|  Because of the colder weather, shorter days and gloomier light in  NYC these days, I've been thinking more and more about serious issues.  It often happens to me in the fall, I retreat inside and therefore  inward too. Apart from experiencing a mild case of SAD each winter -- I  recently wrote a post about this year's more serious bout with it on my blog -- lots of heavy world causes and lofty ideas begin inhabiting my mind, distracted only by the upcoming holidays and some miscellaneous winter events
  Most of you are certainly aware that World AIDS Day is on the 1st of December of every year and  takes place around the globe, with various 'celebrations' and  observances which vary from open-air gatherings, to marches and parties  thrown by the best and brightest celebrities of films, music and  sports. While I always knew the day was there, I never fully  participated, other than perhaps wearing my red ribbon for 24 hours, or  buying a (RED) t-shirt at the Gap...  This year, a project close to my heart brought new meaning and passion  to this incredibly important world health cause and gave me the push  necessary to begin understanding this crisis from a very personal  viewpoint.
  The first case of HIV was detected in  India in 1986 and at last count, in 2008, it was estimated that around  2.3 million people are living with the disease there. Of those numbers,  39% are women and 3.9% are children. Although it seems that the disease  is no longer progressing as quickly as it once was, it is still a  widespread plague and education is the only way to fight it. Education  in a country which is mostly rural based with a population that relies  on word-of-
            mouth  and pop culture - such as movies and TV - for information. OK, so far  so good, right?! Well it would be if it were not for all those pesky  morality laws and censor boards, which regulate who and how people can  kiss on screen and what can be spoken about on the air. Hence, loads of  misconceptions and myths persist about AIDS and HIV, causing the  disease to continue spreading, with a slight slowdown in recent times,  but at an alarming rate nonetheless. When we figure that the country of  India holds ONE FOURTH of the world's population, the idea of a  monstrous disease like AIDS spreading at all is very scary.
  Enter Mira Nair and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. In 2007 Ms. Nair introduced the audience of the Indo-American Arts Council film festival in NYC to the film 'AIDS JaaGO' - meaning AIDS Awake - a collection of four short films by four of the  most beloved filmmakers in modern Indian cinema. The shorts were meant  to be played in multiplexes throughout India before the main films, to  illuminate and educate the common folks about the disease. While the  film received a lot of media attention and the individual shorts played  constantly on Indian TV, it is with the very recent release of the DVD  - a fabulous release party was organized at a downtown Indian eatery NYC by distributing company FilmKaravan, just this past week - that the film finally has found an international voice. BTW, it's now available through Amazon and for rent on Netflix.  If you have not seen it, I highly recommend it. It's informative, but  more than that, it's a wonderful piece (pieces!) of filmmaking. 
 
  Briefly, the four stories are 'Positive' by Farhan Akhtar - he is well respected as both a director
              and  an actor, and is even on the verge of becoming a rockstar in India! - a  film dealing with the effects of AIDS on the adult son of a man who  appears to have brought the disease on himself... 'Blood Brothers' by Vishal Bhardwaj - he is best known as the Indian filmmaker who reworked the Shakespeare  tragedies of 'Macbeth' and 'Othello' to great audience and critical  success - which deals with medical mistakes and how horrible the  results can be. Then there is 'Prarambha' (The Beginning) by South  Indian director and cinematographer Santosh Sivan,  which is a touching insight into just who the youngest victims of the  disease are; and finally Nair's own 'Migration' a film that touches on  infidelity and how far and wide the disease is able to travel, truly,  in its migration...
  The  films are all individually poignant but collectively momentous, with  the wonderful actors featured - all read like a who's-who of Indian  superstars and supertalents - and great format. Though short in time,  each one is a complete and indepth story about relationships and human  mistakes. Those kinds of mistakes that I can imagine having made in  college or could have happened to my own best friend. 
 I  highly recommend watching the films and now that I own a copy, I find  it great to be able to refer to it from time to time. Just in time for  World AIDS Day!
 
 Images of 'AIDS JaaGO' courtesy of FilmKaravan
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