An Idea for A Movie or A Novel
I have previously posted about my childhood engagement with Soviet-ude via free CCCP magazines, heavily subsidized novels, the complete works of Marx & Engels hidden in my parents' attic etc. So last night, when I was wandering through cyber-ia (as a poor antidote to raging insomnia), I somehow ended up on the Wiki page of Svetlana Alliluyeva nee Stalina (I think I began at the Wiki page for The Battle Of Kursk – yes, I know the use of WW-II battle histories as sleeping pills is a queer choice), and the following section caught my eye:
In 1963, while in hospital for the removal of her tonsils, she met an Indian communist visiting Moscow, Brajesh Singh. Singh was mild-mannered and idealistic but gravely ill with bronchiectasis and emphesema. They continued and cemented their relationship while recuperating in Sochi, on the Black Sea. Singh returned to Moscow in 1965, to work as a translator, but they were not allowed to marry. Singh died in 1966 and Svetlana was allowed to travel to India to take his ashes back, for his family to pour them into the Ganges. She stayed in the family home in Kalakankar on the banks of the Ganges for two months and became immersed in local customs.On March 6, 1967, after first having visited the Soviet embassy in New Delhi, Alliluyeva went to the U.S. embassy and formally petitioned Ambassador Chester Bowles for political asylum. This was granted; however, owing to concerns that the Indian government might suffer from possible ill feeling from the Soviet Union, it was arranged for her to leave India immediately for Switzerland, via Rome. She stayed in Switzerland for 6 weeks before proceeding to the United States.
Further cyber-digging into this aspect of Ms. Stalina’s biography led me to the archives of the US Department of State. They contain many declassified missives exchanged between the US Embassy in Delhi and Washington DC, and shed further light into the motivations behind Ms. Stalina’s decision to defect to the bosom of her papa’s mortal enemy. Roughly it goes like this: she falls in love with Brajesh Singh; is not allowed to marry him or travel to India with Mr. Singh by the all knowing Party; Mr. Singh dies; she is given permission to travel to India to immerse his ashes in the Ganges; she defies the Soviet Ambassador, and overstays the fifteen day time limit on her visit to her lover’s village by two months; discovers “God”; is ordered by the Soviets to get on a plane back to Moscow; walks into the US Embassy the night before she is supposed to depart from India and asks for asylum; the Americans put her on a Rome bound plane out of Delhi in the six to eight hour window they had, before the Soviets figured out their beloved babushka had gone AWOL from the Soviet Embassy.
Interestingly, I could also dig out that Brajesh Singh was the uncle of Dinesh Singh, the then Minster of State for External Affairs in the Indira Gandhi government, and came from a zamindari/ aristocratic background. He was also associated with one of the fathers of Indian communism, M.N. Roy*. How a rajasaheb became a communist, and later ended up falling in love with Stalin’s daughter in the USSR, is a good enough plot for an intelligent Bollywood movie (with two or three songs), if not for a novel. So pliss be feeling free to steal this idea/situation for a movie script or a novel if you want to.
*Another totally fascinating dude. He ran around the planet, way back in the 1920s: Berlin, Tokyo, San Fransico, New York, Mexico City, Moscow etc having madcap adventures! The Raj produced far more interesting chaps than ascetic Gandhi.
My Daily Notes
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Scannings - 2
NYT, August 23, 2006
Market Place
For 2 Giants of Soft Drinks, a Crisis in a Crucial Market
By AMELIA GENTLEMAN
The Center for Science and the Environment announced in August. that drinks manufactured by Coca-Cola and PepsiCo in India contained on average more than 24 times the safe limits of pesticides, which could come from sugar, water and other ingredients.When those reports appeared on the front pages of newspapers in India, Coke and Pepsi executives were confident that they could handle the situation. But they stumbled.
They underestimated how quickly events would spiral into a nationwide scandal, misjudged the speed with which local politicians would seize on an Indian environmental group’s report to attack their global brands and did not respond swiftly to quell the anxieties of their customers.
...
In hindsight, Ms. Bjorhus, the Coke communications director, said she could now see how the environmental group had picked Coca-Cola as a way of attracting attention to the broader problem of pesticide contamination in Indian food products.
Sunita Narain, who heads the group, “has serious concerns about pesticides in the food chain,” Ms. Bjorhus said.
“By focusing her attention on the soft drinks industry, she gets a lot of attention.”
...
Regulators have not set standards for allowable levels of pesticides in soft drinks. Cleansing sugar of pesticide traces is difficult, and India’s groundwater is so contaminated that most food products contain some pesticide residue.
Asim Parekh, a vice president for Coca-Cola India, said his “heart sank” when he heard first heard the accusations because he knew that consumers would be easily confused. “But even terminology like P.P.B. — parts per billion — is difficult to comprehend,” he said. “This makes our job very challenging.”
So is the great NYT saying the question of whether desi colas are contaminated or not isn't as much as scientific problem but a 'weak/ faulty communication' problem on part of the cola gaints? Yes, Mr. Sinking-Heart-Parekh, we be so ignorant that we don't comprehende P.P.B and s**t; so pliss just be giving us a slew of ads (preferably engineered by PR companies that specialize in crisis management) with Bollywood stars feeding cola to their kids for breakfast instead of "doodh" fhata-fat, and we will go back to dinking dem colas, pesticides or not. ...
NYT, August 21, 2006 Fresh Princes of Mumbai, Building a Global Audience By LAURA M. HOLSON
India has a robust movie industry with none of China’s political constraints. Mr. Lynton offered to introduce the actor to Indian producers, actors and directors. And the next month Mr. Smith took his first trip to India.Now he has a deal — to make movies there instead.
Overbrook Entertainment, the company created by Mr. Smith and his business partner, James Lassiter, announced it was working with UTV, a television and film concern run by the entrepreneur Ronnie Screwvala. The two have agreed to produce two movies, neither of which will star the popular Mr. Smith.
UTV will pay the films’ costs up to a specified sum (after that amount, Overbrook has to raise the money) but the burden is on Mr. Smith and Mr. Lassiter to develop a script and hire the cast.
Will Will Smith get jiggy with Bollywood babes is the question? After Ms. Mallika -my-body-is-like-Viagara - Sherawat flashed Jackie Chan, which lady will do the same for our brotha from Bel Air, all in the name of art?
Scannings
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