Ritwik Ghatak's Subarnarekha explores partition and exile

This year commemorates the birth centenary of filmmaker Ritwik Ghatak and the 60th anniversary of his acclaimed film Subarnarekha. Part of his Partition trilogy, the movie portrays the struggles of refugees in post-Partition Bengal. Its themes of displacement and loss resonate with contemporary global crises affecting millions.

The birth centenary of Ritwik Ghatak is being marked through various events, including screenings and discussions, coinciding with the 60th anniversary of Subarnarekha's release in 1965. Though not a commercial hit at the time, the film frequently ranks among the greatest in cinema history. Critics speculate that an earlier release might have positioned Ghatak ahead of Satyajit Ray in Indian parallel cinema.

The story centers on Ishwar Chakraborti, a refugee in Calcutta after Bengal's Partition, who builds a makeshift family with his younger sister Seeta and the lower-caste orphan Abhiram. Ishwar secures work in Chhatimpur along the Subarnarekha river. Over the years, Seeta and Abhiram fall in love, elope, and start a family with son Binu. Tragedy strikes when Abhiram is killed by a mob, leading Seeta to a brothel where she encounters Ishwar unknowingly. In a devastating recognition, she takes her own life. Devastated, Ishwar returns to Chhatimpur with Binu but loses his job and all stability.

Subarnarekha weaves personal dramas against broader issues like exile, caste discrimination, social inequality, and the challenges of nation-building in independent India. The river Subarnarekha serves as a stark, foreboding backdrop, symbolizing unchanging natural forces amid human turmoil. Ghatak, a committed Marxist, explained his vision: “What I felt and wanted to tell through my film is the story of the present economic, political, and social crises in Bengal.” He emphasized that the narrative addresses not just Partition refugees but universal homelessness: “refugee or homeless in this film does not mean only the homeless from East Bengal. I wanted also to speak of the fact that we have all been rendered homeless in our time, having lost our vital roots.”

The film's ambiguous ending shows Ishwar and young Binu heading toward the river's far side, evoking faint hope amid unresolved trauma. With 122 million people displaced worldwide by April due to conflicts, Ghatak's insights into lost livelihoods, identities, and connections remain strikingly pertinent today.

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