ITIHAAS

A feature film produced by
RUPKAMAL PRODUCTIONS,
GUWAHATI, ASSAM.

Director :
Bhabendra Nath Saikia

THE CAST
The ArtisteThe Role
Nikumoni Barua
Mridula Barua
Tapan Das
Biju Phukan
Nilu Chakraborty
Jayanta Das
Upakul Bardoloi
Dilip Phukan
Tapas Dutta
Dr. Hemen Barman
Jowan Dutta
Punyada Bora
Indubhushan Gogoi
Subhash Goswami
Prarthana Gayan
Pratibha Choudhury
Manjula Barua
Jeena Barua
Anurupa Banerjee
Lakhimi
Manju
Madhu
Mukul
Arabinda
Prof. Kumar
Kishorilal
Bhola
Alakesh
Bhadralok(1)
Robikumar
Nepal
Bhadralok(2)
Sankar
Rukmini
Sarala
Bijoya
Ratna
Parbati


CREDITS
Producer: Rupkamal Productions, Bora’s Inn,Guwahati-781028
Executive Producers: Late Rupam Bora, Khasgir Babul, Leena Bora, Pradip Hazarika
Producer: Leena Bora
Story, Screenplay, Dialogue, Direction: Bhabendra Nath Saikia
Cinematography: Kamal Nayak
Audiography: Anup Mukhopadhyay, Jyoti Bandopadhyay, Hirendra Prasad Bhattacharyya
Editor: Nikunja Bhattacharjee
Music Director: Indreswar Sarma
Art Director: Nuruddin Ahmed
Make Up: Pradip Bag
Asstt. Directors: Jayanta Das, Parvez Ahmed, Indu Bhusan Gogoi, Punyada Bora
Costume Supervision: Preeti Saikia
Commentary: Sanjeev Hazarika
Management: Satish Baishya, Punyada Bora, Babul Kakoti, Indubhushan Gogoi
Production Supervision: Biswajit Bora
Technical Management: Arun Guhathakurta
Processed at: Prasad Film Laboratories, Madras
Edited at: Jyoti Chitroban (Film Studio) Society, Guwahati


SYNOPSIS OF THE STORY

It was a small locality at the fringe of a town. Steeped in poverty, its people lived in their own characteristic worlds. The public well there was a common property for all of them- and for both their souls and social activities. About twice a year the municipality men lifted the mud from its bottom in order to clear the water. Whenever that operation was done, various things that had once belonged to some people of that locality -specially those that had dropped there from the children’s hands – came up to the outside. In those things and in the joys expressed on their recovery was reflected the simple and uncomplicated character of their lives.
At a certain stage the town started developing speedily towards that area. All around buildings came up. Most of the land of that locality was owned by Damodar – who was, however, poor and addicted to drinks. He sold out his land, plot after plot, to Kishorilal, a rich business – man of the town. Kishorilal planned to buy up all the land there and build up a “housing Complex”. And all the land did ultimately go to Kishorilal. And after that all the people who had been residents of the locality moved away to the other side of the river.
But Bhola – who belonged to a family that lived at an extreme end of that locality did not agree to selling his paternal plot of land there. As a result the whole plan of Kishorilal was about to receive a bad shape. However, he cajoled Nepal – the elder brother of Bhola – into agreeing to sell away his own share of the plot and ultimately started building the housing-complex. Gradually the huge complex, being built there, surrounded from all sides the solitary house of Bhola’s family. One day Kishorilal made a proposal : when the complex would be completed he would give Bhola a flat of three rooms in the very area they had their paternal house; he would make Bhola a supervisor in a Floor Mill at Laxmipur, and till the flat was completed would give them a house across the river to live in for that interim period.
Bhola had no alternative to accepting this proposal. One day he took his mother Sarala and the two grown- up sisters Lakhimi and Rukmini to a house across the river to settle them there and went away to work in a Flour Mill of Kishorilal at Laxmipur.
A great change came over Bhola as he happened to find himself in the midst of various people. His relations with his sisters became thin as he started enjoying his life in Laxmipur. The only well-wisher of that family, which had fallen into the clutch of utter poverty in that time, was Madhu who had been a lover of his sister Lakhimi for a long time. The house given to them had become rather a ramshackle one; but after the completion of the housing- complex Kishorilal started playing a hide and seek game when he had to give them a flat of three rooms. One day Madhu forcefully occupied that flat and thus made arrangements for Lakhimi and her family to live there. But as a result of that act he came to be in Kishorilal’s disfavour.
A new life for Lakhimi and her sister and mother began in a flat of a modern housing complex raised on the plot of land which belonged to them. There was no arrangements for electricity and water in that flat which Kishorilal had used as a godown. The daily life of the family of Lakhimi became again connected with that old well. After a period of this phase of life had elapsed, Rukmini – the sister of Lakhimi one day fled away with Robilal, who had been working on Kishorilal’s housing – complex as a work-assistant; and there was no telling where they had gone.
Compelled by the necessity of earning a livelihood while living with her mother, Lakhimi, at one stage, started doing household chores at the houses of several well-to-do families. Coming into close contact with the so-called good society she found a variety of characters being gradually revealed before her eyes. She became gradually helpless and silent while getting an experience of man’s tenderness, generosity, ugliness, fierceness and vileness. Through all this experience she gradually lost Madhu – the only support of her hopes and aspirations. One day, the supportless Lakhimi wanted to rebel against the evil forces that made her lose her everything; but as a consequence she found a shelter in the bottom of the well – the well which had been a companion of hers since her childhood.
In search of clues to her death, the mud of the well was raised to the outside ground for the last time. Mingled with that mud there came up materials of a history of the recent times.

