HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Safdar Hashmi (12 April 1954 – 2 January 1989) was a communist playwright and director, best known for his work with
street theatre Street theatre is a form of theatrical performance and presentation in outdoor public spaces without a specific paying audience. These spaces can be anywhere, including shopping centres, car parks, recreational reserves, college or university c ...
in India. He was also an actor, lyricist, and theorist, and he is still considered an important voice in Indian political theatre. He was an activist of the
Students' Federation of India The Students' Federation of India (abbreviated as SFI) is an Indian left-wing student organisation politically aligned to the ideologies of Independence, Democracy and Socialism. Currently, V. P. Sanu and Mayukh Biswas are elected as the All ...
(SFI). He was a founding member of '' Jana Natya Manch'' (People's Theatre Front; JANAM for short) in 1973, which grew out of the Indian People's Theatre Association (IPTA). He was murdered in 1989 in
Jhandapur Jhandapur is a village in Ghaziabad Tehsil of Ghaziabad District in Uttar Pradesh, India. Jhandapur is situated between the main railway line of the Delhi-Howrah route and the Grand Trunk Road. Sahibabad Railway Station is the nearest railway s ...
, while performing a street play, ''Halla Bol''.


Personal life

Safdar Hashmi was born on 12 April 1954 in Delhi, to Haneef and Qamar Azad Hashmi. He spent the early part of his life in Delhi and Aligarh, where he grew up in a liberal Marxist environment, and went on to complete his schooling in Delhi. Actress
Saba Azad Saba Azad (born as Saba Singh Grewal, 1 November 1985) is an Indian actress, theatre director and musician. She is one half of Mumbai-based electro funk duo Madboy/Mink. She made her Bollywood debut as one of the leads Raaga in the indie film '' ...
is his niece. Hashmi graduated from
St. Stephen's College, Delhi St. Stephen's College is a constituent college of the University of Delhi, widely regarded as one of the oldest and most prestigious colleges for arts and sciences in India. It was established in 1881 by the Cambridge Mission to Delhi. The college ...
with a degree in English Literature, and went on to complete his M.A. in English from Delhi University. During this period, he became associated with the cultural unit of the
Students' Federation of India The Students' Federation of India (abbreviated as SFI) is an Indian left-wing student organisation politically aligned to the ideologies of Independence, Democracy and Socialism. Currently, V. P. Sanu and Mayukh Biswas are elected as the All ...
, the student wing of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), and eventually with the Indian People's Theatre Association (IPTA). In the years before and after his graduation, he worked on several plays with IPTA, such as ''Kimlesh'', and ''Dekhte Lena''.


