| There is an oft-repeated assertion by the late historian Jacques Barzun     that starts, “Whoever wants to know the heart and mind of America had     better learn baseball.” Perhaps less known is the full quote, which     includes the suggestion that one learn the game “by watching first some     high school or small-town teams.”  
   Mirra Bank, director of “The Only Real Game,” in Manipur, India.  This came to mind during a viewing of “The Only Real Game,” an     engrossing and deeply stirring documentary depicting the popularity of     our national pastime in what would seem an unlikely place: Manipur, a     poor and embattled state in northeastern India.
 In “The Only Real Game,” Mirra Bank, an award-winning filmmaker and     resident of East Hampton and New York City, delivers a fascinating     portrait of America’s enduring influence in the world, particularly its     cultural impact and the emotions it stirs in people harboring big   dreams   but little hope.
 “The Only Real Game,” as Babe Ruth called it, explains that “in the     land of cricket and soccer, baseball arrived in Manipur on the wings of     war.” In response to the 1942 bombing of Manipur by the Japanese — in     preparation for an invasion — President Roosevelt sent air support.   Some   American servicemen took advantage of the downtime and warm,   sunny   weather to “put on an exhibition of our national pastime,” as   one   surviving veteran says, and a love affair was born.
 Following India’s postwar independence from Britain, Manipur, which     had existed as a princely state under the British Raj, was effectively     annexed by India after a plebiscite was dismissed as illegal. This   gave   rise to a protest, which morphed into an entrenched and violent     separatist movement that persists to this day. One of the most heavily     militarized places in the world, more than 30 armed insurgent groups     operate in Manipur, according to the film. These groups, marked by a     corruption that rivals that of the government, may spend as much time     smuggling drugs and guns as they do fighting for sovereignty.    The Indian government responded to the insurgency with the Armed     Forces Special Powers Act, or the “black laws,” as Manipuris refer to     it. “It means you have no rights,” Ms. Bank said. “You can be shot,     arrested, and have no legal recourse.”
 It is in this environment, “caught in a vise between two   evils,” as   one resident says, that young people — men and women alike —   cling to   an obsessive love of baseball and the potential for escape   that it   represents.
 “I found out about it and dug into it,” said Ms. Bank, who   was   short-listed for an Academy Award for “Last Dance,” her previous     documentary. “It’s a great human story, and with baseball as the     vehicle, the metaphor, it’s an unexpected way to get into the culture     and find out these very surprising things. There’s a real love story     that develops between people there and two baseball coaches.”
 “The Only Real Game,” which is narrated by Melissa Leo of   Springs,   follows the effort by L. Somi Roy, a native Manipuri living   in the   United States, and Muriel (Mike) Peters as they visit Mr. Roy’s     childhood home and discover a rabidly enthusiastic but threadbare     outpost of the American game. Back in New York, they establish the     nonprofit venture First Pitch, ultimately dispatching representatives     including Jeff Brueggemann, a former major league pitcher, and Dave     Palese, both with Major League Baseball International, to Manipur to     train players and coaches and organize the construction of     infrastructure befitting a professional sport. The Spalding sporting     goods company donates equipment to the fervent but poorly outfitted     players.
 Results were mixed. The effort produced many Manipuri   coaches,   including women, but promising players were denied visas for a   visit to   the U.S., and funding for a proper baseball complex,   promised by a   government official, did not materialize. The film,   however, is an   overwhelming success in detailing the human connection   and love that   develop between people from radically differing worlds.
 &nbA striking feature in “The Only Real Game” is its   depiction of the   almost unimaginable resilience of Manipuri women.   Frustrated by decades   of strife, corruption, and poverty, women emerge   as the strongest force   in their society, vocal in their rage against   all oppressors. This   strength is reflected in their participation, as   equals, on the baseball   field. Women both play and coach baseball, and   their athletic ability,   like their love of the game, rivals that of   the men and boys crowding   the field. “The role women play in   leadership was very unexpected,   certainly for me,” Ms. Bank said.
 “The Only Real Game” premiered last month at Tribeca   Cinemas as   part of the New York Indian Film Festival, where it took   Best   Documentary honors. “We’re very much trying to get the film back   to   India,” Ms. Bank said. “We’re just now beginning to do festival     submissions.”
 The documentary has been submitted to the Dharamsala Film   Festival   in Himachal Pradesh, she said. “We’re going to try to get the   film into   public consciousness, first through festival exposure, and   hopefully   find the appropriate way to get it televised.”
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