The original story : “Barnana”
Time of writing : 1975
Writer : Bhabendra Nath Saikia
Dr. Bhabendra Nath Saikia - the brain behind:
Dr. Bhabendra Nath Saikia was born on February 20, 1932 in Nagaon Town in central Assam . He passed matriculation examination in 1948, securing star marks. He secured his B.Sc. Degree with honours in Physics from Cotton College in 1952 and M.Sc. in Physics from Presidency College of Calcutta University in 1955 – 1956. He obtained Ph.D. Degree in Physics in 1961 from London University . He also obtained Diploma of Imperial College (DIC) of Science & Technology, London in 1961.


Dr. Saikia started his illustrious career as a physics teacher, first at the Sibsagar College and then at the Gauhati University . He did pioneering work in the publication of college level textbooks in the Assamese language during his tenure as Secretary of the Co-ordination Committee for production of textbooks in regional languages. He served as the Chairman of the Railway Service Commission, North East Frontier Railways in the early eighties.
However, it was his literary genius that made Dr. Saikia a household name in Assam . Be it short stories, novels, stage plays or children’s literature –Dr. Saikia’s stature in Assamese literature is unparalled. He is the author of twenty nine books as of January, 2001 which also includes his autobiography Jivan Britta that he completed in 2000.

He received the Sahitya Academy (India) Award in 1976, the Publication Board, Assam, Award in 1973 (Inaugural Year) and the Sahityik Hara Nath Ghosh Madel for 1981 given by the Bangiya Sahitya Parishad, Calcutta, the Assam Valley Literary Award of 1990 (Inaugural Year) instituted by the Magor Education Trust and the Surendra Nath Paul Award for lifetime achievement, awarded by the cha – cha – cha Tea Festival of Calcutta in 1999.

He was honoured with the Srimanta Sankardeva Award, the highest award Instituted by the Government of Assam, for the year 1998, and the Kamal Kumari National Award for the year 2000. In 2001, the Dibrugarh University conferred the Degree of D.Litt, honoris Causa on Dr. Saikia in recognition of his outstanding contribution in the fields of cinema and literature. He was awarded Padma Shri by the Government of India in the same year.

He broke new grounds in the field of journalism in the state while serving as Editor of the children’s magazine Sofura and the Chief Editor of the prestigious fortnightly Magazine Prantik. As an editor of Sofura, Dr. Saikia was intensely involved with cultural growth and development of children.

Dr. Saikia was an icon in the field of Assamese Cinema. His contribution was instrumental in carrying Assamese Films forward into the global arena. The seven Assamese feature films that Dr. Saikia directed were all awarded the prestigious Rajat Kamal award as the best regional films. They are Sandhya Raag (1977), Anirban (1981), Agnisnaan (1985), Kolahal (1988), Sarothi (1992), Abartan (1994) and ltihaas (1996). Besides that, he won the national award for the best screenplay for one of his films Agnisnaan. His films have been included in the Indian Panorama section of the Indian Film Festival and have been screened at many international film festivals such as Cannes , Montreal , Toronto , Karlovy Vary , Nantes , etc.

He was adjudged as one of the “Twenty-one Great Assamese Persons of the twentieth century”. He was instrumental in the conception and development of the Sri Sankardeva Kalakhsetra, Assam and served as its Vice Chairman until August, 2003.

