NEW DELHI, Nov 19: Many are the perils to be encountered on the way when man decides to meet God. And for photographer Madhur Dhingra the greatest peril became the Naga Sadhus and their way of life.
The show of photographs, spiritual in theme, called `Where Man Meets God’, opens at the India International Centre (IIC) annexe on Tuesday (November 24). But one particular photograph which made the organisers blush and say that it could not be displayed was on one Naga sadhu `doing it’ to another. “The IIC organisers had good enough reasons for not wanting to display it. But my aim
So, complying with the conditions the IIC put forward, Dhingra decided to withdraw this picture along with three others on the cremation of the poor at the Mahashamshan at Manikarnika. But shehas arranged for a preview of the pictures at the Art Konsult gallery in Hauz Khas village.
Dhingra, a coloniser who took up product photography for advertising firms as a hobby, and later decided to express his creative urge by photographing religious places and rituals, was in for a rude shock when he went armed with a camera to the Maha Kumbh at Haridwar this year. “I was very excited by the thought of seeing the Nagas descend from the Himalayas where I thought they led an austere life, living without clothes amidst snow.
But I was in for disillusionment. Austere lifestyle had changed to luxurious living in air-conditioned rooms, money was God. I saw pitched battles between the Nagas and the police. There was bitter rivalry among various groups. Homosexuality was widely prevalent,”recalls Dhingra.
By clicking these pictures, Dhingra says he did not want to take the stand of the majority heterosexual group condemning the minority homosexual group. “I am against the use of the name of religion forother kinds of activity,” he says.
What shocked him further was the way the poor, who cannot afford enough wood, were cremated. “Never before had I encountered the disrespect being shown to the dead as I saw here. The bodies were cremated in a strange manner. First only the middle portion of the body was set aflame, leaving out the legs and head. As the fire rages, the face and legs get charred. Then the whole body is turned and twisted like barbecue chicken,” says Dhingra.
Three photographs of such cremations have been kept turned to the wall even at Art Konsult. “We put them up at fist, but it is difficult even to look at them,” says gallery owner Siddhartha Tagore.
Dhingra says that he has achieved his mission as Khushwant Singh has agreed to do a text for his pictures and the two will be bringing out a book. Surprisingly, it is to be in the coffee-table book format. Tagore says that Art Konsult is arranging for the publication.
Dhingra adds: “Khushwant was very intrigued by the homosexualityshot of the Naga Sadhus and he has taken four to five copies of the picture for private circulation.”