Mumbai, Nov 4
Veteran Bollywood scriptwriter and lyricist Javed Akhtar
believes the controversy over the national song "Vande mataram"
is obsolete and those who have any objection to it should simply not sing
it.
He was referring to the Jamiat-e-Ulema-e-Hind Tuesday
asking Muslims not to sing the song on the grounds that some of its lines
were "against the religious principles of Islam".
"It's a non-issue and unnecessarily provocative.
I've written songs with 'Vande mataram' in them. I used the term 'Vande
mataram' in Priyadarshan's 'Saza-e-Kala Pani'," Akhtar told IANS.
"Then I used the term for a song in 'Phir Bhi Dil
Hai Hindustani' and finally for a song that's used at the military academy
at Dehradun. Please don't make an issue out of a non-issue."
He believes the "controversy is old and obsolete.
'Vande mataram' is part of Bankimchandra Chatterjee's novel 'Anand Math'.
All the villains in this novel are Muslims. Ultimately the Muslims lose
and the novelist feels happy that the British have come to save us from
these so-called 'barbaric' Muslims.
"This is the song of militant sadhus in the novel.
There were two stanzas of strong religiosity in this song. When talk arose
of making 'Vande mataram' the national anthem it was pointed out by rational
elements that the novel was anti-Muslim.
"The Congress decided to take out the two rabidly
religious stanzas and the rest of the song was retained. The controversy
ended there.
"What is this new resistance? The objection is redundant.
You don't want to sing 'Vande mataram', don't! Who is forcing you? I sing
it. I don't see it as objectionable. If you do, don't sing it. Why do
you insist on bringing such irrelevant matters centrestage?"
While the Jamiat passed a resolution supporting an earlier
decree against the song, it drew fierce criticism from the Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP), which called the move 'anti-national'.
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