Dr. Saikia was a Member, Sangeet Natak Akademi; Member of the Executive and General Council of Sahitya Akademi; Member, Indian National Council for co-operation with UNESCO; Member, Academic Council, Gauhati University; President of Jyoti Chitraban (Film Studio) Society; Member, Advisory Body, AIR, Guwahati; Chairman, Assam State Film (Finance and Development) Corporation Ltd; Member., Governing Body, North East Zone Cultural Centre, Dimapur; Member, Governing Body, East Zone Cultural Centre, Kolkata; Member of Court of the Gauhati University, Assam; Member, Society of the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune, Member, Board of Trustees, National Book Trust of India.
It was not the awards and accolades that give Dr. Saikia the stature he enjoys in Assamese society today. An intensely private person, he led a life of simplicity, honesty and hard work with unwavering principles and standards that earned him universal respect. He managed his public life and duties while staying grounded and devoted to the well-being of his private life and virtues. He had immense respect and love for others, especially children. In the process he was able to dream of a project such as Aarohan which has benefited children in whom he had faith. Aarohan is a presence that endows his love on those children who frequent this facility. His vision at Aarohan was the well-being and safety of these children and their happiness through the medium of the arts.
Dr. Saikia passed away on August 13, 2003 before Aarohan could be completely built. Dr. Saikia's wife Preeti Saikia, with the help of a group of excellent individuals and trustees, has overseen the construction and management of Aarohan and its programs. Dr. Saikia's wife of 38 years, producer of some his movies, his helping hand and business acumen, she contributes her day to Aarohan today. In this sense, she is the wind beneath his wings. Dr. Saikia's theme in his work was women's rights. Mrs. Saikia has embodied that theme. All together they have achieved a collective dream within the facility of Aarohan where the children play.
People

Administration


 
Teaching and Supporting






Programmes

Since inauguration, the following Programmes are being carried out for many underprivileged students from Govt. Schools and others at AAROHAN.
  1. Computer Training
  2. Drawing and Painting
  3. Satriya Nritya (under Sangeet Sattra Pariksha Parisad, Assam)
  4. Vocal (under Bhatkhande Sangit Vidyapeeth, Lakhnow)
  5. Tablaa Baadan (under Bhatkhande Sangit Vidyapeeth, Lakhnow)
  6. Kathak Nritya (under Bhatkhande Sangit Vidyapeeth, Lakhnow)
  7. Violin (under Bhatkhande Sangit Vidyapeeth, Lakhnow)
  8. Piano-Keyboard
  9. Guitar
  10. Drumset
  11. Modern Creative Dance
AAROHAN also provide free coaching classes to support BPL category students of the institution in subjects English, Mathematics and MIL (Assamese) for IV, V and VI standard.

Age group: 6-14 years (for all programmes).

Admission is done free on the basis of lists of students of poor families sent by the respective Headmasters / Headmistress and interview of parents whenever needed. Direct admission is done for other students under Self Subsidised Payment scheme.

Our Donors

  1. Dr. Manmohan Singh, Ex. Prime Minister, Govt. of India
  2. Sri Tarun Gogoi, Ex. Chief Minister, Govt. of Assam
  3. Sayda Anwara Taimur, former MP
  4. Sri Karnendu Bhattacharya, former MP
  5. Sri Indramoni Bora, former MP
  6. Dr. Arun Sarma, former MP
  7. Sri Sylvius Condpan, former MP
  8. Dr. Birendra Nath Baishya, former MP
  9. Late Nareswar Sarmah
  10. Sri Krishna Roy, Awahan Theatre
  11. ONGC (Oil & Natural Gas Corporation) India
  12. Sri Pradyut Bordoloi, Ex Minister, Govt. of Assam
  13. Cambridge India 
  14. Safura
  15. Sri J.N Saikia
  16. Maharishi Vidya Mandir, Silpukhuri
  17. PATHAAR, A Socio-Cultural Org., Duliajan
  18. Sri Rajani Prabha Das
  19. KAUSHIK, Assam Foundation, America
  20. Assam Association, America
  21. Assam Foundation, North America
  22. Numaligarh Refinery Ltd.
  23. Oil India Ltd.
  24. Guwahati Refinery
  25. Sampaitee, A Socio-Cultural Org., Sivsagar
  26. Dainik Janambhumi
  27. Dainik Janasadharan
  28. Lions Club
  29. Deepak Sangha
  30. Mr. Pradip Kalita
  31. B&A Limited
  32. Sri Gouranga Lal Das
  33. BRPL, Bangaigoan
  34. NEDFi, Guwahati
  35. Dr. Sangeeta Saikia
  36. Kalyani (Numaligarh Refinery Ltd.)
  37. Maitri Treaders, Guwahati
  38. and many others .. 
How You Can Help

