Jan 29, 2013

Read Shah Rukh Khan's statement on controversy over his article

Actor Shah Rukh Khan today issued a media statement over the raging controversy around an article he wrote for a magazine recently. In the article titled 'Being a Khan' in Outlook Turning Point, Mr Khan had written, "Rallies have been held where leaders have exhorted me to leave and return what they refer to my original homeland."

Today, Mr Khan spoke to the media, issuing a strongly-worded statement on the controversy that followed after he wrote the article.

Read Shah Rukh Khan's statement below:
 According to me, all our lives we are defined by three identities.
 
Two of which are fortunately acquired by birth  and are a matter of unconditional love and acceptance.
 
The first identity is acquired by where one is born. Our Motherland. That defines us. So foremost all of us here like me are proud Indians.
 
Second the family name and upbringing that our parents give us. Mine is Khan, like some of us here. I am very proud of my parents, like all of us are here. I love them unconditionally.
 
The third is the profession we choose that defines us. By some quirk of fate I am a celebrity... a public figure in the fields of art and media. Like most of us are here today.
 
As I said being an Indian and my parents' child is an unconditional accepted truth of my life and I am very proud of both.

The third... being a public figure makes me open to any kind of questioning, adjectives good and bad and or  sometimes makes me an object  of controversy  as people  use my name and statements to attach any positive or negative sentiment to it. I accept all the above  because this is the life I chose and will stand by it.  I am what I am, because of the love and admiration that comes with being who I am in my profession...so I thank everyone for making me the star I am.
 
Now to  address this whole issue, with regards to my Article, that has taken an unwarranted twist . I do not even understand the basis of this controversy.
 
Ironically the article I wrote (yes its written by me) was actually meant to reiterate that on some occasions my being an Indian Muslim film star is misused by bigots and narrow minded people who have  misplaced religious ideologies for small gains....and ironically the same  has happened through  this article...once again.
 
The reason for this primarily is....I think some of the people have not even read it and are reacting to comments of people, who in turn have also not read it. So I implore you all to first read it.
 
Second if you read it, nowhere does the article state or imply  directly or indirectly that I feel unsafe....troubled or disturbed in India.
 
It does not even vaguely say that I am ungrateful for the love that I have received in a career spanning 20 years. On the contrary the article only says that in spite of bigoted thoughts of some of the people that surround us....I am untouched by skepticism  because of the love I have received by my countrymen and women.
 
I will paraphrase the beginning and the end of the article to clarify and substantiate my stand.
 
"Then, there is the image I most see, the one of me in my own country: being acclaimed as a megastar, adored and glorified, my fans mobbing me with love and apparent adulation..

So I am a Khan, but no stereotyped image is factored into my idea of who I am. Instead, the living of my life has enabled me to be deeply touched by the love of millions of Indians. I have felt this love for the last 20 years regardless of the fact that my community is a minority within the population of India. I have been showered with love across national and cultural boundaries, they appreciate what I do for them as an entertainer - that's all. My life has led me to understand and imbibe that love is a pure exchange, untempered by definition and unfettered by the narrowness of limiting ideas.
 
Sometimes, they ask me what religion they belong to and, like a good Hindi movie hero, I roll my eyes up to the sky and declare philosophically, "you are an Indian first and your religion is Humanity", or sing them an old Hindi film ditty, "tu hindu banega na musalmaan banega - insaan ki aulaad hai insaan banega" set to Gangnam style.
 
Why should not the love we share be the last word in defining us instead of the last name? It doesn't take a superstar to be able to give love, it just takes a heart and as far as i know, there isn't a force on this earth that can deprive anyone of theirs.
I am a Khan, and that's what it has meant being one, despite the stereotype images that surround me. To be a Khan has been to be loved and love back...."
 
Please I implore everyone here to read the article and convey through your respective mediums of communications, all the good things that it expresses  to youngsters and my fellow Indians. It is a heartfelt and extremely important aspect of my life, an appreciation of love that all of you have bestowed upon me and also a point of view from my being a father of two young children
 
I would like to tell all those who are offering me unsolicited advice that we in India are extremely safe and happy. We have an amazing democratic, free and secular way of life. In the environs that we live here in my country India, we have no safety issues regarding life or material. As a matter of fact it is irksome for me to clarify this non-existent issue. With respect I would like to say to anyone who is interpreting my views and offering advice regarding them, please read what I have written first.

Also some of the views that I have been made to read are just an extension of soft targeting celebs and creating an atmosphere of emotional outbursts and divisiveness based on religion...in the minds of some. I implore everyone to understand, that my article is against exactly this kind of giving in to propaganda and aggressiveness. Lets not be misled by tools which use religion as an anchor for unrest and a policy of divide and rule.

