Yakub Habeebuddin Tucy, the great grandson of the
last Mughal emperor, Bahadur Shah Zafar, has filed a writ petition
in the Supreme Court against what he calls "molestation of history
and character assassination of emperor Akbar" in Ashutosh Gowariker's
"Jodhaa Akbar".
In his writ petition filed Thursday, Tucy prayed to the apex court
to direct the producers of the film to change the name of the character
"Jodha" to "Harkha" or some other fictitious name
which "does not distort history and defame the name of Akbar
or the illustrious Mughal dynasty".
Talking to IANS from Hyderabad, Tucy said he presented documents
and statements of prominent historians like Jadunath Sarkar, Satish
Chandra, Ashirwadi Lal Srivastav, and R. Nath to establish that emperor
Akbar had nothing to do with Jodha Bai "who was actually the
daughter of Udai Singh and daughter-in-law of Akbar."
He objected to the distortion of history in the movie, which the
producers were promoting as a "period film".
Tucy said he wanted the film's screening to be stopped as it was
misleading people and creating a wrong image of the Mughal dynasty.
Noted Mughal historian R. Nath said "Jodhaa Akbar" is an
example of perverted history for entertainment.
"The film by Gowariker is no match to K. Asif's 'Mughal-e-Azam'.
No doubt Asif added characters and events to romanticise the film,
but hardly ever did he try to transgress the limits of history or
outrage its sensitivity or authenticity. That was how Anarkali was
permanently imprinted on the collective psyche of people."
Nath said "Jodhaa Akbar" is a poor imitation of "Mughal-e-Azam"
and without any historical basis whatsoever.
"In history, there was only one Jodha Bai, daughter of Mota
Raja Uday Singh Rathor of Jodhpur, and was married to Salim (Jahangir,
1628-58).
"She was called Jodha Bai because she belonged to Jodhpur. Jahangir
bestowed upon her the title of Jagat Gosain, as he styled himself
as Jagat Guru. Jahangir's queen Jodha died in 1619 and her son Shah
Jahan built for her a magnificent tomb at Agra."
Akbar had four wives and with none did he have any romance as "all
these were political marriages".
Nath said Gowariker had done "injustice" to Mughal emperor
Akbar whose dignity, majestic looks and grandeur had been "caricatured"
in the form of Hritik Roshan.
Even the inscription outside the so-called Jodha Bai palace in Fatehpur
Sikri clearly mentions that Jodha Bai has been mistakenly called Akbar's
wife, said Tucy. With such material proof how can filmmakers claim
they had researched and presented true Mughal history, he asked.