HomeEntertainmentMoviesJayan Cherian Part 1: ‘Hindu Siddis are found only in India’s Konkan region; re-enslaved by upper caste landowners’

Jayan Cherian Part 1: ‘Hindu Siddis are found only in India’s Konkan region; re-enslaved by upper caste landowners’

First of a two-part interview with New York-based Malayalee filmmaker Jayan K Cherian, whose latest Konkani-Kannada film 'Rhythm of Dammam', on the Siddi community of Yellapur, Karnataka, premiered at International Film Festival of India (IFFI), Goa, and next shows in International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK).

December 04, 2024 / 17:24 IST
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Filmmaker Jayan K Cherian; stills from his latest film 'Rhythm of Dammam', on the Siddi Community of Yellapur in Uttara Kannada (north Karnataka).
Filmmaker Jayan K Cherian; stills from his latest film 'Rhythm of Dammam', on the Siddi Community of Yellapur in Uttara Kannada (north Karnataka).

The stunningly shot and evocative Rhythm of Dammam, in Siddi Bhasha, is the first fictional feature ever to be made on the Indian Siddi community that traces its ancestry to Africa. In the film, the pre-teen Jayaram, who lives in Karnataka’s Yellapura, is afflicted by his dead grandfather’s visions, as his impoverished family fights over supposed buried treasure. But Jayaram is a chosen one, the visitations will lead him to discover his community’s origin and sea-bound journey to India centuries ago, as slaves, and their continued oppression by upper-caste landowners.

Born in small-town Kerala, New York-based filmmaker Jayan K Cherian’s first brush with race happened in the US where he went for higher studies. “All of a sudden, in America, I became a nigger, a black man, an accented Indian, a brown-skin guy. White people — albeit not all — have their prejudices and stereotypes, they put you in a bracket of what you look like. And it is cyclical. In 1555, the Roman Catholic Church burned the epics of the Aztecs and started the Mexican Inquisition, some years later, the Portuguese started the Inquisition in Goa, ruled by Bishop Menezes, this is recent history. Xenophobia is always present, in all communities and across classes. And we [Indians] have our own baggage, too. When I’d talk about racism, oppression, xenophobia, homophobia and gender oppression, my White friends would interject: ‘You people are caste oppressors’,” says the 58-year-old filmmaker whose latest film Rhythm of Dammam premiered at the just-concluded 55th International Film Festival of India (IFFI), Goa, and is one of the only two Indian films in the International competition segment of the 29th International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK), from December 13-20.

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In the first segment of a two-part interview, Cherian, who stayed with the community in Yellapur over five years since 2016-17, talks about the Siddi community and the making of the film. Edited excerpts:

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