New Delhi, March 2023.
Centre for Cultural Resources & Training (CCRT) organised a four days’
cultural festival titled ‘VIRASAT – Kamaladevi’ to honour the memory
of Smt. Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay, Founder & First Chairperson of
CCRT from March 24th to 27th, 2023 in CCRT Campus Dwarka, New
Delhi.
Day 1 of VIRASAT Kamaladevi 2023 festival started with inauguration of
Amrit Camp and a lamp lighting ceremony by Dr. Vinod Narayan Indurkar,
Chairman CCRT and Shri Rishi Vashist, Director CCRT. In
the evening a play ‘Pahatiya’ was staged which was about an unsung hero from
India’s independence movement Gend Singh from the state of Chhattisgarh.
The Second Day, Saturday, March 25th, 2023, of VIRASAT
Kamaladevi festival saw the declaration of CCRT’s DDR (Digital
District Repository) brand ambassadors and their felicitation in a Facebook
Live program. This was not just online, but was also offline at the Bharatmuni
Natyagriha auditorium from 4pm to 6pm. The stars of the show were Maharashtra's
Dr Shivaji Mhaske, Andhra's Somisetty Sarala, Haryana's Prakash Sangwan who
have written over hundred stories for Project DDR- celebrating unsung heroes,
events, hidden treasures, living traditions- that have contributed in some way
to India's independence movement/ freedom struggle. Dr. Sandhya
Purecha, Chairperson- Sangeet Natak Akademi and Chair, W-20 was
the Chief Guest for the DDR Program held Live at 4pm at CCRT
campus and she felicitated the three brand ambassadors of Project DDR. About
the festival, Dr Purecha said, “Kamaladevi was a vidushi
(scholar) and to have a festival in the name of this legend is a big thing. And
this is exactly what our culture is. It is to carry forward the legacy of the
past into the present.” The evening witnessed a gripping suspense drama
called “Ek Inspector Se Mulaqat” which was conceptualised and directed
by Sharad Sharma of Abhinav Rangmandal, Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh.
Day 3 saw two riveting outstanding plays. The first
was ‘Sardar’ based on the story of Sardar Patel, directed by Shri Ramji
Bali, Theatre Wala Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh. The second play was ‘Sandhya
Chhaya’ directed by Shri Sudesh Sharma, Theatre for Theatre,
Chandigarh. Sandhya Chhaya was the story of an
old couple, a poignant tale of their loneliness which made the audience laugh
and cry- and the audience could not stop clapping at the end of the play and
even gave a standing ovation to the entire cast. Says Maira Bhatt,
a 21 year old student of IP University who had come to see the play, “It was
an eye opener for me about how elders feel when their children go away. A range
of emotions were portrayed by the old couple, be it happiness, sadness, love
for kids, their childhood, their insecurity about their own future. It made us
cry but there were many funny scenes too such as the banter between the old
couple.”
Day 4 started with “Siddhi Samaroh" or
Valedictory program with Chief Guest Dr Shripad Bhalchandra Joshi,
senior Marathi poet and writer and Guest of Honour – Smt Uma
Nanduri, Joint Secretary, Ministry of Culture. The chief guest unveiled the
statue of Smt. Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay and inaugurated
the exhibition of 30 paintings of women freedom fighters in the CCRT Art
Gallery. Soon after this, a cultural Presentation ‘Amrit Camp’ was made by
CCRT’s scholarship holders in conclusion of the Amrit Camp: Kadam Kadam Badhaye Ja. Forty-two
children from tribal regions of Udaipur, Rajasthan; 20 children from Varanasi
interpretation centers and 18 CCRT Scholarship holders showcased a synchronized
cultural production in classical music, dance and traditional art form along
with a visual art exhibition. The theme of the visual art exhibition was
‘Unsung Heroes of India’ in unique Indian folk-art styles such as Pichwai and
Madhubani painting, where students used charcoal and mixed media. The theme of
folk theatre and folk dance is Ghoomar, a feminine and elegant dance form of
the royal families performed during the family festivities using instruments
such as shehnai, nagada, dhol and harmonium. The theme of
classical music production was ‘Regional songs of India commemorating unity of
India’ and classical dance production was ‘Maine Mrityu ko dekha.’
The Amrit Camp was followed by a ramp walk event ‘Rangi Ramani’
curated by Deepali Phadnis, a choreographer who has organized
several Mrs. India Contests. There was a ramp walk by those women
artists in those Kerala’s Kasava sarees, they had painted with women freedom
fighters on it.
This was followed by book release of
a book series on Lesser-Known Cities of India ‘Santon Ka Shahar- Hoshiyarpur’
and a book series on Sanjhi Sanskriti Ke Nirmata ‘Taj Bibi’, followed by
documentary film such as CCRT’s New Institutional Video and Dharohar (P
Vetriboopathy).
The Ninth Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay Memorial Lecture was delivered in the evening
by Prof Shrinivasa Varakhedi, Vice Chancellor, Central Sanskrit University,
Delhi on “Kala, Sanskriti Evam Sanskrit.” The evening witnessed two plays by Nagpur based theatre
group - ‘Chidiya, Chhilke aur Sahgal’ and ‘Bhatki Gazal’- both directed
by Dr Vinod Narayan Indurkar, National Art & Craft Creator Nagpur,
Maharashtra who is currently also the Chairman CCRT. The first play
‘Chidiya, Chhilke aur Sahgal’ revolved around Shree and Shirin- a boy and girl
who at one time were in a romantic relationship and later went their separate
ways and how they suddenly bumped into each other and recounted their past. In
the second play ‘Bhatki Gazal’ the plot revolved around four characters and
their interpersonal relationship. The play was a take on the desire of the
modern man and the real world and the conflict thereof and the existential
crisis.