Art & Culture

Chalo Jeete Hain - an effective portrayal of a unique side to PM Modi

Uday MahurkarJuly 28, 2018 | 19:31 IST

Biopics are often notorious for over-playing the character. Chalo Jeete Hain (Let's live life for others), a biopic that brings out the altruism and empathy of the child Narendra Modi in his schools days, in his home town of Vadnagar, steers clears of that. Rather, it does a neat job of connecting the empathy of the child Modi and the sensitivity of Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the poor, as manifested today by his obsession to bring India’s poor above the poverty level (BPL) line with an empowering, and not a dole-based, model.  

Even as Prime Minister, Modi wishes to uplift the poor with an empowering, and not a dole-based, model. (Photo: PTI/file)

The hero of the plot is Naru (Narendra Modi), whose mind is constantly caught up with one question: “Who do you live for?" (Aap kiske liye jeete ho). He first asks this question to his mother when she is cooking in their ramshackle house. The mother tells him to ask his bapu (father). A tired father running a tea stall at Vadnagar Railway Station shuts him down. He is advised to ask the question to his class teacher (Guruji) instead.

In his class room, his classmate from a Dalit scavenger family, Harish Solanki, is absent from class for days together. Every day, when the class teacher takes attendance and when the name of Harish comes up, the entire class says in a chorus, 'absent, absent'.

While helping his father at his station tea stall in his free hours, Naru asks Harish and his sweeper mother as to why doesn’t he attend school. The annoyed and disturbed mother asks whether she should fill her family’s stomach or pay for Harish's school expenses.

Naru finds the family’s poverty —their inability to buy his school dress — is the reason for Harish’s absence. Next, he requests Guruji as to why he can’t allow Harish to attend classes wearing his regular dress, considering his poverty. The teacher says rules once broken can create anarchy. 

Here, the film’s director, Mangesh Hadawale, beautifully brings out Modi’s by-now well-known commitment to discipline and systems.  

After a few days, Naru gets to play the role of a boy in a village drama. He brings the village audience to tears with his moving portrayal of a scorned Dalit boy. A rich merchant in the audience is so impressed with his performance that he gives money to Naru in the form of a prize. 

The Vadnagar railway station, where the PM helped his father at his tea stall. (Photo: PTI/file)

With that money, Naru buys a school dress for Harish. 

The next day, when the class teacher is about to mark Harish absent, he enters the classroom to the joy of the entire class and the class teacher himself.

The producers Anand L Rai — maker of the film Tanu weds Manu — along with Mahavir Jain and director Hadewale, haven’t over-played Naru’s poverty. He wears a neat school dress with a red sleeveless sweater. Here, they bring out a very well-known Modi trait. Though from a poor family, Modi always wore neat clothes, even ironing his shirts with a hot water-filled metal bowl.

The film is shot in real-life situations in his hometown Vadnagar. The house where Naru and his family lived is true-to-life. The actual house where Modi lived as a child has been sold and renovated, but his cousins in Vadnagar live in very similar homes. Even the school shown in the biopic is the same in which Modi studied. The roles of Naru and Harish, played by child artistes Dhairya Darji and Dev Modi respectively, are superb. 

The child Naru's uniform is always neat, bringing out a very well-known Modi trait. 

Many around the Prime Minister have wondered how Modi has always been a very tough person to deal with for all — his co-workers, his juniors and, of course, his opponents — but when it comes to empathy for the poor, he has repeatedly revealed amazing sensitivity.

One great example is the Gujarat government’s UN Mehta Institute of Cardiology in Ahmedabad, a favoured place for Gujarat’s poor for treatment of heart problems for free, or at extremely low rates. The institute’s budget was just Rs 2 crore when Modi took over as chief minister in 2001.

When he left Gujarat for Delhi in 2014, the institute’s budget was Rs 95 crore. Plus, he had built a new institute building that was reportedly better than Ahmedabad’s Apollo Hospital in terms of facilities and equipment. 

As a journalist who has covered Modi since 1987 and also knows stories about his childhood, I found that the biopic effectively captures this element of Modi. 

Also read: Why the Trafficking Bill is an important step towards securing child rights

Last updated: July 28, 2018 | 19:31
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