India Today Group Online
 


October 08, 2001
Issue

 

COVER
    Islam's Buccaneers
With the United States prepared for a showdown with the Taliban militia in Afghanistan, the first big war of the 21st century is set to become a clash of civilisations. Pitted against the most modern superpower in the world is a country which revels in and looks forward to its medieval past.


 
PAKISTAN
   

Price Of A Deal
Musharraf may have bent backwards in a bid to make his country the standard bearer of the US in the region. Of course, there are financial rewards for Pakistan, but the fear of a fundamentalist backlash continues to keep the nation on tenterhooks.

 
AFGHANISTAN
 

Circle Of Death
Violence fuelled by bigotry and foreign money brought the Taliban to power. Now as things come full circle the Islamic militia may meet an equally brutal end.

 

 
IMAGES
 

Afghanistan 1978-2001
Its women once enjoyed social freedom, and there was joy and peace. It is now a country perverted by the missionaries of a grim utopia. A social history in pictures.

 
OTHER STORIES
     
 



 
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NEWSNOTES

TRAVEL
Caravan Of Conservation Begins
To Roll

KARACHI: Singapore's city festival has spawned several offspring, the newest being the month-long Karavan Karachi Festival which got underway on September 1. What sets the Karavan Karachi Festival 2001 apart from its predecessors in Singapore and Dubai, however, is its focus on things cultural rather than commercial. Most of the city's theatre groups have banded together to put up a week-long theatre festival with three performances daily. A film festival, which drew participants from India and Pakistan, and musical concerts featuring ghazals, qawwalis and popular film music are among the highlights. The festival will culminate in a series of fashion shows set against the backdrops of some of the city's most spectacular architectural landmarks. Conservation is the focus of the entire festival. Festival organiser Yasmin Lari's non-profit NGO, Heritage Foundation, has developed walking tours through the city's historic districts to acquaint people with Karachi's undervalued architectural heritage. The organisers believe tourism will eventually make the festival a self-financing event.

FUNQUIZ

Q 1. The Censor Board banned the film Paanch for not having...
a. People wearing clothes.
b. A social message.
c. Any "good" words.

Q 2. Pankaj Parashar, for his planned Charlie's Angels remake, has roped in

a. Jaya, Mamata and Sonia.
b. Noyonika, Madhu, Bipasha.
c. Sushmita, Shilpa and Raveena.

Q 3. Fardeen Khan is now appearing in Pepsi ads and ramps all over because ...

a. He has given up on coke.
b. He has given up on movies.
c. He hasn't given up anything, it's good money.

Answers: 1(b), 2(c), 3(c)

MUSIC RELEASES

World Cafe
(Milestone; Rs 125)
Inspirational world music. Features Taufiq Qureshi, Jai Uttal and Ustad Sultan Khan.

 

Colors of Trance
(Times Music; Rs 100)
Music consisting of repeating rhythms. Essentially a beat sampled from hip-hop, funk, disco.

 

Lata
Forever
(HMV; Rs 350)
Five volumes of evergreen melodies by the queen of melody. A collector's item.

 

Q&A
SHAH RUKH KHAN
"There's A Sense Of Calm"

Playing Asoka has changed him as a person, says Shah Rukh Khan.

Q. Tell us about Asoka.
A.
We wanted to make a film that did not keep us in the comfort zone or had a safety net-songs, dances, good-looking hero and heroine and a little love story thrown in. We wanted to make a film that was a little different.

Q. Do you consider yourself an actor or a star?
A.
I'm an entertainer-I try to make sure I'm watchable because that's what I'm getting paid for. What I'd like to believe is that I'm a hardworking person who puts the director's vision through.

Q. How has playing Asoka affected you?
A.
I truly believe I have changed after the film. As an actor, I've just learned to grow long hair but as a person I've really changed. There's a strange sense of calm and peace that I've achieved because of this film. I'm in no hurry any more. I'm not turning Buddhist but something has changed hundred per cent.


 
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     METRO TODAY
 
   

MetroScape

Fort Of Arms
In the 16th century, a Portuguese governor fortified a strategically located house to defend ships in the harbour of an island on the west coast of India acquired from the Sultan of Gujarat. Mumbai grew first into a fort and then into a city from here.
more...


Looking Glass

Delhi Photography:
Pradeep Bhatia

Delhi Music Concert: Pandit Ram Chatur Mallick Dhrupad Foundation

Delhi Sculpture: Sculpter Hemi Bawa

 

 
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