LET US DIP OUR BLOOD IN HIS MEMORY WHO RENDERED AN IMMORTAL SERVICE TO THE MASSES BY DEVISING NEW ART FORM
By Harsh Thakor
Today we commemorate the 10th death anniversary of the playwright Gursharan Singh Punjab has never witnessed a revolutionary theatre activist who has penetrated the soul of the masses in such depth or done as much justice to Marxism. Gursharan Singh took creativity to unexplored regions as an artist, turning a spark into a prairie fire. Be it in the era of the Naxalbari uprising, the Emergency, the Khalistani movement or period of Globalization, he kept the red flag afloat even amidst the darkest waters and embezzled revolutionary spirit at a crescendo. He exhibited genius in formulating work in accordance with the very idioms of the people. New art forms were literally devised. I would go as far as ranking him amongst the best revolutionary playwrights of all time.
His most progressive contribution was exposing the cruelties of the caste system, Religions communalism, semi-feudal oppression and discrimination of women. After witnessing his plays the common people's anger resembled coal in a furnace burning at a boiling point, Naxalbari politics was projected in a people' s form, making them relate it's politics to their day to day lives. Gursharan Singh sowed the seeds for a major revolutionary theatre movement to encompass every region of Punjab., moulding many a theatre activist. I would go as far as calling Gursharan ji , an Indian equivalent of Bertolt Brecht. I marvelled in the manner in which he infused Leninist ideology with democratic themes, striking a perfect balance. Making the audience detached, played a key aspect in his plays. The memorial programme staged after his death would rank amongst the most ceremonious ever when paying homage to a revolutionary cultural activist. Every component of the Communist revolutionary camp bowed down in his honour. The revolutionary spark resembled a lotus in full bloom. He was simply a living example of how man can determine the course of his own life, facing the harshest circumstances.
His work
drew many a rank of the youth into revolutionary cultural organizations, particularly
in rural areas.
After his
death his plays have been enacted in thousands of democratic rallies of
farmers, literally taking the intensity of the masses to a boiling point. One
literally gets vibrations of his soul resurrected when witnessing his plays. Gursharan
Singh's work still plays an invaluable role in sharpening the sword of
revolutionary consciousness. It is most significant that the cadre of the
Bharatiya Kisan Union(Ugrahan) and Punjab Khet Mazdoor Union every year flock
on his death anniversary .
My
greatest memories of Gursharan Singh are when he led the rally of the
Revolutionary Centre, Punjab in March 1987, in a march upholding Shaheed Bhagat
Singh and condemning Khalistani terrorism and state terrorism. I can never
forget the intensity in his voice speaking against the killings of Innocent
Sikhs in encounters. Condemning killings by Khalistanis and compromise of
revisionist left parties. Every cadre must read the homage paid to him by
Journal 'Surkh Rekha' in 2011, which illustrated the magnitude of the
contribution of Gursharan Singh. It is significant that Gursharan Singh owed
allegiance to no revolutionary organisation. I also remember his inaugural
speech in the founding convention of the All India League for Revolutionary
Culture. Here he brilliantly portrayed the oppression of women. Towards the end
of his life, he left no stone unturned in expressing the fascist character of
Operation Greenhunt. I would love to hear the words of Comrades like Amolak
Singh and Jaspal Jassi, for Gursharan paji.
I can
never forget the esteem even Maoist intellectuals held for Gursharan Singh,like
Varavara Rao ,or activists of Aavhan natya Manch and Navnirman Sanskritik Manch
of Mumbai.
Yesterday I had a long chat with his daughter Navsharan, who
gave me the details on his life. I express my gratitude to her.
BIOGRAPHY(information
from Gursharan Singh Trust)
Gursharan
Singh gained his baptism in theatre in 1958 and never looked back since. There
is a well-known story of how the first spark of his theatre life. In 1958, he
was posted in Bhakra Nangal, where he worked on the Dam site as a hydraulic
expert, the Dam was dedicated to the people of the country by Prime Minister,
Jawaharlal Nehru. Soviet leaders Khrushchev and Bulganin came to Nangal on this
occasion and a cultural show was organised that evening for the dignitaries.
