Rakhi, the Sister's Day, is celebrated in India to symbolize the
love and emotional bond between brothers and sisters. It is a
festival rooted in the Indian tradition and reaffirms the pious
relationship. The sisters tie the sacred thread around wrist of their
brothers to protect them from any possible evil, and the brothers
give gifts in return and promise to be there for them. Rakhi can be
made of colorful cotton, silk or zari threads. Rakhi is celebrated
with lots of fun and frolic. Besides the ritual of tying Rakhi, there
is the real enjoyment in sisters and brothers getting together,
exchanging gifts and relishing tempting and mouth-watering sweets of
all sorts. This makes Rakhi festival interesting for everyone in the
family.
The passing of time and the concept of multi-cultural society has
influenced the festival to enlarge its scope and widen the ways of
celebrating it. Today tying of Rakhi is not confined to the siblings
alone. Rakhi can be tied to anyone by a woman whom she takes to be
her brother. Soldiers in the battlefield receive the sacred Rakhi
with wishes for their victory and safe return. Rakhi is also a day
for women to visit the orphanages or prisons to tie Rakhi to the
inmates. The kind act gives the ill fated Rakhi brothers a feeling of
Hope, Love and Care. Rakhi, indeed, stirs up one of the deepest and
noblest emotions in the human heart. The simple Rakhi thread
motivates the brother to make any sacrifice to help his sister in
need.
Raksha Bandhan in Bollywood
In Hindi cinema, the sister was the strong silent character in
the background. The frail one for whom the hero played protector,
wreaked vengeance. The one whose marriage or studies were on top of
her brother’s mind when he entered a dubious deal. Mainstream Hindi
cinema has, indeed, made a whole industry out of the brother-sister
bonding. From Mehboob Khan's Bahen (1941) to Dev Anand's iconic Hare
Rama Hare Krishna (1971), the sister was an integral part of most
family dramas. Even in 1970s and later, we had Amitabh Bachchan
protecting her in films like Majboor, Adalat and Agneepath. Who will
not remember on the Rakhi day, the immortal song from Majboor
'Phoolon Ka Taron Ka Sabka Kehna Hai, Ek Hazaron Mein Meri Behna Hai.
The oldest historical reference to the festival of Rakhi goes back
to 300 B.C. at the time when Alexander invaded India. It is said that
when the great conquerer, king Alexander of Macedonia was shaken by
the fury of the Indian king Puru, Alexander's wife, who had heard of
the Rakhi festival, approached the mighty king Puru and sought
assurance of her husband's life by tying the Rakhi on Puru's hand.
The story goes that just as Puru raised his hand to deliver a mortal
blow to Alexander, he saw the Rakhi on his wrist and refrained from
striking at Alexander. The entire episode was well depicted in Sohrab
Modi's great movie of epical dimentions, Sikandar (1941) in which
Prithviraj Kapoor played Sikandar, Sohrab Modi Puru and Vanmala,
Sikandar's beloved Rukhsana.
During the midieval era, Rajput kings were fighting Muslim
invasions. When Rani Karnawati, the widowed queen of Chittor,
realized that she could in no way defend the invasion of the Sultan
of Gujarat, Bahadur Shah, she sent a Rakhi to the Mughal Emperor
Humayun, enlisting his support against the onslaught of the Gujarat
Sultan. Touched by the gesture, Humayun hastened to the rescue of his
Rakhi sister. The Mughal Emperor Hamayun coming to the rescue of his
Rakhi Rajput sister is convincingly portrayed and pictured in Mehboob
Khan's Mughal historical Humayun (1945). Cecil B DeMille apparently
wrote in a letter to Mehboob Khan that this film was “a masterpiece
of lighting composition.” And It is. Ashok Kumar played Humayun and
Veena his Rakhi sister. Nargis was only 16 when she acted in this
movie as the Emperor's beloved.
In 1959, director and producer L.V. Prasad released "Chhoti
Bahen", one of the industry´s memorable films for tackling the
emotion behind blindness, sibling emotion and how different persons
in a family can react to it. Chhoti Bahen is also well known for the
song that recurs to this day on Raksha Bandhan, "Bhaiyya Mere
Rakhi Ke Bandhan To Nibhana". Shankar-Jaikeshen´s music is
memorable, but this title track is more than your trip down memory
lane. The song practically explains what the holiday is all about and
how siblings idolize each other, the sister to the brother. The
film´s main leads, Balraj Sahani and Nanda do just that.
"Rakhi", "Bhai Bahen" -- Two of the most
successful tearjerkers of the 1960s, both directed by the eminently
saleable A. Bhim Singh -- were about brother and sister outdoing each
other for the martyr's cup. In "Rakhi", Waheeda Rehman and
Ashok Kumar played siblings who just could not be without each other.
Six years later, Bhim Singh made "Bhai Bahen", a
straight-off saga of sibling suffering with Sunil Dutt and Nutan in
the lead.
Manoj Bajpai's passionate possessiveness for sister Antara Mali in
Ram Gopal Varma's Telugu "Prem Gatha" verged on the
incestuous. Shah Rukh Khan went completely ballistic trying to keep
sister Aishwarya Rai from Chandrachur Singh's arms in Mansoor Khan's
"Josh".
Mahesh Manjrekar wouldn't let little sister Bhoomika anywhere near
Abhishek Bachchan in Jeeva's "Run", and in Bapu's "Pyari
Behna", hyper-protective brother Mithun Chakraborty smothers
poor Tanvi Azmi in brotherly affection while the love-interest
Padmini Kolhapure fumes and frets.
In "Bandhan", sister Ashwini Bhawe takes kid-brother
Salman Khan to her in-laws' as dowry. Understandably, brother-in-law
Jackie Shroff feels sidelined and spends his nights at the nautch
girl Shweta Reddy's place.
