Screen legend Shabana Azmi receives International Peace
Award for poverty and rights work
Actress Shabana Azmi has become accustomed to receiving accolades
for her ground-breaking performances on stage and screen ever
since 1974 when Satyajit Ray first called her the finest
dramatic actress in the country.
However, she is equally well known for her decades
long work to empower the slum dwellers of Mumbai. As chairperson
of Nivara Hakk (Right to Shelter), Shabana Azmi along with
documentary filmmaker Anand Patwardhan and three slum dwellers
undertook a five-day hunger strike, demanding and finally
getting land for the slum dwellers of Sanjay Gandhi Nagar.
Nivara Hakk opposes demolitions, arguing that demolitions
serve no purpose, they only create worst slums out of already
existing ones. Guaranteeing unconditional land tenure to the
slum dwellers, upgrading the civic amenities around them and
ensuring rural employment (70% of Indias people live
in her villages) are some of the means by which the mushrooming
of slums can be arrested. Twenty years after the hunger strike
in 1986, Nivara Hakk functions in more than 40 slums of Mumbai
and runs schools, health centres and employment generation
activities. In a tripartite agreement between the State government,
a private builder Sumer Corporation, and Nivara, 13,000 tenements
have been built for slum dwellers who were ousted off the
National Park. The 1st keys will be handed over to the slum
dwellers in the first phase of the programme on 2nd Oct. 2006.
This will be simply the largest resettlement project in all
of Asia.
Throughout her life, Shabana Azmi, has followed
the principles and practice of Non violence that Gandhi
advocated. This has included a passionate and fearless opposition
to religious fundamentalism of all hues. Under attack by both
Muslim and Hindu extremists, Shabana Azmi believes that the
clash of civilisations theory is a construct.
The fight is not been East or West, between Hindus or Muslims
but between liberal values and intolerance of the extremists.
She believes the fastest way to bring about change is to get
women involved in the process of development.
It is for this over-arching achievement in becoming
a true practitioner of what Gandhi called Satyagraha [truth-force]
that the Patrons and Trustees of the London based The Gandhi
Foundation decided to give her The Gandhi Foundation International
Peace Award for 2006. She also delivered the prestigious Annual
Lecture. News of this has been reported in every major newspaper
and television channel across India.
Azmi is the latest recipient of the Gandhi
Foundation peace award given yearly to outstanding peace
activists. Previous recipients have included the International
renowned human rights lawyer Clive Stafford-Smith and Denis
Halliday, former Assistant General Secretary of the UN who
resigned over the Iraqi sanctions. Annual
Lecturers have included His Holiness the Dali Lama, Archbishop
Desmond Tutu and Sir Mark Tully.
It will be no coincidence to many that 2006 also marks the
centenary of the speech that Gandhi gave in Durban, South
Africa, on 9th September [i.e. 9/11] 1906 in which he advocated
Non-Violence in all aspects of our living and being and in
which he presented his audience with his newly-coined term
Satyagraha for the very first time. A Satyagrahi
is one who has achieved total Non-Violence, both inner and
outer, a state of mind to which, he said, we should all aspire.
The Trustees believe that Ms Shabana Azmi is an exemplary
Satyagrahi.