For Saif Ali Khan getting conversant with the holy Quran to play the jehadi in Rensil D’Silva’s Kurbaan was comparatively easier.
But John Abraham belonging to a completely different religion and culture, learning the doctrine of the Quran from the scratch to play the NRI Muslim in Kabir Khan’s New York.
Not knowing a syllable of the Quran John had to study the holy book in translation.
A close friend says, “John researched thoroughly on Islam and its various aspects. His character in New York is detained wrongly for terrorism. John based his character on three such real life Muslims taken into custody in the US for wrongs they hadn’t committed. John and his director Kabir Khan merged the case of three such unlucky people to create John’s character. He actually lived breathed slept and wept like someone who had been wrongly ostracized.”
So traumatized was he by the experience that John went into a complete shell in Philadelphia where New York was shot.
A friend says, “He wouldn’t talk to people. He was totally in his own shell. It was life-changing experience. Today John knows what it feels to be a Muslim and a target of ceaseless suspicion and hostility in the US. He also empathizes closely with the issue of Indian students being racially abused in Australia after playing an Indian abused in New York. He understands the isolation of the minority. To a large extent as a Parsi John has been a part of a minority from his birth.”
John studied the Quran intimately.
John’s friend says, “He went very deep in the film’s theme of Islamic isolation. His familiarity with Islamic terrorism started when he shot Kabul Express with Kabir Khan in Afganistan. John spoke to people in Taliban and began to understand the concept of jehad. He understood how risky it is to fight for a cause without knowing the history of that cause. He went on the net, found legitimate and proper translations of the Quran. He learnt the proper pronunciations of words in the Quran.”
When asked about the process of acclimatizing himself with the Quran John tells, “It’s part of my larger determination to prepare myself completely for a part. Whether it was New York or now Abbas Tyrewala’s film, I’m taking time off to prepare for the movie and character. The audience today understands an honest movie. That’s what I want to give. I only want to do roles that take me out of my comfort zone. Through my characters and performances I want to make people comfortable with what makes me uncomfortable as a human being and an Indian.” |