The donations made to Bhabendra Nath Saikia Children Welfare Trust are deductible as the Trust has been granted approval under section 80 G (5) (vi) of the Income Tax Act. 1961 by the Commissioner of Income Tax, Guwahati through order bearing No. 31/80G/CIT/Guwahati-II/TECH/2001-2002/1606 dated 13/3/2002.
Donation of Equipment and Educational Materials are always appreciated. Our current needs are:
  • BOOKS for children aged 6-16 years, - fiction and non-fiction - in English and regional Indian languages
  • GAMES (BOARD GAMES, EDUCATIONAL GAMES), TOYS
  • EDUCATIONAL SOFTWARE, ENCYCLOPEDIAS
  • ART and CRAFT SUPPLIES (Color pencils, paints, paper, sand art, craft books )
  • SCIENTIFIC KITS - ROBOTS, TELESCOPES
  • COMPUTERS, PRINTERS, SCANNERS, COPIER, PROJECTORS
  • SUPPLIES FOR A PREVENTIVE HEALTH CARE CLINIC
  • FURNITURE - for the library, computer rooms, project rooms
  • MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS etc.
Bhabendra Nath Saikia Children Welfare Trust -
The Bhabendra Nath Saikia Children Welfare Trust was established by Dr. Bhabnedra Nath Saikia in 2001 as a not for profit charitable trust with a mission to work with underprivileged children by creating for them an environment that will foster academic and intellectual development and empower them to rise, to accomplish, to succeed.

The Magor Education Trust instituted a literary award in 1990 called “The Assam Valley Literary Award” which contain a cash amount of rupees one lakh, a citation & a plaque. Dr. Bhabendra Nath Saikia was the first recipient of this award. On receiving the award in a public function held on April 9, 1991, Dr. Saikia declared that he would utilized the prize money in establishing a Trust for the welfare of the children. Accordingly, he kept the prize money as a fixed deposit.
A busy work schedule and problems relating to health kept Dr. Saikia’s plan on hold for nearly a decade. The scheme was finalized in the year 2000 and the Dr. Bhabendra Nath Saikia Children Welfare Trust was officially set up on February 12, 2001.

The Trust is registered under:
  • The Indian Charitable Trust Act in the year 2001 vide Deed no. - 529
  • Section 12 A of the Income Tex Act, 1961
  • Section 80 G of the Income Tex Act, 1961
  • Foreign Contribution Regulation Act, 1976
Eight Trustees with eminent personalities of Assam govern the Trust. The present Trustees are :
  1. Smti Preeti Saikia
  2. Dr. Kulendu Pathak
  3. Shri Krishna Roy
  4. Dr. Hemen Barman
  5. Dr. Hitesh Deka
  6. Smti Malaya Goswami
  7. Shri Gopal Jalan
  8. Shri Indrajit Das
Events

In the Service of the Underprivileged Children...

Designed in an innovative and unique way, AAROHAN aims at integrating learning and development skills, social values, discipline, work ethics and character building amidst fun and enjoyment in a non-formal way. Optional Associate Activities of the trust for the allround personality development:
  1. Mid-term IN HOUSE PROGRAMME by the participants in Music, Dance, Art Competition, Art Exhibition etc.
  2. Parents’ Counseling for Improvement of child behaviour and changes in home atmosphere.
Identification and nurturing of budding talents is a part of all our programmes and providing them platforms for performance have already been undertaken in the All India Radio, Guwahati, Srimanta Sankardeva Kalakhetra, Children Science Congress Functions and Guwahati Book Fair Cultural Events.

In addition, Birth and Death Anniversary of Dr. Bhabendra Nath Saikia is celebrated every year.
Facilities
The Resource Center have 16,000 square feet of space, spanning 4 floors, beautifully designed to accommodate the various activities and work areas. A bronze statue of Dr. Bhabendra Nath Saikia in the premises. It consists of the following:
  1. A Library with an attached playroom exclusively for children and the teenagers.
  2. An Art Room.
  3. Computer/Internet/Resource Rooms.
  4. Music, Dance & Drama classes.
  5. A Conference room with around 40 capacity.
  6. A Crafts Space.
  7. An Auditorium with 250-capacity.
  8. One exclusive Playroom.
  9. A mini Memorabilia Museum of Dr. Bhabendra Nath Saikia’s Writing Room, Trophies, Prizes, Certificates, Books and Manuscripts etc.
At present 5 Assistant Instructors are helping 16 teachers under several Resource Persons. Each class engages one teacher and one volunteer cum assistant instructor for smooth functioning.

Free health check-up in Pediatrics, General Health, Dentistry, ENT and Eye has been provided time to time.


Photo Gallery...







Aarohan -
A project of the Bhabendra Nath Saikia Children Welfare Trust- a not for profit charitable trust with a mission to work with underprivileged children by creating for them an environment that will foster academic and intellectual development and empower them to rise, to accomplish, to succeed.
Aarohan believes......
  • Children are the foundation of our future.
  • Education is the foundation of their lives.
  • Every child has a right to a good education.
It is up to us to give each one of them a fair chance.
Strategy:
  • To provide a physical place for children to spend time, in a safe and educationally enriched environment.
  • We aim to bring to children innovative educational and cultural programmes that will augment their current school curriculum, not replace it.
  • To generate community involvement to support our children’s education – to instill the belief in parents and teachers that the time to invest in our children’s education is now and they must play the leading role in the process.
  • To provide basic physical and mental health services, including counseling, with a special focus on the girl child.