I would also like to add here, that my profession as an actor makes me, liked beyond the borders of my nation and culture. The hugs and love that I am showered upon by Nationalities all around the world, make me safe all over the globe, and my safety has genuinely never been a matter of concern to me...and so it should not be a matter of concern to anyone else either.
 
We are all educated and patriotic people. We do not have to prove that time and again because of divisive politics of a few.

My own family and friends, are like a mini India...where all religions, professions and a few wrongs included, all are treated with tolerance and understanding and regard for each other. I only sell love...love that I have got from millions of Indians and non Indians....and  stand indebted to my audience in my country and around the world. It is sad that I have to say it to prove it, in my country, which my father fought for, during the Independence struggle.

That's my piece and having said all this...I would like to request all of you present here....that henceforth ask me questions regarding....my next movie. The songs that I have recorded. The release date of my film. The heroines cast in it. The Toiffa awards in Vancouver, because I am an actor and maybe I should just stick to stuff that all of you expect me to have a viewpoint on. The rest of it...maybe I don't have the right kind of media atmosphere to comment on. So I will refrain from it.
 
And please if you can...put all I have said on your channels, or mediums of communication, in the exact same light as I have said it and meant it in. 24 hrs of unrequired controversy is more than enough for all of us I assume. So do not sensationalize and hence trivialize matters of national interest and  religion any further and drag a movie actor  in the middle of it all...and let me  get back to doing what I do best....making movies.

Shah Rukh Khan
 

Read Shah Rukh Khan's statement on controversy over his article

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After a Pakistani minister expressed concern over the safety of Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan and asked India to give him adequate security, the actor said today, "I would like to tell all those who are offering me unsolicited advice that we in India are extremely safe and happy. We have an amazing democratic, free and secular way of life."

The controversy over one of India's biggest and most adored celebrities is rooted in a magazine article he wrote last week titled 'Being a Khan'.

Rejecting the debate it has spawned as "nonsense", the actor said at a press conference in Mumbai, "I don't even understand the basis of this controversy. Ironically, the article I wrote - yes it is written by me - was actually meant to reiterate that on some occasions my being an Indian Muslim film star is misused by bigots and narrow-minded people who have misplaced religious ideologies for very, very small gains. And ironically the same has happened through this article once again." (Read Shah Rukh Khan's full statement)

In the piece in Outlook Turning Point, the 47-year-old had written, "There have been occasions when I have been accused of bearing allegiance to our neighbouring nation rather than my own country - this even though I am an Indian, whose father fought for the freedom of India. Rallies have been held where leaders have exhorted me to leave and return what they refer to my original homeland." 
(Read article)

In reaction, over the weekend, Jamaat-ud Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed, who India holds responsible for its worst-ever terror attack, said the star could move to India.   Pakistani Interior Minister Rehman Malik said yesterday, "He (Shah Rukh) is born Indian and he would like to remain Indian, but I will request the government of India (to) please provide him security."

The Indian government was cutting in its response.

"We are quite capable of looking after the security of our own citizens... let him (Malik) worry about security of his own," Home Secretary RK Singh told reporters in New Delhi.

Don't need unsolicited advice, we are safe in India: Shah Rukh Khan

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MUMBAI: Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan on Tuesday termed the controversy kicked up by Pakistan's interior minister as "nonsense".

"To address this whole issue with regards to my article that has taken an unwarranted twist, I do not even understand the basis of this controversy. This is what can only be called nonsense. It is deja vu again," he told reporters at an event here late on Tuesday.

Speaking about the article that was at the centre of the controversy, Khan said: "The article I wrote was actually meant to reiterate that on some occasions my being an Indian Muslim film star is misused by bigots and narrow minded people who have misplaced religious ideologies for small gains. And ironically, the same has happened through this article, once again," said a dejected Khan.

Pakistan's interior minister Rehman Malik had on Monday said that India should provide security to Shah Rukh Khan, wading into a controversy triggered by Jamaat-ud Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed stating that the star could move to Pakistan following his comments on being a Muslim.

Saeed had said Khan could move to Pakistan if he does not feel safe in India after the superstar gave a first person account for Outlook Turning Points magazine, published in association with The New York Times newspaper.

Khan said that the primary reason why people reacted to his article was because they did not read it.

"I think some of the people have not even read it and are reacting to comments of people, who in turn have also not read it," he said.

"I implore everyone here to read the article and convey through your respective mediums of communications all the good things that it expresses to youngsters and my fellow Indians," he added.

Khan said that the feelings expressed in the article are heartfelt and are extremely important aspect of his life.

"The article is an appreciation of love that all of you have bestowed upon me and also a point of view from my being a father of two young children," he said.

