Rakesh Sharma (filmmaker)
Rakesh Sharma is an Indian documentary filmmaker. His most notable work is the feature-length documentary Final Solution on the 2002 Gujarat riots. Rakesh Sharma spent his formative years in Agra, before moving to Delhi to finish school and college education. He started career as television journalist in 1986. He graduated from SRCC, University of Delhi in 1984 with a BA Honours degree. He studied MA in Mass Communication from Jamia Millia Islamia MCRC in 1986.
Rakesh was born in Uttar Pradesh, in 1964.
Early career
- 1986-Set up Newstel, a Delhi-based news agency, supplying features and stories to the monopoly state broadcaster - DD.
- 1987-89: Assistant Director, Discovery of India/ Bharat Ek Khoj by Shyam Benegal.
- 1990- Ringmasters, a special investigative documentary commissioned by DD. On use of money and muscle power during Indian elections. Co-director..
- 1991- Democracy in Crisis. Co-Producer and Co-director. The film attempted to document the ongoing transition in Indian politics, with the collapse of the centrist Congress party leading to newer political formulations based on identity constructs, ie, Janata Dal and BJP etc. The film included travel sequences in UP with former Prime Ministers Rajiv Gandhi and VP Singh, in Gujarat with future Dy PM L K Advani, in Bihar with Lalu Prasad Yadav and future PM I. K. Gujral, as well as others like Vinay Katiyar of Bajrang Dal and Sadhvi Rithambara of VHP.
- 1992- Beaches of India. Producer and Director. A film with no spoken words or text slides, with an elaborately designed music and sound effects track only. Shot by Navroz Contractor, in Andamans, Lakshadweep, Puri-Konark, Mahabalipuram and Goa.
- 1993-94- Legends; Zee TV. Producer-Director. The series, aired as Sitaron ka Karvan, kicked off with a 4-episode biopic with Ashok Kumar, the first big star of Bollywood. Followed by a 3-episode biopic with Shammi Kapoor.
Rakesh then move to the corporate side of broadcasting for the next 7-8 years, before returning to self-financed, independent film-making in 2001-2.
- 1994: Head of Shows, Channel , an edgy music channel, as a part of the 3-member core team to launch the channel.
- 1995: Moved to StarPlus with a brief to Indianise and relaunch the channel. Initially as Commissioning Editor, and then as Head, Star Plus.
- 1996: Moved into Network Planning, Star TV
[Final Solution (2004 film)]
Sharma made waves with Final Solution, a documentary that presents the 2002 Gujarat riots as an anti-Muslim pogrom orchestrated by right-wing Hindu nationalists in Gujrat. Himself a Hindu, Sharma used primary sources — testimony from both victims and perpetrators — to allege that the state was complicit in the violence.The Ban on Final Solution
The film was denied certification in July 2004. But, following widespread civil society protests, Central Board of Film Certification convened an unusual suo moto screening, as the filmmaker refused to reapply or approach the Revising Committee on the grounds that the Examining Committee preview panel was politically partisan and did not even bother to see the film in its entirety before effectively banning it. In Oct 2004, after a special Revising Committee preview convened by Chairman, Central Board of Film Certification, Final Solution was cleared by the Censor Board without a single cut. Final Solution won the President’s Award in 2006, underscoring what the filmmaker called “the schizophrenic nature of the State, ”. Curiously, the two state-run film festivals of India -International Film Festival of India and Mumbai International Film Festival never ‘selected’ or screened Final Solution. Nor did the state broadcaster, Doordarshan, mandated with showing national award winning films, ever telecast the film despite formal requests. International broadcasters who aired the film include BBC, NHK, YLE, DR2 and several smaller TV stations in Europe, West Asia and Africa.Unusual distribution strategy
The battle for Final Solution was fought in the realm of public opinion. The strategy ensured that instead of the film being buried, it went viral. It also resulted in widespread public support and civil society protests that eventually created pressure on the Censor Board to re-examine the case. A week after the ban, 10,000 discs were bulk-replicated and launched in a Pirate-and-Circulate campaign. This campaign got a tremendous and widespread response, enabling the film to reach towns and villages no commercial DVD distributor could possibly have.Simultaneously, on the website, it was made clear that neither a formal permission nor a screening fee was necessary for any India screenings. This led to hundreds of protest screenings at cultural spaces, in college hostels, trade union halls and community auditoria etc. On Oct 2, 2004, Gandhi’s birth anniversary, inspired by his Civil Disobedience campaign, a nationwide Show@Home initiative was launched by Himmatbhai Zaveri, an old Gandhian. Free DVDs were made available for over 200 such screenings countrywide, for home screenings for neighbours, family, colleagues and friends.Further, activist groups & grassroots networks were encouraged to use the film for advocacy, urging them as well to pirate-and-circulate the film. A tie-up with smaller journals, focusing on Democracy, Fundamentalism, Communal/ sectarian violence etc, offered free DVDs to their subscribers. It ensured targeted distribution to ground-level activists already working on the very issues the film explored. Some groups were even given the master tapes to prepare dubbed versions in regional languages.Finally, the film was also uploaded for free viewing, in the limited spaces available online in 2004-5, as well as on institutional intranet servers at Indian universities, technical colleges, management institutes and even BPO call centres! That’s how the film went viral even before the ban was officially lifted.
