A
Narmada Diary
co-produced and directed
with Simantini Dhuru
(1995, Colour, 57 mins)
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The Sardar Sarover Dam in western
India, lynch-pin of a mammoth development project on the river Narmada's
banks,
has
been criticized as uneconomical and unjust. It will benefit
urban India at a cost borne by the rural poor.
When completed, the dam will drown 37,000 hectares
of fertile land, displace over 200,000 adivasis - the area's indigenous
people -, and cost up to 400 billion rupees. Ecological, cultural,
and human costs - as often is the case with "mega" projects - have
never been estimated.
A NARMADA DIARY introduces the Narmada Bachao
Andolan (the Save Narmada Movement) which has spearheaded the agitation
against the dam. As government resettlement programs prove inadequate,
the Narmada Bachao Andolan has emerged as one of the most dynamic
struggles in India today. With non-violent protests and a determination
to drown rather than to leave their homes and land, the people of
the Narmada valley have become symbols of a global struggle against
unjust development.

But
the dam building continues. If it's height is not checked, the
entire adivasi region of the Narmada will drown. In the name of
progress,
a relatively self-sufficient, egalitarian and environmentally sound
economy and culture will be destroyed and a proud people reduced
to the status of refugees and slumdwellers.
Awards
* Filmfare Award, Best Documentary, India, 1996.
* Grand Prize, Earth-Vision Film Festival,
Tokyo, 1996.
Reviews
“Scrupulous attention is paid to the particularities
of action and speech – and to the sensitive membrane joining
/ separating them …At a time when both languages and agencies
of emancipatory politics are so contested, so fractured, the modesty
of the observant witness may be this documentary’s subtlest
gesture.”
Alex Napier, Pix
Magazine, UK
A letter from Achyut Patwardhan,
February 1988
Judgement and after The Hindu, November 26,2000
Anand Patwardhan
Credits
Camera, Sound -
Simantini Dhuru, Anand Patwardhan
Editing - Anand Patwardhan