Ritwick Ghatak was averse to the term “refugee problem”. In one of his interviews, he said, “I have tackled the refugee problem, as you have used the term, not as a ‘refugee’ problem. To me it was the division of a culture and I was shocked”. This shock would give birth to a trilogy on the Partition – Meghe Dhaka Tara (The Cloud-capped Star),1960; Komal Gandhar (E Flat),1961; and Subarnarekha (The Golden Thread),1962. In them, he highlighted the insecurity and anxiety engendered by the homelessness of the refugees of Bengal; tried to convey how Partition struck at the roots of Bengali culture; and sought to express the nostalgia and yearning that many Bengalis felt for their pre-Partition way of life.
The Cloud-Capped Star

NR2h 7m7.8

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A selfless young woman makes the ultimate sacrifice, putting her family's needs before her own happiness.

Subarnarekha

NR2h 3m7.3

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A man fiercely resists the blossoming romance between his adopted sister and the orphaned boy they took in years ago.

Partition trilogy background