Leea Contractor
Last year, Bollywood superstar Salman Khan’s film Tiger Zinda Hai was not allowed to be shown at Pakistani cinemas. Akshay Kumar’s PadMan has now met with the same fate, apparently because of its subject. The film is a bold attempt from director R. Balki of Cheeni Kum, Paa and English Vinglish fame as it carries a strong message. Shouldn’t it be left to the cine-goers to decide what they want to see? At the fag end of 2017, Tiger Zinda Hai failed to reach the screens in Pakistan as one of the objections raised by the censor board to the film was that it showed a Pakistani girl in love with an Indian boy.
In the past, Afzal Chaudhry’s Lakhoon Mein Eik (LME) had a similar situation when Ejaz, a Muslim boy from Pakistan, was seen in love with Shamim Ara, a Hindu girl from across the border. Directed by Raza Mir and written by Zia Sarhadi, the film, now considered a classic, was released in 1967. A famous song from the movie sung by Noor Jehan and Mujeeb Alam, Saathi Kahan Ho, had meaningful lyrics:
Sub dastoor hain jhootay jag kay, jhooti hain saari rasmain
Yeh manzoor hai kab duniya ko, mil ke rahain aapas mein
The song targeted the Two-Nation Theory and yet writer Sarhadi, who had strong communist leanings, was forgiven for choosing Partition rather than a contemporary setting as the film’s beginning sequence. But films released around the same time as LME with contemporary settings were heavily censored, citing patriotic or religious reasons.
The ban placed on a couple of Indian films in recent times by Pakistan’s censor authorities once again raises the question about who should decide for cine-goers what they can see and what they are not allowed to see. The issue, however, is not a new one. Icon looks back at the history of censorship in Pakistan
It all began in the 1950s with W.Z. Ahmed, a celebrated director and producer who had migrated from India to Pakistan, becoming the first victim of the censors. A veteran of half-a-dozen films in the undivided subcontinent, he established W.Z. Studios in Lahore and directed Roohi, which was banned in 1954. The reason given was that Roohi promoted “class hatred” because the film depicted illicit relations between a rich, married woman and a young, single man. W.Z. Ahmed went on to direct the super hit Waadah (1957) with Santosh Kumar and Sabiha Khanum in the lead roles but never did he or his son Fareed Ahmed ever attempt a bold subject again.