Salam wrote in his diary: ‘Declared non-Muslim. Cannot cope.’
At a cemetery in Rabwah, Punjab, Professor Dr Abdus Salam’s gravestone reads: In 1979 [Abdus Salam] became the first Nobel laureate for his work in physics. The eulogy doesn’t make sense, until the camera cuts to an obvious close-up, and lingers for two seconds too long.
One word between first and Nobel has been painted over in white: Muslim.
Abdus Salam was a wunderkind. The son of a poor man who studied under candlelight as a child, published his first scientific paper at the age of 17, became a PhD in theoretical physics from Cambridge at 24-years-old, was accepted as the youngest Fellow of the Royal Society of London when he was 33-years-old, was awarded the Sitara-e-Pakistan in 1959, founded Pakistan’s space programme Suparco in 1961, he gave Pakistan its first Nobel prize for physics in 1979.
He was also an Ahmadi — which, as per the Pakistani constitution since 1974, is why the word ‘Muslim’ is painted over, and why the documentary, Salam: The First ****** Nobel Laureate, has such a unique title.
A documentary film on Pakistan’s first Nobel laureate, Dr Abdus Salam, that took 14 years to make, would be a shoo-in for the awards season, if it weren’t for politics
Producers-cum-researchers Zakir Thaver, Omar Vandel and director-editor Anand Kamalakar’s sleek documentary is a fantastic work of asceticism; it is restrained, straightforward and simple to comprehend, but not simplistic.
The film, which took 14 years to make and two years to edit, covers specific milestones in Salam’s life through interviews, archival footage and animated newspaper clippings. Unlike conventional television-ish documentaries, the filmmakers do not employ the services of a narrator to spoon-feed information.