Career and activism

Hashmi co-founded the ''Jana Natya Manch'' (People's Theatre Front), with the acronym JANAM ("birth" in Hindi), in 1973. JANAM grew out of the Indian People's Theatre Association (IPTA) and was associated with the Communist Party of India (Marxist), with which he was actively involved in the 1970s. When Indian Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi Indira Priyadarshini Gandhi (; Given name, ''née'' Nehru; 19 November 1917 – 31 October 1984) was an Indian politician and a central figure of the Indian National Congress. She was elected as third prime minister of India in 1966 ...
was accused of rigging the elections, he produced a street play, ''Kursi, Kursi, Kursi'' (''Chair, Chair, Chair''), as a reaction to the controversy. The play narrates the story of a king whose throne moves with him when he attempts to give it up in favour of an elected representative. The play was performed every day for a week, at the Boat Club Lawns in New Delhi, then a hub of political activity. It proved to be a turning point for JANAM. Until 1975, JANAM performed open-air proscenium and street plays for mass audiences. When Indira Gandhi imposed a state of emergency and made political theatre difficult, Hashmi began to work as a lecturer in English literature in universities in Garhwal, Kashmir, and Delhi. When the Emergency ended in 1977, he returned to political activism, and in 1978, JANAM took to street theatre in a big way with ''Machine'', which was performed for a trade union meeting of over 200,000 workers on 20 November 1978. This was followed by plays on the distress of small peasants (''Gaon Se Shahar Tak''), on clerical fascism (''Hatyare & Apharan Bhaichare Ke''), on unemployment (''Teen Crore''), on violence against women (''Aurat'') and on inflation (''DTC ki Dhandhli''). Hashmi also produced several documentaries and a TV serial for
Doordarshan Doordarshan (abbreviated as DD; Hindi: , ) is an Indian public service broadcaster founded by the Government of India, owned by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting and one of Prasar Bharati's two divisions. One of India's largest bro ...
, including ''Khilti Kaliyan'' (''Flowers in Bloom''), which examined rural empowerment. He also wrote books for children and criticism of the Indian stage. Hashmi was the de facto director of JANAM, and prior to his death, it gave about 4,000 performances of 24 street plays, mostly in working-class neighbourhoods, factories and workshops. Hashmi was a member of the Communist Party of India (Marxist), the largest communist party in India. In 1979, he married his comrade and theatre actress, Moloyshree. Later, he worked for the Press Trust of India (PTI) and ''The Economic Times'' as a journalist, and then became Press Information Officer of the Government of West Bengal in Delhi. In 1984, he gave up his job and devoted himself full-time to political activism. Hashmi’s output includes two proscenium plays – an adaptation of Maxim Gorky’s ''Enemies'' (1983) and ''Moteram ka Satyagraha'' (with Habib Tanvir, 1988) – many songs, a television series script, poems and plays for children, and documentary films. While committed to radical, popular, and left-wing art, Hashmi refrained from clichéd portrayals, and was not afraid of formal experimentation.


Murder

On 1 January 1989, the JANAM troupe began a performance of the street play ''Halla Bol'' (''Raise Your Voice!''), during the Ghaziabad municipal elections in
Sahibabad Sahibabad is the name for a group of industrial, residential and commercial areas within the jurisdiction of Ghaziabad Municipal Corporation (Vasundhara Zone) in Ghaziabad District of Uttar Pradesh, India. It touches the borders of Delhi, Noid ...
's Jhandapur village (near Delhi). During the performance, the troupe was attacked by Indian National Congress workers. Hashmi was fatally injured and died the following day. On 4 January 1989, two days after his death, his wife Moloyshree Hashmi went to the same spot again with the JANAM troupe, and defiantly completed the play. Fourteen years after the incident, a Ghaziabad court convicted ten people, including
Congress Party The Indian National Congress (INC), colloquially the Congress Party but often simply the Congress, is a political party in India with widespread roots. Founded in 1885, it was the first modern nationalist movement to emerge in the British Em ...
member Mukesh Sharma, for the murder.


Legacy

Hashmi has become a symbol of cultural resistance against authoritarianism for the Indian Left. JANAM continues its theatre work, and on 12 April 2012, Hashmi's birthday, the group inaugurated Studio Safdar, a performance and workshop space located in Shadi Khampur, near Patel Nagar in Central Delhi. The space is next door to a left-wing cafe and bookstore, May Day. The writer Bhisham Sahni, along with many other artists, founded the Safdar Hashmi Memorial Trust (SAHMAT) in February 1989, as an open platform for politically and socially conscious artists. Hashmi's writings were later collected in ''The Right to Perform: Selected Writings of Safdar Hashmi'' (New Delhi, 1989). Each year on 1 January, the Safdar Hashmi Memorial Day is observed as a "Day of Resolve" by SAHMAT, and a daylong cultural congregation, "Jashn-e-Daura", is organised in New Delhi. The day is also commemorated by JANAM, which organises street plays at Jhandapur village, in Sahibabad, where he was killed. In 1998, Safdar Hashmi Natyasangham was formed in Kozhikode, Kerala, which provides free training to economically backward students. The 2003 film '' Anbe Sivam'', made by Sundar C., and the 2008 film ''
Halla Bol ''Halla Bol'' (''Raise Your Voice'') is an Indian Hindi-language drama film directed by Rajkumar Santoshi. ''Halla Bol'' stars Ajay Devgn and Vidya Balan in pivotal roles and a number of celebrities from the Hindi and other film industries appe ...
'', made by Rajkumar Santoshi, were inspired by his life. The latter also depicts a scene where a street theatre activist is beaten by men hired by a political party, an incident which turns into a catalyst for a public uprising. In 1989, the painter
M.F. Husain Maqbool Fida Husain (17 September 1915 – 9 June 2011) was an Indian artist known for executing bold, vibrantly coloured narrative paintings in a modified Cubist style. He was one of the most celebrated and internationally recognised Ind ...
had a painting "Tribute to Hashmi" sold at auction for over $1 million, the first time a painting by an Indian artist reached this valuation. The 2020 book ''Halla Bol: The Death and Life of Safdar Hashmi'' by Sudhanva Deshpande recounts the events leading up to the attack on Jana Natya Manch's performance of the play ''Halla Bol'' in Jhandapur on January 1, 1989, in which Safdar sustained fatal injuries. It also discusses Safdar's work in Jana Natya Manch. The Institute for Research and Documentation in Social Sciences (IRDS), a non-governmental organisation from Lucknow, has been awarding the Safdar Hashmi Award for Human Rights in reverence to his contributions to the cause of human rights. A street in Mandi House, New Delhi was named after Safdar Hashmi.


