Power, Progress, and Politics: Samna (1974)
Cinema often
mirrors society, but few films hold up a reflection as piercing as Samna.
Directed by Dr. Jabbar Patel and written by Vijay Tendulkar, this 1974 Marathi
political drama transcends its genre. It is not merely a tale of power,
progress, and politics—it is a meditation on the eternal struggle between
ambition, development, and the human conscience.
The Duel of Ideals
At the heart of Samna
lies the confrontation between two unforgettable characters: Hindurao
Dhonde-Patil, embodied by Nilu Phule, and the Master, portrayed by Dr. Shriram
Lagoo. Their exchanges are not mere dialogues but philosophical duels that
compel the audience to confront uncomfortable truths.
Dhonde-Patil,
proud of the empire he has built—factories, schools, hospitals, jobs—asserts
with conviction: “We drained our blood and sweat to bring prosperity here.”
To him, this is fact, not arrogance. The Master counters gently: “Pride
itself can be a fact. And if one does not know the truth, any claim may appear
as pride.”
This subtle
tension captures the essence of the film: the fragile line between progress and
pride, between reality and illusion.
The Rise and Hollowing of Power
Dhonde-Patil’s
journey begins with vision and hard work. He gains power, brings development,
and seeks more power. Yet service gradually disappears from his mission. Power
itself becomes the end. When Maroti Kamble resists, he is eliminated.
Externally,
Dhonde-Patil radiates authority—immaculate attire, diamond rings,
silver-handled cane. Internally, however, he is hollowed out. Power gnaws at
his soul. In solitude, he confesses to the Master: he is unhappy at home,
friendless among his people, and buries his loneliness in relentless work.
It is a haunting
admission—the loneliness of a man who has everything, yet nothing.
The Fall
The Master, once
an idealist, demands justice for Kamble’s murder. An inquiry follows.
Dhonde-Patil is found guilty. Police take him away. His empire slips from his
hands, and he watches helplessly as the edifice he built crumbles.
Why did his
downfall occur?
- Because of his opponents?
- Because of the justice system?
- Because the Master raised the right
question?
- Or because power gained through
wrongful means devoured his soul?
The answer lies
in all these factors. Yet the deepest truth is this: a person’s true end comes
not when society condemns him, but when he betrays his own soul.
A Mirror for Our Times
Samna is more than a film—it is a timeless
allegory. It reminds us that progress without morality is hollow, that pride
can masquerade as fact, and that power, when divorced from service, corrodes
the very spirit of its wielder.
In an age where
development and ambition are celebrated, Samna whispers a warning: the
greatest downfall is not external defeat, but internal betrayal.
—Dr. Mahendra
Ingle, Pune, March 6, 2026
#ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats