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Sanya's got two mommies doesn't fly with the Sena

 

 

Mobs Attack Indian Theaters Over Lesbian Film

 

 

 

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Hard-line Hindus hurled stones and damaged movie theaters in India Monday to stop the screening of a film about a relationship between two women, saying it violated Indian culture.

 

Nearly 100 activists of the student's wing of the Shiv Sena group smashed window panes, ripped up posters and burned effigies at a hall screening the Hindi film "Girlfriend" in Bombay, capital of India's prolific movie industry, witnesses said.

 

The film show was stopped after the attack.

 

Shiv Sena members also attacked a hall screening the film in the northern Hindu holy city of Varanasi, police said. There were no reports of any injuries in either incident.

 

 

"The film has some lesbian scenes and we got many complaints from the public, especially women, so we decided to take action," Nitin Amberkar, a member of Shiv Sena's student wing, said in Bombay, minutes before tearing up posters of the film.

 

 

About 20 Shiv Sena activists were detained in Varanasi after the incident. The cinema proceeded to screen the film under tight security, police said.

 

 

Arun Pathak, the Varanasi unit chief of the hard-line Hindu group, said the film violated Indian traditions.

 

 

"This film is out to degrade Indian culture. We will not allow anyone to do this," he told Reuters. The director of "Girlfriend" said his film did not violate Indian culture but merely reflected a slice of society that has long been brushed under the carpet.

 

 

"If my film doesn't not offend any religious or spiritual sentiments, then why the breakage?" Karan Razdan told Zee News television. "I'm just trying to show what's happening in society."

 

 

The box office response to the film, which opened on Friday, has been poor.

 

 

India turns out 1,000 movies a year -- the most in the world -- many of them three-hour boy-meets-girl candyfloss extravaganzas with lavish sets and song-and-dance routines.

 

 

In recent years, some Bollywood film-makers have stepped off the beaten track and made movies on themes considered unorthodox by old-school producers. However, strict censorship still prevents on-screen nudity and profanity.

 

 

"Fire," a 1998 Bollywood film that portrayed an intimate relationship between two women, provoked the wrath of hard-line Hindus who said it promoted what they called the alien practice of lesbianism and hurt Indian culture.

 

 

 

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They really need to learn what Hinduism's ideals are, because they most definitely are not fulfilling them.

 

Violence and intolerance is NOT the way to go about solving most problems, ESPECIALLY something so silly as a movie about lesbians.

 

 

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But I can understand their frustrations a bit. In the name of equality and tolerance so many ridiculous things are happening in the US. Now the big thing is homosex marriage. They are fighting to have adoption rights also throughout the country. The effects on the children are not good. And this attitude, like many others, is spread widely and quickly through the movies and mass media in general.

 

Things are so confused in kali-yuga that something simple like gender roles becomes muddled.

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