Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Review On ‘Firaaq’

     Firaaq is a documentary based on the journey of the people who affected during the Riots and what are the problems they faced in the Riots

     The documentary has shown in such a way that the person can feel really very blesses that they are the one who are not facing it, as If this may happen to them and if they see to it they cannot tackle that situation in a appropriate way. There were many people on the roads shouting for helps but there were no one who can help them in the proper way or there is no one who can take them to the hospitals, There were only dead body surrounded all the way to the people.
     Firaaq is set basically on Gujarat Riots, the horrific 2002 communal riots, which left according to mostly Muslims, the number of people died in gujrat riots are mostly muslim’s. The film is a fictionalised account woven out of, it says, “a 1000 true tales.”
     In Gujrat Riots muslim’s are affected at greater extent which includes some well known like jahangir khan etc. Music maestro, Jahangir Khan, faces isolation during the riots. Arati experiences guilt when she did not open her door to shelter an injured Muslim woman. Her husband, Sanjay, had looted merchandise from shops, and his brother, Devan, had even sexually molested Muslim women. A young lad, Mohsin, leaves the safety of an army-guarded camp to look for his father. Sameer Shaikh and his Hindu wife, Anuradha, decide to re-locate to Delhi. Muneera suspects her Hindu friend, Jyoti, of setting her house on fire, while biased police officers continue oppressing Muslims and five Muslim men find a gun and attempt to seek revenge
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