Gursharan Singh was in-charge of the show – Gopi Krishan Maharaj; Yamini
Krishnamurthy, Pundit Birju Maharaj; Lal Chand Yamla Jatt; Surinder Kaur and
many others were invited to perform. The show was open to the visiting
dignitaries and Bhakra managers. Gursharan Singh requested the management that
workers be invited to view the rehearsal of the cultural show. He was told that
it would be a wasted effort, as ‘workers don’t understand fine culture’. This
shook him badly and he went around asking artistes to stay for an additional
day to perform for the workers. Some stayed and others did not for a
performance for the workers the next day. Shortly after the incident, the workers
struck down work seeking a holiday on the occasion of Lohri. Impromptu he wrote
a play “lohri dee hartal” and there was no looking back for the next five
decades.
When he
began his theatre activity is Punjab, IPTA was almost extinct. There was not
very much theatre activity outside the boundaries of theatre departments with
limited audience. He founded Amritsar Natak Kala Kendra in 1964 and introduced
the best world drama to the audience in Amritsar in a sustained manner.
Beginning in 1969, he began taking his theatre to engulf many a village in
Punjab. He believed that rural citizens of India were denied their share of
culture of modern sensibility. A number of writers and theatre directors often
declined to go to rural audiences because according to them rural people did
not understand the language of theatre and therefore theatre was not for them.
He challenged this wisdom and through his sustained work demonstrated that if
theatre speaks to the lived experiences of people in the villages, they understand
it, appreciate it, and own it.
He
developed a new idiom of theatre
a theatre
which was truly people’s theatre – the awami theatre. The people of Punjab and
specially the rural people of Punjab fully took to owning his theatre. This
theatre was not reliant on fancy auditoriums or perfect lighting. He developed
a form where actors communicated with the audiences directly. Since the early
1970s, he performed in the villages of Punjab on an average, at least 150
nights in a year. Thousands of women, men and children came to see his plays,
raised funds for the performance and invited him to their villages. They often
traveled for miles on tractor trolleys, bicycles, bullock carts and on foot to
see the plays. His biggest contribution to Punjabi theatre is to create
audience for theatre in Punjab.
He
insisted that rural people are marginalised from experiencing art and theatre.
For him theatre and the oppressive semi-feudal social order were deeply
connected. He believed that they must not be cast as mutually exclusive and for
him a theatre that is truly based on people’s everyday existential experience
is theatre of relevance which he practiced. His mission was to transform the
world to cut out the tumours of injustice.
At the
same time he developed street theatre in Punjab and performed street plays in
cities and towns in market places, parks, streets and bazaars on issues of
social relevance. His street plays on dowry murders, custodial deaths, police
atrocities, women’s rights, dalit rights, human rights abuses, terrorist
killings and struggles for equality, highlighting the prevalent inequality in
the socio-economic landscape of India, were witnessed by thousands of people
all over Punjab.
Singh was
arrested during the Emergency for the plays he staged and lost his job, and
Shabdeesh remembers how when he came out of jail, he decided to take his
theatre to villages. “During the days of militancy in Punjab, he staged a play,
Hit List, a direct attack on terrorists who had him on their hit list. Many
thought he presented short plays only, but he staged Shiv Kumar Batalvi’s Loona
as soon as it was released, and it was a 90-minute, beautiful production.
Over the
four decades of 1970-2010, his theatre for social transformation, produced
plays that exposed power relations by positioning marginalized voices – women,
dalits, landless – centre stage in a dialogical relationship with their
mainstream counterparts.
