vs Modi in Varanasi

    The 'donkey route' to Britain: Hair-raising tales of illegal immigration

    The 'donkey route' to Britain: Hair-raising tales of illegal immigration
    This is the hair-rising tale of 12 Indians cheated by a dodgy agent who extracts big money from them on false promises and sent them off on “the donkey route” through Russia and Europe to Britain. 

    The 'donkey route' to Britain: Hair-raising tales of illegal immigration

    AAP Favours Consensual Gay Sex

    AAP Favours Consensual Gay Sex
    In a significant championing of gender justice and gay rights, the 16-month-old Aam Admi Party (AAP) will favour decriminalisation of homosexuality in its much-awaited manifesto for the Lok Sabha polls, party sources said.

    AAP Favours Consensual Gay Sex