Salaam Bombay!
Proceeds from prize-winning film
will benefit street children in India
by Alan AtKisson
One of the articles in Is Militarism Fading? (IC#20) Winter 1989, Page 8
Copyright (c)1989, 1997 by Context Institute
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Salaam Bombay!, a new film by Indian-born director Mira Nair, deals with
the lives of children living in Bombay's teeming streets. The film has already
garnered prizes at Cannes and Montreal, but more remarkable are the actors
that play the roles and the director's plans for its profits.
Nair made four documentaries before turning to fiction, but she retained
a determination to present life in its true complexity. For this purpose
she and her assistants (including a child psychologist) selected children
directly from the streets of Bombay to act in the film, worked with them
closely over many weeks, and continued the relationship after filming.
"Our whole attitude was to meet them halfway and help them realize
their own self-worth and dignity," said Nair in a recent interview
with The Christian Science Monitor (12 Oct 1988, p.19). "[We]
wanted to help them create opportunities they want for themselves."
Responding to this respectful approach, some children entered school, some
returned home to their villages, some got jobs, and some have stayed on
the streets.
Nair is using proceeds from the film to open learning centers for street
children in both Bombay and Delhi. "They've become almost invisible
in India; when you see so many, they become invisible," the
director said. "It's like the way materialism ... is invisible in the
United States. It's so normal, so natural, that you stop thinking how absurd
it is!"
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