On the 71st death anniversary of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, rare archival footage has emerged, that shows the Mahatma’s ashes being immersed at Jabalpur in Madhya Pradesh. The eight minute-plus reel was shot on 12 February 1948, by the photographer James E McEldowney. McEldowney was a professor at the Leonard Theological College, Jabalpur. “It is a matter of great pride and honour to know that a movie made by one of our senior colleagues has such a historical significance,” Dr Naveen Rao, principal of Leonard Theological College,
said
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Mahatma Gandhi. File Photo[/caption] The silent film depicts lakhs of the Gandhi’s followers paying their tributes to him as his ashes are immersed. A following snippet shows a parade of military and paramilitary forces. A slide at the very beginning of the clip reads: “He (Gandhi) worked unceasingly and gave his life so that men and women of all creeds and races might dwell together under God in security and prosperity in India.” The footage — digitised, and in colour — was released by the National Cultural Audiovisual Archives (NCAA) on 30 January 2018, and can be viewed in its entirety
here
. “We received the film from the National Archives of India in October 2017 and sent it for digitisation last year. The reel had to be put in a climate controlled environment as part of the effort to conserve it prior to digitisation,” Irfan Zuberi, project manager — NCAA,
told
the Hindustan Times. Several urns filled with Gandhi’s ashes
were sent all over India
. The one immersed at Jabalpur was among them. Sangam (in Allahabad), Jinja (in Uganda) and Girgaum Chowpatty (in Mumbai) were other sites where the Mahatma’s ashes were immersed.
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