Name Sanjay Kak | Role Filmmaker | |
![]() | ||
Movies Red Ant Dream, Jashn-e-Azadi: How We Celebrate Freedom, In the Forest Hangs a Bridge, Geeli Meetti Education University of Delhi, St. Stephen's College, Delhi Awards National Film Award for Best Non-Feature Film on Family Welfare, National Film Award for Best Non-Feature Film People also search for Tarun Bhartiya, Ranjan Palit, Reena Mohan, Setu Pandey |
Ftii protest sanjay kak
Sanjay Kak (born 1958) is a left-wing activist and self-taught film-maker who makes documentaries dealing with issues such as environmental activism and resistance politics.
Contents
- Ftii protest sanjay kak
- Mati ke laal red ant dream by sanjay kak full documentary
- Background and education
- Career
- Filmography
- References

Mati ke laal red ant dream by sanjay kak full documentary
Background and education
Kak was born into a family belonging to the Kashmiri Pandit community of Brahmins. Although of Kashmiri ethnicity, his family has been based in New Delhi for several generations and he works out of that city.
Kak studied economics and sociology at the University of Delhi. He is a "self-taught" film-maker who is actively involved in the documentary film movement and in the Campaign against Censorship and the Cinema of Resistance project.
Career
A self-taught film-maker, Kak makes documentary films with a strongly left-wing bent. His early work includes Punjab: Doosra Adhay (1986) about the Punjab in the days of the Khalistan struggle, and Pradakshina (1987), about the river Ganges. He followed this with a 1990 film about Cambodia's Angkor Wat temple, Angkor Remembered. In 1993 he released films about the Indian diaspora in England (This Land, My Land, Eng-land) and South Africa (A House and a Home). 1995 saw the release of Harvest of Rain.
One Weapon (1997) followed, "the documentary that marked Sanjay Kak as an explicitly political filmmaker", according to The Caravan magazine, and In the Forest Hangs a Bridge (1999) (about the making of a bridge in Northeast India; winner Golden Lotus Best Documentary Film, National Film Awards; Asian Gaze Award, Pusan Short Film Festival, Korea). His next films were Words on Water (2002), about the struggle against the Narmada dams in central India (which won Best Long Film prize at the Internacional Festival of Environmental Film & Video, Brazil) and Jashn-e-Azadi - How We Celebrate Freedom (2007) (about the Kashmiri freedom struggle).
Jashn-e-Azadi is a film that has "widely influenced the way Kashmir was perceived in India". The film has had a chequered screening history.
In 2008 he participated in Manifesta7, the European Biennale of Art, in Bolzano, Italy, with the installation A Shrine to the Future: The Memory of a Hill, about the mining of bauxite in the Niyamgiri hills of Odisha. He writes occasional political commentary, and is the editor of Until My Freedom Has Come – The New Intifada in Kashmir (2011).
His latest feature-length documentary is on the revolutionary Maoist movement in India, called Red Ant Dream. The film was under production for more than three years and released in 2013.