Base de données sur les 
réalisatrices canadiennes
accueil recherche parcourir à propos contact English

Recherche rapide par nom de famille

Citation :
« There are fascinating sequences in both films. In A Sari Tale, we see a mother empathizing with her daughter's embarrassment with Indian culture—and, yet, feeling palpable, profound sadness about it when her daughter is out of view. In Hair Scare, the nagging question 'What's underneath the turban, eh?' is answered. We see Amar, after he's had a shower; combing his long hair, gathering it and tying it with string; we see his father help him with the cloth that is tied around the bunched hair; we see the father and son discuss their common experience with turbans and being teased. Both videos have aired repeatedly on TVOntario and on the Knowledge Network in British Columbia. Deservedly so: they tackle the wide ranging issues of racism sensitively, facing head-on the stereotypes that all Sikhs are terrorists and that all Indian parents are insensitive to their Canadian children's needs. What is more, they portray youth issues in a way that the widest possible audience of children and parents can relate to. And, best of all, the avoidance of neat endings: the filmmakers acknowledge that, by definition, dilemmas never afford an easy way out. »
-- Sanjay Khanna


Source :
KHANNA, Sanjay. « Video in review: A Sari Tale; Hair Scare », Rungh: A South Asian Quarterly of Culture, Comment and Criticism, vol. 1, no. 4, janvier 1993. (p. 37) [en anglais]