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This Article is From Oct 28, 2013

Mahesh Bhatt: I lost the relevance of God in my childhood days

Mahesh Bhatt: I lost the relevance of God in my childhood days
Mahesh Bhatt recently participated in the third edition of Samanvay, the Indian Languages Festival
New Delhi: God has always had less relevance in the life of producer writer Mahesh Bhatt who says his dissatisfaction stemmed from unfulfillment of fundamental longings.

"I lost the relevance of God in my life in my childhood days only. I always wanted my father to stay with me, but when that didn't happen I lost faith. People around me had relevance in him so I never complained too but I felt different for him," Bhatt said.

The filmmaker was participating in the just concluded third edition of Samanvay, the Indian Languages Festival, which began at the India Habitat Centre, last week.

Sharing a flash back moment, Mahesh said, "I got into LSD and drugs when my films were not working. It was later when I met U G Krishnamurthy, who made me realise that society has its parameters and we have to play in its boundaries. I found some meaningful existence after Saransh which looked at an elderly couple who had lost their son. I along with others re-examined the theory of reincarnation," he added.

According to Bhatt, the film industry's approach had also turned hostile in the 1990s.

"It was post Godhra riots when the film industry's narrative of 'India' changed into the version of India that is talked about today. It wasn't easy though; I had to face many hassles for making Zakhm, my last film as a director. The film locked horns with right fundamentalist ideology. The censor board told me that I needed clearance from the political bosses. The film was later referred to the home ministry and I was told to replace the saffron head bands with another colour for an 'obvious relevance'. I had to use digital technology and it cost me more than forty lakh rupees for a low budget film but the film worked and later it bagged awards", he shared.

"I was amazed at the existing hypocrisy around me where at one time they thought that it was irrelevant and had 'inappropriate' content and at the other time they awarded it because it was well received by the audience. That's how it works.!" Bhatt said.

The four-day festival with the theme Jodti Zubanein, Judti Zubanein: Language Connections' concluded here on Sunday.

The festival featured a select panel of authors, lyricists, film-makers, media personalities, activists and performers. Some of the names are Anupam Mishra, Gulzar, Jerry Pinto, Ketan Mehta, Mahesh Bhatt, Mukul Kesavan, Meenakshi Reddy Madhavan, Piyush Mishra, Ravish Kumar, Sharda Sinha, Sanjay Kak, Shashi Deshpande, Shuddhbrata Sengupta and Varun Grover among others.

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