Kashmir's Timeless Hamlet
Outlook|October 11, 2024
Vishal Bhardwaj's film Haider, released ten years ago, remains as relevant now as It was then because It shows nothing Is normal’ in Kashmir
Tanul Thakur
Kashmir's Timeless Hamlet

AROUND the halfway mark in Vishal Bhardwaj's Haider (2014), we enter Faraz Cinema. "Main hun diwaana tere pyaar ka, peecha na chhodunga tera," sings Salman Khan, like a dutiful stalker, on screen. A wide shot shows the Indian Army officers, as viewers, enduring varied stages of boredom-some drinking, some sleeping, some barely awake. Then, a door opens, and convicts line up in front of the screen. An officer signals the projectionist to stop; the interrogation-or the real film-has to start.

This Hamlet adaptation, much like its setting, Kashmir, inverts conventions, mocks normalcy, and distorts identities.

So a theatre, promising freedom from the captivity of mundane life, functions as a prison. The multiplicity of identities here isn't just restricted to inanimate things.

Because in the same theatre, Haider's father, "Doctor" (Narendra Jha), notices an "aasteen ka saanp"-a man whom he considered bhai, Khurram (Kay Kay Menon), morphed into the Army's informer-a brother turned betrayer. In a drama centred on a conflict-torn land, coveted by two countries, it makes poetic and perfect sense that dualities define Haider.

Consider its more literal example: the Army officials stopping and checking the IDs of regular Kashmiris, reminding them that they need permission to enter their own homes. Or making them feel, as a character says later, that "All of Kashmir is a prison". These ID checks, even more than the Faraz Cinema scene, examine and extrapolate identity and duality, as the 'correct' documents make all the difference: between allowed and detained, insider and infiltrator, home and prison.

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