Titled 'Girmitiya Kantraki', the project features a song sung by an Amsterdam-based pop artist, whose great grandfather from India was also taken away as an indentured labourer to work in Suriname, then a Dutch plantation colony.
While there have been books published and documentaries made on the subject, this is perhaps the first attempt to narrate the story of the moving tale of 'girmitiyas' while paying tribute to their struggles, descendants of many of whom have achieved great heights.
"From mid-19th century to about 1920, millions of Indians, mostly from Bihar and UP were taken as indentured labourers to various British, Dutch and French colonies.
"This video pays tribute to all those who were taken away. And, also salutes their indefatigable spirit which passed on to their descendants," Chandra told PTI.
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"In the video, Raj Mohan (artist) pays tribute to them by playing his own great grandfather, who was taken away to Suriname from Chhapra in north Bihar.
'Girmit' is a corrupt form of 'agreement' -- an agreement under which thousands of labourers were taken away by the colonial rulers to work in the plantations of Mauritius, Fiji, Suriname, Guyana, and Trinidad and Tobago.
"And, 'Kantraki' is the corrupt form of 'contract' under which these labourers were indentured through 'arkatiyas', Indian agents who would lie to them and trap them in a vicious cycle of exploitation in cahoots with the British rulers.
"But, while conceiving the project, we realised the story of girmitiyas has to be retold and capturing 1850s and 1920s, I thought it was only possible through animation," the 36- year-old filmmaker said.
At the 63rd National Film Awards, 'Mithila Makhaan', directed by Chandra, won as the Best Film in Maithili language.
The Patna-born filmmaker, now based in Mumbai, says the biggest challenge was to render the emotions of the characters depicted while using animation graphics.
"But, we worked on reflecting the emotional contours on the faces of characters seen in the video, whether labourers climbing the ship that took them away, or their suffering while travelling through oceans," Chandra said, adding, "the animation took two months to complete".
The song's lyrics also capture the pathos of the labourers -- 'Saat samundar paar karike, ek nava des ke sapna dekahike... Le gaye dur suriname bataiye ke (Across seven seas, selling a dream to us... They took us to far away Suriname).
Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam, whose ancestors were taken away from Bihar, went on to become the first prime minister of Mauritius.
He was also a freedom fighter there and his bronze statue was unveiled by his son, Navinchandra Ramgoolam, also former prime minister of Mauritius, in Patna few years ago.
Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar had recently attended a luncheon hosted by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in honour of current Prime Minister of Mauritius Pravind Kumar Jugnauth during his India visit. Kumar had described the ties between Bihar and Mauritius as an "emotional bond".
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