Singh
worked laboriously for the emancipation of the working class, farmers,
labourers, women, Dalits, and anyone who was oppressed, through his courageous
plays, and with no reservations spoke against power and authority. Alongside,
he enabled a new generation of theatre directors and actors to bloom , who are
now spread all over India. From the Emergency (Eh Lahoo Kisda Hai), to the dark
days of terrorism and militancy in Punjab (Dastaan-E-Punjab, Bhai Mana Singh),
the condition of women, class discrimination, poverty (Mitti Da Mul),
corruption among others, are some of the issues Singh wrote about.Singh was
known to wait for women in the villages to finish their chores and be in the
audience. With his theatre, he wanted to give common people a voice and bring
about change. “His focus was the script and actors and his mission was to give
the downtrodden a voice and strive for change. He, through his art and
progressive ideologies, manifested virtues of equality and justice for the
people. He showcased his work just about anywhere, without sets, music,
costumes, so that people could connect to the power of simplicity and not be
intimidated by the art form. In Virsa Vihar in Amritsar, to get people involved
in theatre, he would charge Rs 10 a year as membership and then every three
months, stage a new play,” recalls Shabdeesh.
Gursharan
Singh developed street theatre on issues of social relevance.
He
authored close to 200 plays, published in seventeen books and 7 collected
volumes. His theatre inspired scores of young women and men to what he called
the theatre movement in Punjab. Today there are scores of rural theatre troupes
actively doing theatre in Punjab. They have created several theatre complexes
in villages with modern facilities where theatre activities happen on a regular
basis. These groups are self sustaining because there is now audience and a
culture of appreciation of rural theatre in Punjab.
His
theatre and the new idiom helped to challenge the received notions of
aesthetics and established assumptions about theatrical excellence that
perpetuated rigid separation between theatre art and ordinary working people’s
lives. His theatre included art practices which were embedded in ordinary
people’s lives.
His
theatre incorporated classical forms. but confronted the questioned the
aesthetic codes formulated to patronise the hegemony of the powerful. He
believed in meaningful collaboration between professionals and rural theatre
artists and activists. He encouraged the democratization of theatre practices.
This has attracted a new generation of artists as well as audience in Punjab.
In 1981,
in association with fellow comrades, he founded Punjab Lok Sabhayachar Manch
(People’s platform for culture), a forum where artistes, writes, and activists
contributed to a unique rural theatre discourse about intersections between
politics, culture and social justice and the stage. At present scores groups
are part of this umbrella organisation.
We can
say with confidence that his efforts of the last four decades have made most
qualitative impact. This difference is not only in terms of inspiring scores of
young men and women to adopt theatre as a profession, or in creating a critical
audience for theatre, but also inspire the belief in young men and women that
socially meaningful theatre is sustainable and has its rewards. His best reward
of doing theatre and realizing its impact was the reach of his theatre during
the troubled days of Punjab. In the early 1980s he knew that his medium, style
and credibility was powerful enough for him to give a secular and rational
version of the ‘Punjab crisis’ to the people. With this version many ordinary
people of Punjab identified and were willing to engage. Some of the prominent
plays that performed this role in the early 1980s were Baba Bolda hai, Ek Kursi
Ek Morcha Ate Hawa Vich Latakde Log, and Chandigarh Puara Di Jarr. During the
period of Punjab crisis, his voice of reason and a vision of society based not
on religions but on social justice reverberated in Punjab – Hindu raajna
Khalistan, raj kare mazdoor kisaan.
He has
been duly rewarded for his efforts in terms of immense love, affection and
regard that he received over the years from the people of Punjab. The genre of
theatre that he pioneered is recognised as a formidable form and has come to be
called as the rural theatre of modern sensibility for which he was awarded the
prestigious Sangeet Natak Academy award in 1993. He is also the recipient of the
Kalidas Samman which was conferred on him in the year 2004. He was also given
The Shiromani Natakar Award, Punjab Sahitya Academy Award and many other awards
from Punjabi people in Punjab, United Kingdom, USA and Canada. However, the
biggest recognition of his work came about in 2006 when Punjabi theatre groups,
writers, poets, playwrights and artists came together to give him the
Revolutionary Dedication Award for his lifetime contribution to the theatre
movement. More than 30,000 people converged in Kussa village on this occasion
to show their love and affection for the work that he had been doing in the
field of rural theatre. There are fewer examples of such an appreciation of the
work of a cultural worker. He also received ‘Punjabi of the year’ award in
2005.
He passed
away on September 27, 2011. The day, 27th is marked in Punjab as Revolutionary
Theatre Day since then.
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