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Can rap culture, Urdu poetry influence morchas?
Updated On: 17 October, 2017 02:52 PM IST | Mumbai | Krutika Behrawala
<p>Can rap battles, Urdu poetry and satirical documentaries be significant tools of protest like the morcha? Find out</p>

What's common between rapper Sofia Ashraf, filmmaker Fathima Nizaruddin and Urdu-Kashmiri poet Mohammad Muneem Nazir? Besides a form of expression, they use their art as a tool of resistance. Next week, they will come together at Godrej India Culture Lab for Performing Protest, an evening that explores how art works with hunger strikes and marches to help create change. "The idea is to highlight alter-narratives [alternative narratives]. Young India is protesting in a number of ways — through candle-light marches, online petitions and flash mobs. Art is also one of them,"âu00c2u0080u00c2u0088says Lab head Parmesh Shahani.

A still from Nuclear Hallucinations
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