Akal Takht Bans release of controversial movie ‘Nanak Shah Fakir’

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AMRITSAR – Sri Akal Takht Sahib on Monday has imposed a ban on the release of controversial movie ‘Nanak Shah Fakir’.

“We have imposed a complete ban on controversial film Nanak Shah Fakir. The film cannot be released,” Akal Takht Jathedar, Gyani Gurbachan Singh told PTI over phone from Amritsar.

“Showing Sikh gurus in living form cannot be permitted. And the issue relating to human beings playing the role of the Guru and his family has not been addressed,” he said. The movie is slated for release on April 13.

Akal Takht Jathedar said a Sikh Censor Board will be constituted and it will be made mandatory for filmmakers to seek approval from the board before they start preparing any script on a subject pertaining to Sikhs and their religion.

The Sikh Censor Board will have members from the SGPC, Delhi Sikh Gurudwara Management Committee, Sant Samaj, among others, Jathedar Giani Gurbachan Singh said.

Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC), the apex religious body of the Sikhs, had constituted a second sub-committee to review the movie, a week before its slated release.

The SGPC had constituted the first sub-committee of eight members in 2015 when the movie was to be released initially.

A month ago, the film producers again announced the movie’s release for April 13 after which various Sikh outfits started raising objections seeking a ban on the grounds that depiction of Sikh gurus and other historic Sikh figures in films is considered blasphemous.

Now, the SGPC too has urged the central and state governments to ban the screening of the movie keeping in view the Sikh sentiments.

Some radical Sikh organisations too have demanded ban on the movie, claiming it “brazenly violates the religious philosophy and Sikh maryada (code of conduct)”.

Meanwhile, members of various Sikh organisations held protests at many places across Punjab today.

Addressing a gathering of Sikhs at Nawanshahr, former SGPC general secretary Sukhdev Singh Bhaur said it was against the Sikh tenets to show Guru Nanak in “living form”.

The protesters said in case the film was released in the state on April 13, its makers would have to face wrath of Sikh community across the country.

Some protestors also disrupted the traffic on Bathinda-Mansa road in protest against the movie.

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