Further reading

* ''Halla Bol: The Death and Life of Safdar Hashmi'', by Sudhanva Deshpande, Delhi, LeftWord Books, 2020. Also in Hindi, as ''Halla Bol: Safdar Hashmi Ki Maut Aur Zindgai'', translated by Yogender Dutt, Vaam Prakashan/LeftWord Books, Delhi, 2020. * ''The Right to Perform: Selected Writings of Safdar Hashmi'', Delhi, SAHMAT, 1989. * ''Paanchwa Chiraag, Qamar Azad Hashmi'', (Hindi). 1995. * Qamar Azad Hashmi, ''The Fifth Flame: The Story of Safdar Hashmi''. (Translation) Penguin Books, 1997. .
Official website of Jana Natya Manch.
*''Theatre of the Streets: The Jana Natya Manch Experience'', edited by Sudhanva Deshpande, Delhi: Janam, 2007. * * Vijay Prashad, ''Safdar Hashmi Amar Rahe'' * Eugene van Erven, ''Plays, Applause and Bullets: Safdar Hashmi's Street Theatre'' * Vellikkeel Raghavan, ''Cross-Continental Subversive Strategies: Thematic and Methodological Affinities in the Plays of Dario Fo and Safdar Hashmi''. Ph.D. Thesis. University of Calicut. 2007. * Vellikkeel Raghavan. ''Halla Bol''. Translation of Safdar Hashmi's Hindi play ''Halla Bol'' (1989) into English. ''Indian Literature''. Sahitya Academy, New Delhi, India. Vol. LV No. I, Issue No. 263 May/June 2011, pp. 115–137. * Vellikkeel Raghavan. ''Machine''. Translation of Safdar Hashmi's Hindi play ''Macheen'' (1978) into English. ''Indian Literature''. Sahitya Academy, New Delhi, India. Vol. LV No. I, Issue No. 261 Jan/Feb 2011, pp. 165–173. * Vellikkeel Raghavan. "Safdar Hashmi's ''Machine'':A Metaphor of Post-Independence Indian Industriabist Apparatus." ''Indian Literature''. Sahitya Academy, New Delhi, India. Vol. LVI, Iuuse No. 271 Sept/Oct 2012, pp. 219–232.


References


External links


Official website of SAHMAT

Documentary on Jana Natya Manch, Safdar & Its Theatre Festival in Mumbai 'SARKASH' by NDTV

Official website of Jan Natya Manch, 'JANAM'

Video Documentary "SAFDAR" by PTI and SAHMAT
(English and Hindi Mixed)
Children's Poem Book ''Duniya Sabki'' (''World Is for All'') by Safdar Hashmi in Hindi
*

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hasmi, Safdar Hashmi, Safdar Hashmi, Safdar