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| Korak Day
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Could he be a Hindu, or is he a
Muslim? No, a Christian perhaps. Most people in Rajabazar are
confused about Korak Day’s identity. But the 33-year-old,
diminutive frail frame clad in lungi-kurta, is happy to
be rid of a religious tag. For Korak’s only concern are the
underprivileged women and children of the Muslim-dominated
Rajabazar belt, who cling on to him for hope, for inspiration,
for a lifeline.
Amaar Nijer, the charitable trust
Korak had set up a year and a half ago much against the wishes
of his parents, is where around 200 children learn the
alphabet and their mothers attend vocational courses.
From a rented space in Narkeldanga,
Korak runs separate classes for primary school-goers,
dropouts, older girls and extra coaching. The women are
trained in painting, embroidery, zardosi, flower and
bonsai-making. A no-loss business scheme, improvised by Korak,
helps them use their creativity to earn a living. With raw
materials provided by him, the women conceive designs that are
later used on greeting cards, T-shirts, kurtas and
saris.
To the city’s film fraternity
though, Korak is also known as a filmmaker, with two titles to
his credit. The student of Satyajit Ray Film and Television
Institute (SRFTI) quit the direction and screenplay-writing
course midway to make his first short Kolkatar Kali.
The second venture, My Karma, fetched him laurels from
far and wide — it was screened at the New York International
Film Festival, Las Vegas, and the Los Angeles Film Festival
last year.
“I left SRFTI as I had to make a lot
of compromises. I felt a mere degree would not add any value
to my sense of being,” comes his candid confession.
“Films, for me, are a medium — and
by far the best — to reach the people for and with whom I have
been working all these years. The pain depicted by the actors
(Moon Moon Sen, Arjun Chakraborty and himself) in My
Karma is a reflection of what I have seen in these
people,” says Korak, who drifted towards his “roots” in
Calcutta, leaving behind a childhood and college days in Agra.
The Master’s degree-holder in maths
had a stint in the Indian Navy, too, before working as a
volunteer with the Missionaries of Charity and enrolling at
SRFTI.
As a social worker, Korak has
charted a difficult path for himself. At Amaar Nijer,
donations are a no-no; it survives with profits from Korak’s
films and by selling a couple of audio albums for which he has
penned and composed songs. “I do not believe in charity,” is
his final word. |