I interviewed Norhayat Kaprawi who is doing a documentary on M Indira Ghandhi, a mother who has been cruelly separated from her daughter. Read the full story below
Headline: An Inconsolable Loss
By Bissme S
THE DOCUMENTARY, Dairi Untuk Prasana, captures the
suffering of a mother who has been cruelly separated from her daughter. The
mother in the 45-minute documentary is M. Indira Gandhi.
When
her former husband converted to Islam in 2009, he took away their daughter
Prasana, who was then only 11 months old. He later applied to unilaterally
convert all three of his children with Indira to Islam, setting off a custody
battle that has seen Indira travelling from High Court to Federal Court in
order to get her youngest child back. Sadly, Indira’s efforts have been in
vain. While she successfully regained custody of her two oldest children – Tevi
Darsiny, now 20, and Karan Dinish, 19 – she has not set eyes on Prasana, now
aged nine, in seven years.
“Her story is tragic,” says Datuk Mohd Zaid
Ibrahim, a prominent lawyer-turnedpolitician who is also the producer of the
documentary, who adds that our legal system has not given her justice.
Zaid
feels that everyone is passing the buck around, and that the politicians are
afraid to make firm decisions.
“Our country has failed her, and this is very
depressing.”
Some
parties feel that giving Prasana back to Indira would meant a setback for
Islam. “How can Islam be compromised if you give justice to a mother?” Zaid
asked.
“Some
Muslims feel [that] if they side with the mother, then they are siding with a
nonMuslim. But just imagine if this were to happen to you ... what would you
do?
“Some
[only care] that the daughter has become a Muslim. But she cannot see her
mother. It is never easy to grow up without a mother. Kindness has always been
the central principle of Islam, and that’s the reason Islam spread fast in the
early days. “Unfortunately, Islam (in our country) has become dogmatic.”
Last
year, Zaid hired documentary maker Norhayati Kaprawi to tell Indira’s story.
Norhayati is an activist who is fond of promoting female equality in her
documentaries. Some of her works included Mencari Kartika which is about a
Muslim woman sentenced to six lashes of the rotan for consuming alcohol; Aku
Siapa?, which deals with the issue of wearing a veil in Malaysia; and Ulama
Perempuan which highlights female Islamic scholars in Indonesia.
For
Dairi Untuk Prasana, Norhayati takes a more intimate approach, showing how a
family has been torn apart, and how lives are jeopardised by what has
transpired.
“My
documentary is about the human [aspect of this] story,” she says.
“No
religion [should] separate a mother from her child.”
She
has tremendous respect for Indira, adding that “she has never taught her two
[older] children to hate their father”.
Norhayati
points out that Indira has said that should she finally meet Prasana, she will
not force Prasana to convert to Hinduism.
“She
understands Prasana’s circumstance, and she believes religion is not something
you can force on another person, even if she is your child.
“All
Indira wants is to see her daughter. I am humbled by her big heart.”
Norhayati
also interviewed Prasana’s two older siblings, as well as Prasana’s
grandmother. She says: “Indira has done a good job in raising mature children.”
Norhayati
recalls how Tevi described the moment her father grabbed Prasana from her arms
and disappeared.
“Tevi
felt responsible for what had happened, and could not stop feeling guilty,”
Norhayati says.
Meanwhile,
Karan believes everything can be resolved amicably if both parties sit down and
discuss things calmly.
Norhayati
adds: “[Prasana’s] grandmother is a humorous person, and the audience will love
her. Her [biggest] wish is to see Prasana before she dies.”
Footnote : Dairi
Untuk Prasana will be shown at the Freedom FilmFest (FFF) on Sept 9 at 6pm at
PJ Live Arts in Petaling Jaya.
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