On January 1 this year, as India awoke from its slumber post muted NYE parties, everyone hoped that the new year would be magically better than the bizarre one they were leaving behind. It was not to be.On the first day of the year itself, news broke out that a comedian was arrested in the central Indian city of Indore. What’s worse? He had not even performed. 28-year-old Munawar Faruqui (now 29) was in Indore to kick off a 14-city tour when the leader of a local Hindu fringe group arrived and stopped the show before it even began, complaining that the comic was “insulting” Hindu religious sentiments. Along with Faruqui, two other comedians (and organisers) Nalin Yadav and Prakhar Vyas, an audience member and a juvenile, were also taken into custody. Faruqui’s friend, Sadakat Khan, who was attending the show, was arrested two days later. All of them have now been granted bail. Eyewitnesses say that Faruqui hadn’t even started his routine yet and police later admitted they had no evidence that the comic had done so either. They said that the complainant had “overheard some jokes” during rehearsal. Gaur also brought up a video from April 2020 in his claims and confessed to having arrived at the venue to disrupt the performance.
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Faruqui, however, had to spend 37 days in jail even as his arrest sparked a freedom of speech debate throughout the country following rejected bail pleas. Eventually, the Supreme Court of India granted him interim bail on February 5.Faruqui has over 800,000 followers on YouTube and over 300,000 on Instagram. Besides stand-up comedy, he’s released rap songs like “Nagpada Ka Rider'' and experimented with poetry on his social media. Raised in Junagadh, a city in the western state of Gujarat, Faruqui’s path to stand-up comedy passed through several odd jobs including one at a store selling kitchenware and a graphic design studio. Cut to February, within 10 days of his release, Faruqui appeared on stage at a Mumbai venue, in a surprise act. The room erupted in an applause that wouldn’t stop for a few minutes. “They stopped only when I intervened. It felt good,” Faruqui tells VICE with a smile as he remembers the show. Over the course of an hour-long video interview, it’s these words that continue to light up his eyes; applause, comedy, open mic, content, and a few others. Sitting in a hotel room, on the floor, an armchair in the background, he looks weary otherwise.That Faruqui loves what he does, is obvious. But, he does point out that now, it isn’t passion alone. “I had to go back on stage and there was never any doubt about my return,” he says. “It had already been a financial break for me and now, among other things, I have legal expenses to take care of. I need to get back on my feet.”
Back with a bang
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On February 14, he released a YouTube video titled “Munawar Faruqui Leaving Comedy”, a first-of-its-kind where he speaks directly to the audience about the evils of the internet, troll culture, online hate and the impact of it all. It ends with him saying that he isn’t leaving comedy but living it, every day of his life. It was his way of putting all speculation to rest and bookending his ordeal. It garnered one million views in 24 hours. “There were a few people who told me to be careful and reconsider comedy. Then there were those who responded to the video teaser urging me to not [leave]. But people who know me knew I will find humour in this situation too,” he says.Here, he mentions his time in jail without making a joke of it. But in another clip, from one of his live shows, Faruqui is seen joking about being offered sports shoes that would make it easier to flee, by a salesperson while out on a shopping spree. Not talking about the incident was never an option. “I had to address the elephant in the room,” he explains. “A tragedy will remain a tragedy. I can’t change what happened to me. But, do people really want to hear it as is? I think not, and I choose to present it in a humorous manner. Finding laughter in someone else’s tragedy is not new. The first time we laughed as children was perhaps when someone slipped and fell. But it wasn’t funny for the other person.”
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But the trauma, the comedian admits, won’t go away. His first few days outside prison were spent in a daze and he couldn’t make sense of his surroundings. “It felt like a different world. I was talking to people, receiving calls but didn’t know what was happening. I wouldn’t even remember who had called,” he recounts. “I don’t feel happy after coming out. It’s hard for me to leave it behind. Once you’ve been in jail, you will never go back to normal. You don’t want to remember it but you can never forget,” he adds. It has also instilled in him a deep and lasting fear of a similar recurrence. “As a child, if you fall off a bike, you will be afraid every time you see one even when you aren’t riding,” he says as an analogy.Faruqui’s friends and well-wishers have advised him, on occasion, to seek professional help. But, for now, the comedian wants to bury himself in work, create new content and travel the country with shows. In January, the month he was arrested, Faruqui as part of his tour had planned to hit several smaller cities since his fandom isn’t restricted to the metros. “I’ve always healed myself and it will be no different this time,” he says in response.In a video that surfaced on social media, Faruqui is seen on stage talking to Aklavya Singh Gaur, convener of the Hind Rakshak (a right-wing vigilante group) and son of BJP MP Malini Gaur, who had filed the FIR. He urges, repeatedly, for Gaur to sit in on the show before he makes a conclusion. The conversation lasted nearly ten minutes before the show resumed. However, five minutes later, it was stalled, violence broke out, and Faruqui and three others were arrested.
The ill-fated day
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While he has faced trolling on the internet before, Faruqui had no experience with disruption at a show. “I have never seen such a thing before and wish no artist does. It was heartbreaking. I wasn’t scared because that would show on my face. It just deeply saddened me,” he says recounting the events of the fateful day. Faruqui chose to engage, not to prove a point but to ensure his fans and audience don’t go back home without the promised performance. “There were about 80 people in the audience and they were my responsibility. If I was going to be aggressive, the situation could have erupted. The audience was already getting restless and this was my way of diffusing the tension. It’s what felt right to me then,” he says of his calm and calculated response on the day.“The reason I also chose to engage was because he (Gaur) decided to talk first. The platform was technically my workspace, and the means (taking the mic from me) were wrong, but he was still talking. When everything is going wrong, the smallest right feels reassuring,” he says. At this time, Faruqui did not know that he and the others would be arrested. “The moment I heard that we were being taken to jail, it’s as if everything in front of me froze. Every minute was hard to pass thereon,” he says of the moment that changed his life forever.
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Of hope and prayer
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