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A Christian priest’s
documentary film was selected for the 7th Queens
International Film Festival to be held this week in New
York.
The event from Nov. 12 - 15 will feature Fr Joseph J.
Palackal’s 34 min film: “Kerala the Cradle of
Christianity in South Asia: The Cultural Interface of
Music and Religion.”
The short musical documentary is to be featured on
Saturday, Nov 14, at Bennett Hall in Frank Sinatra
School of the Arts.
The six million Christians in Kerala, on the southwest
coast of India, follow a variety of liturgical and
musical traditions some of which date back to the early
Christian era. The film explores the historical
embeddedness of these traditions that came about as a
result of the region’s commercial, cultural, and
religious interactions with the Middle East, Europe, and
America.
“The narrative follows the events that led to the
introduction of the Chaldean, Antiochene, Roman
Catholic, Anglican, and other liturgies along with the
musical styles associated with them,” according to
details published on the website.
“Over the centuries, these styles have become an
integral part of the musical mosaic of Kerala. A renewed
attempt in the recent past to interpret Christianity in
Indian terms has contributed to adaptations of
semi-classical and bhajan styles of music into Christian
worship.”
The film documents excerpts from the current practice of
chants in East Syriac, West Syriac, Latin, Sanskrit,
English, and Malayalam. The film also showcases a unique
performance context in which Hindu instrumental
ensembles share space in a church festival, illustrating
the extent of religious harmony that exists in Kerala
Drawing attention to the religious, musical, and
linguistic complexity of the region, the film presents
yet another reason to call Kerala, ‘God’s own Country.’
The film was officially released on Aug 2, 2008 at
Kerala House in New Delhi.
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