My Land
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | India |
---|---|
Directors | Mrinal Sen |
Composers | Debojyoti Mishra |
Story by | Afsar Ahmed |
Screenplay | Mrinal Sen |
Afsar Ahmed | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2959260 |
About My Land
Aamar Bhuvan is a 2002 Bengali film directed by Mrinal Sen. The film depicts a place of India where people live peacefully and love each other despite the hatred and violence that scars the rest of the nation. For this film director Mrinal Sen won best director's award in Cairo Film Festival in 2002.
Somalia floods: Bodies unearthed and bridges swept away

... " The 10m- (32ft-) high mango trees had almost sunk when we were leaving, I couldn t see anything standing on My Land, " Mr Abdirahin said...
Portugal's Barroso lithium mine project faces villagers' ire

... " If I sold My Land, what would I do? " she asks...
Ukraine war: Tales of endurance and hardship as winter looms

... " How do I stay strong? The love of My Land, and my native village, and my people...
Ukraine war: Putin raises stakes in speech full of anti-Western bile

... But declaring " this is My Land now" doesn t make it true...
Bardney Festival: The UK's answer to Woodstock that almost never was

... " Even My Land Rover got bogged down in the mud and needed towing out, " he says...
Severodonetsk: Ukrainian man cycles from besieged city, dodging Russian shells

... " When I was riding my bike I didn t really feel fear so much, it was more a sense of anger: This is My Land, this is my country! And I will complete this journey whether you like it or not! " He says this feeling kept him going, it was almost like a " sporting anger, a positive anger"...
Ukraine: 'We are a shield for you - Europe and the world'

... It s my country, it s My Land, it s my city...
Why Uganda is investing in oil despite pressures to go green

... " My Land is like my bank...
Severodonetsk: Ukrainian man cycles from besieged city, dodging Russian shells
A Ukrainian man managed to flee unhurt the heavily-bombed eastern city of Severodonetsk by cycling, dodging Russian shells and warplanes.
Speaking to BBC Newshour, Arif Bagirov, 45, said it was his " craziest journey".
" There was a lot of firing, and at least two air strikes near me, " He Said , recounting his 50km (43-mile) bike ride to The City of Bakhmut.
The Editor and blogger said he knew if one shell landed close then most likely the Russians would not hit there again.
Using those tactics, he reached Bakhmut unhurt.
" There were holes on The Road , everything there was smashed up, including cars, " Mr Bagirov said.
" And there was a lot of debris all over The Place . It's a frontline road, After All . Thank God, there were no Corpses - But you could tell that people have died there. "
Mr Bagirov said it was easier to avoid Russian warplanes, because he could hear them coming from a distance.
" I found a ditch to lie in, and that's where I laid until they had gone past. "
He Said it was a big relief when he finally arrived in Bakhmut, a city under Ukrainian control further west.
" When I was riding my bike I didn't really feel fear so much, it was more a sense Of Anger : 'This is My Land , this is My Country ! And I will complete this journey whether you like it or not!'"
He says this feeling kept him going, it was almost like a " sporting anger, a positive anger".
" It was definitely my craziest journey on a bike, " added Mr Bagirov, an experienced cyclist.
" I had covered such distances loads of times before - But not in such circumstances. "
As for his plans for The Future , He Said simply: " I don't know at The Moment . I'm just on The Way to [the capital] Kyiv, and once I get there I will get a good rest. "
But he added: " As soon as the opportunity arises, all I want to do is help my Home Town again. "
War in Ukraine: More coverageSource of news: bbc.com