Essayer OR - Gratuit

"The CBFC Does Not Want a Real-life Hero From a Minority"

The Caravan

|

August 2025

Honey Trehan on fighting with the censor board for Punjab ’95

- JATINDER KAUR TUR

"The CBFC Does Not Want a Real-life Hero From a Minority"

Shooting and production on director Honey Trehan’s Punjab ’95 was done and dusted in 2022.

The team had filed the film with the Central Board of Film Certification, which certifies films for release in India. Punjab ’95 is a gritty retelling of the lives of the human-rights activist Jaswant Singh Khalra and his family, and their fight against state repression during Punjab’s bloody insurgency between the 1980s and 1990s. Khalra was investigating extrajudicial killings by the police, which had led to a spate of hidden cremations—more than two thousand in Amritsar alone, by his investigation—when he was abducted and murdered by the Punjab Police. An investigation by the Central Bureau of Investigation and a Supreme Court conviction of six police officials hold this to be true.

The CBFC, over the next two years, repeatedly called Trehan and producer Ronnie Screwvala to make increasingly egregious cuts that damaged the narrative and realism of the movie. The ministry of information and broadcasting was involved in the censorship too. The cuts went so far as to disallow them from mentioning the state of Punjab or even Khalra’s name. An unprecedented number of cuts—about a hundred and thirty—were demanded, and it was barred from an Indian release. The fight then continued in court, and when the producer was pressurised to agree to a settlement outside court, he was asked by officials not to screen it abroad either. Speaking to The Caravan’s staff writer Jatinder Kaur Tur, Trehan described how the actions of the government amounted to political censorship, disallowing Punjab to remember and learn from its scarred history. The unedited film has the support of Khalra’s family and Sikh religious organisations. In a text message shared by Trehan, the film’s lead, Diljit Dosanjh, stated, “If there are cuts made to the film, we will remove our names from the credits. That’s the least we can do to stand by our film and our conscience.”

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Caravan

The Caravan

ANY RESEMBLANCE TO ACTUAL EVENTS IS NOT COINCIDENTAL

INTERFAITH ROMANCE FICTION IN THE ERA OF LOVE JIHAD

time to read

31 mins

December 2025

The Caravan

Manufacturing Legitimacy

How a Washington Post columnist laundered the Sangh's violent history

time to read

7 mins

December 2025

The Caravan

The Caravan

DEATH of REPORTAGE

THE DISMANTLING OF OUTLOOK'S LEGACY

time to read

32 mins

December 2025

The Caravan

The Caravan

FOG LIGHT

Samayantar's two-and-half-decade fight against the shrinking of Hindi's world

time to read

22 mins

December 2025

The Caravan

The Caravan

THE FINE PRINT

ON 19 MARCH 2005, thousands came out on the streets of Udupi, in coastal Karnataka, to protest a gruesome incident that had shaken the region a week earlier.

time to read

23 mins

December 2025

The Caravan

The Caravan

CHARACTER BUILDING

The enduring language of Indian streets

time to read

5 mins

December 2025

The Caravan

The Caravan

THE CONVENIENT EVASIONS OF RAJDEEP SARDESAI

DRESSED IN A turban and white kurta pyjama, Narendra Modi sat in the passenger seat of a van crossing the Patan district of Gujarat, in September 2012. Next to him sat Rajdeep Sardesai, the founder-editor of the news channel CNN-IBN.

time to read

63 mins

December 2025

The Caravan

The Caravan

Ahmed Kamal Junina: “Every class we hold is a defiant refusal to surrender”

A professor in Gaza on teaching during a genocide / Conflict

time to read

11 mins

December 2025

The Caravan

The Caravan

Bangla Pride, Urdu Prejudice

The language wars have primed West Bengal for the RSS

time to read

8 mins

November 2025

The Caravan

The Caravan

THE INTERVIEW

\"The people are naked before the government but the government is opaque to them\"

time to read

16 mins

November 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size