Celebrating Ritwik Ghatak's Centenary: A Timeless Commentary on Partition and its Global Relevance

Sourav K Basu

Assistant Professor

Amity School of Communication

Amity University, Kolkata

Description: A photograph of Ritwik Ghatak from his early years, likely taken around 1950 when he was active in the Indian People's Theatre Association (IPTA). License: Public Domain (image published before 1950)

My coming to films has nothing to do with making money. Rather, it is out of a need to express the pains and agonies of my suffering people.

Ritwik Ghatak, “My Coming Into Films”

In 2025, we mark the centenary of Ritwik Ghatak—an auteur who remains one of the most powerful and poetic voices in Indian cinema. His legacy remains strikingly relevant, especially in the context of the global refugee crisis. Whether due to the ongoing crises in Bangladesh, Syria, or the Ukraine-Russia war, the world faces a wave of displacement and migration, themes Ghatak explored deeply in his films. His works resonate with the current human struggles of refugees, making his films increasingly important in global discussions today.

Though his life and career were both tragically brief, Ghatak's legacy looms large over the cultural landscape of South Asia and beyond. More than a filmmaker, he was a seer—one who captured the trauma of Partition not just as a historical rupture, but as a spiritual wound, a lingering fracture in the human psyche that continues to haunt generations. As the world grapples with forced migrations, statelessness, and identity crises, Ghatak's work feels startlingly prophetic.

During my time in Mumbai starting in 2008 with Zee News & Aamir Khan Productions for ‘Satyamev Jayate’, I had the opportunity to visit FTII Pune several times to attend seminars, guest lectures, and technical workshops there. I observed the deep respect for Ghatak's memory, including a wall mural commemorating his time at the institute. Ghatak had served as Vice President of FTII from 1965, and his influence is still felt there.


Ritwik Ghatak's workspace archived at FTII, Pune Pic Courtesy: S.K.Basu 
 

A wall graffiti at FTII, Pune Pic Courtesy: S.K.Basu 

At FTII, Pune Campus, 2010 Pic Courtesy: S.K.Basu 

The Man Behind the Camera

Born on November 4, 1925, in Dhaka (then part of British India, now the capital of Bangladesh), Ritwik Ghatak experienced Partition firsthand. His family's migration to Kolkata was not just a geographic shift but an emotional and psychological schism that deeply informed his artistic sensibilities. Initially drawn to literature and theatre, Ghatak eventually found in cinema a medium expansive enough to contain his anguish, his anger, and his hope.

His filmography is lean but incandescent. While commercial success eluded him in his lifetime, posthumous appreciation has only grown, particularly among filmmakers, historians, and cinephiles who regard him as one of the few directors who dared to look at India’s Partition not merely as a political event but as an existential crisis.

Supriya Devi from Meghe Dhaka Tara


 The Partition as Living Specter

The Partition of 1947 uprooted millions, tore apart families, and sowed seeds of communal distrust that have yet to be reconciled. While mainstream cinema largely glossed over these harsh realities or romanticized them into digestible tropes, Ghatak delved deep into the emotional core of the tragedy.

In Meghe Dhaka Tara (1960), arguably his most acclaimed film, Ghatak uses the story of Neeta—a self-sacrificing refugee woman in post-Partition Kolkata—as a metaphor for the nation itself.

Similarly, in Subarnarekha (1965), Ghatak explores the taboo of incest and the desperation born of rootlessness, underscoring how displacement fractures not just geographies but moral and social orders. These are not just stories of refugees but stories of erosion—of culture, identity, and human dignity.

 

Global Echoes: Why Ghatak Matters Today

The world is witnessing unprecedented refugee crises—from Syria to Sudan, Myanmar to Ukraine. Borders continue to be drawn and redrawn with tragic consequences. The themes that Ghatak explored—displacement, identity loss, cultural amnesia—resonate deeply in today’s fractured world.

In many ways, Ghatak's films serve as a lens through which we can understand the universality of Partition-like traumas. His insistence on remembering, on mourning, on resisting the erasure of history, is a powerful antidote to the homogenizing forces of nationalism and cultural sanitization.

Ghatak also challenges us to rethink the role of art and the artist. In a world increasingly driven by algorithms, franchises, and formulaic storytelling, Ghatak's cinema is a reminder that art is also witness. That the camera can record not just faces but feelings, not just events but their echoes.

 Ritwik Ghatak Commemorative Stamp (2007)
      Description: An image of the Indian postage stamp issued in 2007 to honor Ritwik Ghatak.
License: Public Domain (government-issued stamp)
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Legacy and Reclamation

It is perhaps fitting that Ghatak has found more recognition internationally than in the mainstream Indian cinematic canon. Filmmakers like Martin Scorsese and Kumar Shahani have acknowledged his influence. Institutions across the globe now screen his restored films, and academic studies continue to unearth the layers of his work.

On the centenary of his birth, retrospectives, symposiums, and re-releases are beginning to reclaim his rightful place in cinematic history. But more importantly, they offer a moment for collective introspection—for remembering not just a man, but the questions he posed, questions that remain painfully unresolved.

A partition picture in 1947. Refugees crossing the border in East Bengal Source: Wikipedia

Conclusion: A Cry Across Time

In Komal Gandhar (1961), another of Ghatak's masterpieces, the backdrop of Partition serves as a canvas for exploring fractured political ideologies and the difficulty of healing. Yet even in its bleakness, the film gestures toward hope—through love, through solidarity, through art.

Celebrating Ritwik Ghatak’s centenary is not just about honoring a cinematic genius. It is about engaging with a conscience that never stopped probing, never stopped feeling. His films compel us to acknowledge the wounds of the past, not to dwell in them, but to ensure we do not repeat them.

In an era of curated forgetting, Ghatak reminds us of the power of remembering—and the sacred responsibility of bearing witness.

 



4 comments:

  1. Ritwik remains relevant. Wherever there would be painful displacement, wherever there is spiritual injury, Ghatak's spirits will descend to provide some empathetic presence. Compliment ASCO-Kol for remembering one of the greatest-and-underrated filmmakers of the disturbed world.

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    1. Thank you for your motivating words Sir. Keep following us. From The Editorial Desk

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  2. Dear Sir, a few important and valuable words from you in the comment section would be greatly beneficial to many, especially our Film & Media students.

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  3. Very articulate. Enjoyed reading.

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