Post by kangna001 on Mar 14, 2014 10:42:20 GMT
47 to 84
Cast
Character : Artist
Amrit : Jaffar Dhillon
Sukhmani : Natasha
Reet : Neelam Sivia
Harleen : Gurjit (Punjabi screen)
pritam singh : Jagdish Sachdeva
rattan lal : Asish Duggal
jarnail : Hardeep gill
Crew
Directed by : Rajiv Sharma
Produced by : Babli Singh
Written by : Lally Gill
Editor : Ujwal
Music Director : R. Sheen
Label : Shemaroo
Language : Punjabi
DOP : Satya
47 to 84 is a griping narrative based on true accounts of suffering and painful incidents. The deep body wounds with yawning scars of the unfortunate Sikh families in Lahore at the time of partition in 1947. And the recurrence of these experiences when the rioters swarmed into Sikh neighborhoods, randomly killing any Sikh men or women during the anti-Sikh Genocide that broke in various parts of Hindustan including Delhi in 84. It was a holocaust in our own country perpetrated by fellow countrymen that made Sikhs homeless in their own homeland.
The attack on Sikhs and their property in various localities appeared to be an extremely organized affair and all the suffering during those mass massacres were nothing but criminal conspiracy hatched against a single community. Such incidents in our own country raised many questions like were Sikhs really the considered citizens of India?
47 to 84 is the journey of a young Sikh girl Sukhmani who loses all her loved ones and is forced to leave the newly formed Pakistan during partition. Alone in the world with no where to go and no belongings, Sukhmani finds her way to Delhi. Fending for herself, Sukhmani over time builds a family and life here. India was now what she called home and felt a strong sense of attachment and belonging here. But it was not before long that her world was turned upside down once again during the anti-sikh Genocide of 1984. All her loved ones lives were in danger. The country that she called her motherland was now the most unsafe place for her family, her community and her. Will Sukhmani and like her, the entire Sikh community be able to feel at home in India again?
47 To 84 | Official Digital Motion Poster
47 To 84 | Stories Of 1984 | Social Media Initiative
Join Us On
Cast
Character : Artist
Amrit : Jaffar Dhillon
Sukhmani : Natasha
Reet : Neelam Sivia
Harleen : Gurjit (Punjabi screen)
pritam singh : Jagdish Sachdeva
rattan lal : Asish Duggal
jarnail : Hardeep gill
Crew
Directed by : Rajiv Sharma
Produced by : Babli Singh
Written by : Lally Gill
Editor : Ujwal
Music Director : R. Sheen
Label : Shemaroo
Language : Punjabi
DOP : Satya
47 to 84 is a griping narrative based on true accounts of suffering and painful incidents. The deep body wounds with yawning scars of the unfortunate Sikh families in Lahore at the time of partition in 1947. And the recurrence of these experiences when the rioters swarmed into Sikh neighborhoods, randomly killing any Sikh men or women during the anti-Sikh Genocide that broke in various parts of Hindustan including Delhi in 84. It was a holocaust in our own country perpetrated by fellow countrymen that made Sikhs homeless in their own homeland.
The attack on Sikhs and their property in various localities appeared to be an extremely organized affair and all the suffering during those mass massacres were nothing but criminal conspiracy hatched against a single community. Such incidents in our own country raised many questions like were Sikhs really the considered citizens of India?
47 to 84 is the journey of a young Sikh girl Sukhmani who loses all her loved ones and is forced to leave the newly formed Pakistan during partition. Alone in the world with no where to go and no belongings, Sukhmani finds her way to Delhi. Fending for herself, Sukhmani over time builds a family and life here. India was now what she called home and felt a strong sense of attachment and belonging here. But it was not before long that her world was turned upside down once again during the anti-sikh Genocide of 1984. All her loved ones lives were in danger. The country that she called her motherland was now the most unsafe place for her family, her community and her. Will Sukhmani and like her, the entire Sikh community be able to feel at home in India again?
47 To 84 | Official Digital Motion Poster
47 To 84 | Stories Of 1984 | Social Media Initiative
Join Us On