Shehjar

The Wounded And The Damned A young boy looks at the hands of a woman and pronounces her age to be in the late twenties. When asked his age he snaps, that a man’s age is determined by not by his appearance, but by his experience. What remains unsaid, is that this child, barely in his teens, has seen and endured suffering far beyond his years. The scene is one of the most moving in Nikhil Allug’s film, Shehjar (Shade in Kashmiri), that takes up, indirectly, the issue of Kashmir and the continuing agony of the people of the state torn apart by militancy. The film begins, with a group of four – Nasif (Sunil Kumar Palwal), a burqa-clad Mariyam (Ira Dubey), Jasim (Zahid Mir), and Khalid (Burhan Shafi Itoo), as they embark on a long journey, starting by boat somewhere in Kashmir, then walking through a forest, taking a car to the town of Katra, from where, after a brief stopover at the home of an acquaintance, they catch a train to reach Mumbai. On the way, a...