Hindus Ask India Film Censor Board to "Wake Up"
Hindus have asked the Central Board of Film
Certification (CBFC) of India to “wake
up”.
Acclaimed Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a
statement in Nevada (USA) today, said that seeing the
continuous increase in the unnecessary vulgarity and
violence in Indian films, it appeared that the Board had
lost the sense of India’s cultural milieu and was ignoring
the directions given in the Cinematograph Act.
Zed,
who is the president of Universal Society of Hinduism, said
that they were fully supportive of the artistic freedom and
expression and did not want any unnecessary censorship, but
were highly concerned about the increasing presence of the
explicit scenes in the movies which were there simply for
“mercantile greed” having nothing to do with cinematic
elements.
Rajan Zed appealed to CBFC chairperson
Filmfare winner Sharmila Tagore (Aradhana) to view the films
as a regular Indian mother who was struggling to raise her
children to become moral and successful citizens of India of
tomorrow and not as the mother whose children attended
night-clubs and late-night parties and knew no moral
boundaries.
Zed stresses that the country’s
Cinematograph Act lays down that a film has to be certified
keeping “morality” in mind, besides other things. CBFC
objectives of film certification reportedly include…
“the medium of film remains responsible and sensitive to
the values and standards of society”, “the medium of
film provides clean and healthy entertainment”…What
happened to the CBFC “guidelines for certification” like
“human sensibilities are not offended by vulgarity,
obscenity or depravity”, Zed asked.
Rajan Zed argued
that cinema was a highly powerful medium and had the
potential of impacting the audience and altering the psyche,
especially the impressionable minds of younger generation.
CBFC website was non-functional for a long time and
the taxpayers had no easy access to information about the
certified films, CBFC guidelines and procedures, its contact
information and officials, Cinematograph Act, etc. Its
certificates, dating back about half-a-century and only in
English and Hindi, were very low in visibility, Zed pointed
out.
CBFC (popularly known as Censor Board) is the
body responsible for certifying films suitable for public
exhibition in the country. India has reportedly about 13,000
cinema halls and according to an estimate, every three
months an audience as large as India’s entire population
(about 1.17 billion) flock to the cinema
halls.
ENDS