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Fortoon tellers
THE WEEK India
|December 29, 2024
IF CARTOONISTS ARE THE VANGUARDS OF DEMOCRACY, THEIR FREEDOM IS ESSENTIAL FOR OUR FUTURE
 In the magazine Cartoonists India, former Reader's Digest India editor Mohan Sivanand relates an anecdote about Shankar Pillai, one of the pioneers of cartooning in the country. In 1932, a few months after he had joined as a staff cartoonist with the Hindustan Times, Shankar got a summons from the viceroy, Lord Willingdon. Shankar met the viceroy with some trepidation, only to be welcomed with a broad smile and a pat on the back. He conveyed to the cartoonist how much he enjoyed his work. His wife, however, had one complaint. "Why do you draw my husband's nose so long?" she asked him.
Shankar explained how caricaturing entailed the exaggeration of certain features. "Now, even if I draw only that nose, people will know it is your husband," he told Lady Willingdon. The Willingdons had a hearty laugh. Compare that with today's India, when our leaders have lost their sense of humour so much that exaggerated noses will get them breathing down your neck.
It was not so in the first few years after independence. In fact, Gandhi himself was a great patron of cartoons.He realised their power in the art of protest.
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