Shah Rukh Khan: Controversy over my article is nonsense

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Jan 24, 2013

Shahrukh Khan @iamsrk is on the cover of Forbes India.



source: https://mobile.twitter.com/forbes_india

Shahrukh Khan @iamsrk is on the cover of Forbes India.

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Jan 23, 2013


Superstar Shah Rukh Khan bares it all on what it means to be a Muslim in the Post-9/11 world and how he became an "inadvertent object of political leaders" in first person account for Outlook Turning Points magazine, published in association with The New York Times newspaper. He also features on the cover of the publication.

Titled "Being a Khan", the write-up appears in the current issue of the magazine and the 47-year-old actor, one of the few Indian actors with international recognition, writes: "I sometimes become the inadvertent object of political leaders who choose to make me a symbol of all that they think is wrong and unpatriotic about Muslims in India." 

"There have been occasions when I have been accused of bearing allegiance to our neighbouring nation rather than my own country - this even though I am an Indian, whose father fought for the freedom of India. Rallies have been held where leaders have exhorted me to leave and return what they refer to my original homeland," added the superstar of Hindi cinema. 

SRK is married to Gauri, a Hindu, and has two children - Aryan and Suhana.
"I gave my son and daughter names that could pass for generic (pan-India and pan-religious) ones - Aryan and Suhana. The Khan has been bequeathed by me so they can't really escape it." 

"I pronounce it with my epiglottis when asked by Muslims and throw the Aryan as evidence of their race when non-Muslims enquire. I imagine this will prevent my offspring from receiving unwarranted eviction orders or random fatwas in the future," he wrote.

He said he became so sick of being mistaken for some crazed terrorist, "who co-incidentally carries the same name as mine that I made a film subtly titled 'My Name Is Khan' (and I am not a terrorist) to prove a point."

Set in the post 9/11 US, "My Name Is Khan" focuses on religious and national identitaies through Rizwan (SRK), who has Asperger's Syndrome, and how his Khan identity becomes all important in a suspicious America. 

"Ironically, I was interrogated at the airport for hours about my last name when I was going to promote the film in America for the first time," said SRK.

What it takes being a Muslim? SRK pours his heart out

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Jan 18, 2013


 Shahrukh Khan at SRK at NDTV Toyota University Cricket Championship 15 Shahrukh Khan at NDTV Toyota University Cricket Championship Shahrukh Khan NDTV Toyota University Cricket Championship


Shahrukh Khan at SRK at NDTV Toyota University Cricket Championship 14 Shahrukh Khan at NDTV Toyota University Cricket Championship Shahrukh Khan NDTV Toyota University Cricket Championship





 

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NDTV has launched a revolutionary concept to revive university cricket in India, on Thursday - Toyota University Cricket Championship. Eight teams from four zones will play in a T20 format for the title of being the best university in cricket. The aim is also to find future champions of the sport and nurture their talent.


While university cricket drew huge crowds in the 1960s and 70s, it has seen a gradual fall in interest over the last two decades. NDTV, in partnership with the Human Resource Development ministry, seeks to bring back the cheers, the talent and the  adrenaline of cricket at this level .

With Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan as the enthusiastic face of the tournament, this initiative also aims at promoting grass-root talent.

Speaking at the launch, NDTV Executive Co-Chairperson Dr Prannoy Roy said that this tournament will be world-class. "Great camera-work, excellent graphics and all other factors will make this tournament truly world-class," he said.

Shah Rukh too said that he was pleased with the initiative and that he was glad to be associated with it. "Whatever I am today, it is because of what I learnt at that level - school and universities. Nothing better than this. One of the finest initiatives from NDTV, apart from Marks for Sports," he said, adding, "Sports can be a salaried job. I would like to be a brand ambassador for any sport."

The vital support from the Board of Control for Cricket in India too was acknowledged at the event hosted at the Taj Lands End. BCCI chief N Srinivasan had earlier praised the concept. "BCCI has always encouraged university cricket. I am very glad NDTV is going to sponsor and support it. For people to see university cricket which they don't now, is very important."

Others like Minister of State Shashi Tharoor and HRD Minister Pallam Raju also spoke on the importance of such a tournament. "I hope this (University Cricket Championship) spreads to other sports as well," said Mr Tharoor.

UCC will be an extension of the 77-year-old Rohinton Baria Tournament. All matches will be telecast live on a sports channel and NDTV will also do extensive programming around it. It will start next month.

source: http://sports.ndtv.com/cricket/news/item/202094-ndtv-launches-toyota-university-cricket-championship

Shahrukh Khan speaks during the launch of first ever ‘Toyota University Cricket Championship...

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