This is a favorite cliche where the sister is tortured, raped or
murdered before Big Brother goes on a vendetta binge. In Suneel
Darshan's "Talaash" the entire drama depended on the
brother's search for his sister.
Bollywood's resident screen-sister Nazima played the central role
in Rajshri productions' "Mere Bhaiyya". The actress'
sisterly image was seldom showcased with such splendid sibling
sentimentality.
Shabana Azmi in "Anokha Bandhan" and "Yeh Kaisa
Insaaf" played a sister willing to sacrifice marital happiness
for the sake of her kid brother. In "Tapasya", Raakhee was
the long-suffering 'didi' (elder sister) who tells her lover to take
a walk when his mom says she must let her siblings fend for
themselves.
In K. Balachander's "Aaina", Mumtaz becomes a prostitute
to support her impoverished siblings. And in "Hum Tumhare Hain
Sanam", Madhuri Dixit is willing to suffer her husband Shah Rukh
Khan's taunts to look after brother Atul Agnihotri in her marital
home.
In Nitin Sethi's "Angaaray", sister Smita Patil becomes
a nautch girl for her kid brother Alankar's financial security. Tapan
Sinha's "Didi" portrayed the best Sacrificial Sister of the
lot -- Deepti Naval was a prostitute trying desperately to hide her
profession from her kid brother.
In Manmohan Desai's "Sachcha Jhootha", Rajesh Khanna
takes off for the city to raise dowry for sister Naaz...but only
after singing 'Meri pyari behaniya banegi dulhaniya'.
And come Raksha Bandhan, there would be the mandatory song
celebrating the brother-sister bond. The old songs that steered away
from the stereotype remain classics to this day. Here are a few of
them:
Phoolon Ka Taaron Ka (1971)
Two siblings share a song and a moment before they will be cruelly
separated by their parents’ divorce. This song from Hare Rama Hare
Krishna is still the top request on Raksha Bandhan
Bhaiya Mere Rakhi Ke (1959)
Nanda plays the title role in Chhoti Behan, with Balraj Sahni as
the doting brother.
Mere Bhaiyya Mere Chanda (1965)
The brother is a priceless gem for Meena Kumari’s character in
Kaajal.
Chanda Re Mere Bhaiya (1980)
This soulful Lata Mangeshkar song is the only thing memorable
about Chambal Ki Kasam
Behna Ne Bhai Ki (1974)
This Shankar-Jaikishan song from the Resham ki Dor has come to
epitomise the festival of Raksha Bandhan
O Meri Laadli (1963)
And finally, we end with a Mohammed Rafi classic from Dil Ek
Mandir
The portrayal of brother-sister in films has come a long way.
Today, the sister’s image has changed in Bollywood from the demure,
to-be-protected little one to a sexy, with-a-mind-of-her-own
individual. From Nanda who played the sweet devoted sister to her
three over protective brothers in Choti Behen to Neelam in Hum Saath
Saath Hai, Bollywood has come a long way where the sibling
relationship is concerned. New age films are reworking the dynamics
shared by siblings. The sweet, patiently understanding sister of Gol
Maal has been replaced by the sassy, girl-about-town in B-town.
In Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na, the brother is concerned about his
sister’s welfare, but in a more subtle tone. It's a departure from
past movies where the brother screams and vows vengeance because of
his sister’s rape/murder/distress. The film also explores the mind
of the sister as she grows to learn about the goodness of her brother
even, all the while maintaining her own identity.
A film that was markedly different from the stereotype brother
sister film was Josh. Aishwarya Rai Bachchan played the sultry twin
sister to a brash Shah Rukh Khan. However, the film entirely veered
around Ash and SRK with their respective love lives almost as a sub
plot in the film.
Look up My Brother Nikhil and one would realize that Bollywood has
stepped into new terra firma. Director Onir portrayed a genuinely
close and affectionate bond between brother Sanjay Suri and his
sister Juhi Chawla. From sipping their first glasses of wine
together, this adorable pair even secretly smoked their first
cigarettes together in the film. Moreover, rather unusually, brother
Sanjay depended on sister Juhi, more than she did on him. Juhi
Chawla’s role in the film was one of a saviour where she campaigned
for her HiV+ brother to give him the respect that he deserved.
Another film, which had the brother-sister relationship at its
core was Khalid Mohamed’s Fiza. The film explores the 1993 Mumbai
riots, and communal tensions, through the eyes of Fiza played by
Karisma Kapoor who was in search of her brother, Amaan (Hrithik
Roshan) who vanished during the riots. Mohamed depicted a deeply
caring relationship between elder sister, Fiza, and younger brother,
Amaan, without resorting to any honor-saving stereotypes.
More recently, there was a winner in the hear-melting
brother-sister comaraderie between Farhan Akhtar and Divya Dutta in
Bhaag Milkha Bhaag, the playfull yet protective bond between Sushant
Singh Rajput and Amrita Puri in Kai Po Poche!, the portrayal of the
over protective brothers in House Full and Bol Bachchan and the
love-hate bond between Genelia D'Souza and Prateek in Jane Tu...Ya
Jaane Na.
Bollywood is slowly, but surely coming around and realizing the
role of the sister in films. Today it's more about the characters and
the script than about rehashing the same old formula of Raksha
Bandhan in Bollywood.
Rakhi this year falls on Tuesday 20th August, and the excitement
for the celebration has already started. Since the emotional binding
between brothers and sisters is universal, Rakhi, or the Sister's Day
as we can call it, deserves to be celebrated universally like
Mother's Day or Father's Day. It may happen sooner than later, if
Hallmark, Archies and the like of them decide to add another Day to
the list of events they promote with their creations of globally
popular greeting cards.
Happy Rakhi to Sisters and Brothers!