Filmography & Related activities
Rakesh Sharma returned to documentary film-making after a decade, with the multiple award winning film Aftershocks: The Rough Guide to Democracy, a subaltern re-examination of the Narmada debate. Set in Kutch's lignite mining belt, the film probes democracy 'from below'. The film travelled to over 120 international film festivals, in addition to several universities and academic conferences.2002-2006: After finishing and releasing Final Solution, Rakesh worked full-time on making other versions, DVD sales and self-distribution of the film to broadcasters, institutions and film festivals etc.
- In 2006-7, Rakesh decided to return for filming in Gujarat, for a long-term follow-up to his earlier work. Tentatively titled Final Solution Revisited, it is a mini-series of 3-4 films, each a complete feature-length documentary in itself. Apart from a classic follow-up of events, incidents and people featured in Final Solution, the series also examines several dimensions that could not possibly have been explored in the immediate aftermath. A notable focus of his subsequent probes is the fate of the riot footsoldiers, 5 and 10 years after the carnage. As well as over a dozen “karasevak” families whose loved ones died inside S-6, Sabarmati Express at Godhra, most of whom were abandoned soon after the massive BJP victory in the 2002 Gujarat elections.
- In 2018, Rakesh was diagnosed with an autoimmune syndrome, after years of misdiagnosis since 2002, when he first started suffering seriously from debilitating issues. Though his travel and filming have been hampered after 2006, and near-totally so since 2013, he has still managed to film over 500 hours of material over the years, in Gujarat and elsewhere, probing the rise and entrenchment of Politics of Hate.
- Though largely self-financed, in 2011, Rakesh turned to his audience and supporters with an appeal for crowdfunding, to help digitise his entire archive comprising all filmed and found material since the 2002 Gujarat carnage, as the original mini DV tapes had begun to deteriorate. Thanks to their generous and timely support, nearly 90% of the archival footage and stock was successfully digitized. Edited sequences from this footage, along with excerpts from Final Solution, were released by the filmmaker in 2013-14
2014 Modi video releases
Award for [Final Solution (2004 film)]
- National Film Award – Special Jury Award in 2005
- Wolfgang Staudte award, Berlinale
- Special Jury Award, Berlin International film festival
- Humanitarian Award for Outstanding Documentary, HongKong International film festival
- Montgolfiere d’Or & Le Prix Fip/Pil’ du Public, Festival des 3 Continents at Nantes
- Best Documentary, Apsara Awards
- Best Film, Freedom of Expression awards by Index on Censorship
- Silver Dhow, Zanzibar International film festival
- Human Rights Award, Docupolis
- Special Jury Award, Mar Del Plata Independent film festival
- Special Jury Awards, Karafest, Worldfest and Film South Asia
- Special Jury Mentions, Munich Dokfest and Bangkok International filmfest
- Nominee, Best Foreign Film, Grierson Awards
- Special Award by NRIs for a Secular and Harmonious India, NY-NJ, USA
- Special Award by AFMI, USA-Canada