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'Slumdog' star finally has a home after filmmaker steps in
ONCE under fire for not doing enough for its impoverished Indian child stars, the makers of "Slumdog Millionaire" said yesterday they had bought a flat for one of them whose Mumbai shanty home had been demolished.
Director Danny Boyle and producer Christian Colson flew into Mumbai after pictures of Azharuddin Ismail and Rubina Ali picking through the debris of their homes - torn down by the civic authorities as illegal - were splashed in the media.
Smiling and hugging the children, Boyle said a home had been bought for Ismail, 10, who played the character of Salim as a child. He added they would soon buy one for Ali as well, who plays the young Latika.
Since their homes were torn down, Ali has been staying with relatives and Ismail has been living in a makeshift shanty of tarps and blankets with his parents.
Boyle, who came under fire for not doing enough for the children who lived in squalor despite the film's success, blamed the media for raising the families' expectations.
"Inevitably, the tension and pressure is media generated," he said, after greeting Ali and Ismail with a hug.
"They were given access to a world, an extraordinary and glamorous world, and they understandably want their lives to be completely transformed," said Boyle at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences on the outskirts of Mumbai.
"The homes are a concern. That is one of the reasons why we built the trust," he said.
The "Jai Ho" trust, named after the film's award-winning track, and set up by Boyle and Colson, is meant to pay for the education and basic living costs of Ismail and Ali until they turn 18.
Boyle, whose rags-to-riches romance about a poor Indian boy competing in a TV game show scooped eight Academy Awards earlier this year, said he was pushing the trust to find a place for Ali before the monsoon rains in June.
A director for the trust said the apartment for Ismail was "comfortable, in a good neighborhood (and) near his school" and cost "upwards of 2 million rupees" (US$42,000).
"We have been trying to accelerate the process of re-housing the families, and one of the reasons we set up the trust is to deal with emergencies like this," said Colson.
Boyle and Colson last month also donated 500,000 pounds (US$803,670) to a non-profit organization to support a program for children in a slum in central Mumbai, where the film was largely shot.
In February, the state housing authority said it would give the two children apartments, but the families have not heard from them, said Rafik Qureshi, Ali's father.
"The kids have done such a good job. They haven't got anything. See where the kids are staying," he said.
Boyle also said he plans to make two more films set in Mumbai.
Director Danny Boyle and producer Christian Colson flew into Mumbai after pictures of Azharuddin Ismail and Rubina Ali picking through the debris of their homes - torn down by the civic authorities as illegal - were splashed in the media.
Smiling and hugging the children, Boyle said a home had been bought for Ismail, 10, who played the character of Salim as a child. He added they would soon buy one for Ali as well, who plays the young Latika.
Since their homes were torn down, Ali has been staying with relatives and Ismail has been living in a makeshift shanty of tarps and blankets with his parents.
Boyle, who came under fire for not doing enough for the children who lived in squalor despite the film's success, blamed the media for raising the families' expectations.
"Inevitably, the tension and pressure is media generated," he said, after greeting Ali and Ismail with a hug.
"They were given access to a world, an extraordinary and glamorous world, and they understandably want their lives to be completely transformed," said Boyle at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences on the outskirts of Mumbai.
"The homes are a concern. That is one of the reasons why we built the trust," he said.
The "Jai Ho" trust, named after the film's award-winning track, and set up by Boyle and Colson, is meant to pay for the education and basic living costs of Ismail and Ali until they turn 18.
Boyle, whose rags-to-riches romance about a poor Indian boy competing in a TV game show scooped eight Academy Awards earlier this year, said he was pushing the trust to find a place for Ali before the monsoon rains in June.
A director for the trust said the apartment for Ismail was "comfortable, in a good neighborhood (and) near his school" and cost "upwards of 2 million rupees" (US$42,000).
"We have been trying to accelerate the process of re-housing the families, and one of the reasons we set up the trust is to deal with emergencies like this," said Colson.
Boyle and Colson last month also donated 500,000 pounds (US$803,670) to a non-profit organization to support a program for children in a slum in central Mumbai, where the film was largely shot.
In February, the state housing authority said it would give the two children apartments, but the families have not heard from them, said Rafik Qureshi, Ali's father.
"The kids have done such a good job. They haven't got anything. See where the kids are staying," he said.
Boyle also said he plans to make two more films set in Mumbai.
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