about

“Shunned by his country due to religion, Abdus Salam strives for an achievement that would define modern physics and redefine his place back home.”

Screened in 30 cities to widespread acclaim, including six awards for best documentary film, “Salam” is a feature-length documentary about the Nobel prize winning Pakistani physicist, Abdus Salam.

The film captures Salam’s journey from a small village in rural Pakistan to worldwide scientific acclaim. Salam’s work was a step towards realizing Einstein’s dream of unifying the fundamental laws of nature and postulated the Higgs boson.

But even as he was pushing the boundaries of his work and science, his country was curtailing his rights as a citizen. A member of the Ahmadiyya sub-sect of Islam, Salam was forbidden from identifying as a Muslim and eventually rejected by his State, but not his people. This caused him great personal heartbreak, even as he scaled the heights of professional success on the world stage.

screenings

May 18, 2019 | 2:45-4:30pm
DFW South Asian Film Festival
AMC Village On The Parkway 9
5100 Belt Line Road, Addison, TX 75254
dfwsaff.com/salam

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April 28, 2019 | 7:30pm
Film Screening room (C3 B1-101)
NYU Abu Dhabi Arts Centre
UAE
www.nyuad-artscenter.org

April 24, 2019 | 7:00pm
54th International Festival of Science Documentary Films (AFO54)
Academia Film Olomouc
Olomouc, Czech Republic
www.afo.cz

March 29, 2019 |  7:00 pm– 9:30 pm
Newhouse School’s Joyce Hergenhan Auditorium
Syracuse University
215 University Pl., Syracuse, NY
https://mysouthsidestand.com/event/film-screening-of-salam

March 7, 2019 |  7:00 pm
Graduate Education Auditorium
University of Arkansas
https://news.uark.edu/articles/46395/

February 25, 2019 | 7:00 pm
CSIR – Centre for Cellular & Molecular Biology
Hyderabad, India
ccmb.res.in

February 21st | 5:00pm
TIFR Hyderabad
Hyderabad, India
tifrh.res.in

February 19th | 10:00am
Novotel Hammersmith West – Hammersmith International Ctre 1
Shortlands, London W6 8DR.
Film Fest International London
www.filmfestinternational.com

January 29, 2019 | 6:00 – 8:00pm
Lecture Theatre 1 & 3, Blackett Laboratory
Imperial College London
Prince Consort Road, London, SW7 2BW
http://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/190087

January 15, 2019 | 6:00-9:00pm
Institute of Islamic Studies, in collaboration with McGill Centre for Science and Islam,
MIISSC, and Harf – Journal of South Asian Studies.
McGill University
Building-Leacock 26
Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
https://www.mcgill.ca/islamicstudies/

2018

December 15, 2018 | 4:30 pm
NYIT Auditorium on Broadway, New York, NY
Winner, Best Documentary – Audience Choice
South Asian International Film Festival
http://saiff.org/2018/films/salam/

December 5th, 2018 | 5:45 PM
Amnesty International South Asia
Tharangani Hall, National Film Corporation
Colombo 7, Sri Lanka
South Asia Human Rights Festival
Register: www.eventbrite.com/e/art-for-rights-tickets-52931351096

November 19, 2018 | 6:00 PM
Human Rights Film Festival BARCELONA / Paris / NYC
Barcelona, Spain
www.humanrightsfilmfestival.com

November 11th, 2018 | 3:30 PM| Lux 6 |  Q&A with Producer & Director
November 8th, 2018 | 1:45 PM | Lux 2 | Discussion with Ammeke Kateman
Runner up, Best Documentary – Audience Choice
Inscience – International Science Film Festival
Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Tickets: www.insciencefestival.nl

November 9th, 2018 | 5:00 PM
Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics – ICTP
in conjunction with the “World Science Day for Peace and Development
Trieste, Italy
http://indico.ictp.it/event/8787/

October 29th, 2018 | 8:00pm
Institut de physique du globe de Paris
International Science Film Festival Pariscience, Paris, France
https://pariscience.fr/session/salam-the-first-nobel-laureate/

October 28th, 2018 | 2:30pm
Cinéma de Sève
1400 Blvd. De Maisonneuve West, Montreal, Canada
South Asian Film Festival of Montreal
Winner, Best Documentary – Audience Choice
saffm.centrekabir.com

October 25th, 2018 | 7:30 PM – 9:30 PM
Havemeyer Hall Room 309
Columbia University
3000 Broadway, New York, NY 10027
https://www.facebook.com/events/2010620419228937

October 13th, 2018 | 5:00pm – 7:30 pm
Anna Head Alumnae Hall, UC Berkeley,
in collaboration with
Cal PSA and Institute of South Asian Studies
https://www.facebook.com/berkeleypsa

October 4th, 2018 | 7:00pm
South Asia Center, Geballe Auditorium, Physics building
UW, Seattle, WA
13th Tasveer South Asian Film Festival
Winner, Best Documentary – Audience Choice
http://tasveer.org/

September 20, 2018 | 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM & 8:30 PM–10:30 PM (two screenings)
Columbia College Chicago
1104 S. Wabash Avenue Chicago, IL 60605
Chicago South Asian Film Festival
Winner, Best Documentary – Audience Choice
Tickets: http://www.csaff.org/film/salam-the-first-nobel-laureate/

September 21, 2018 | 7:00 PM–9:00 PM
Ray & Maria Stata Center
Room 32-123
32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA
MIT – Massachusetts Institute of Technology
https://www.facebook.com/PakistanisMIT/

September 7th, 2018 | 6:00pm
Room 103 Reiss Bldg, Georgetown University
McCourt School of Public Policy, Georgetown University
in collaboration with
DCSAFF – Washington DC South Asian Film Festival
Winner, Best Documentary – Audience Choice
http://dcsaff.com/

May 12th, 2018 | 6:30pm – 8:00pm
Mathematical Institute
L2, Andrew Wiles Building
University of Oxford,
Radcliffe Observatory Quarter
Woodstock Rd, Oxford OX2 6GG, UK
https://www.facebook.com/events/1434443759994180/

Mar 24th, 2018 | 12:15 PM
UNC Charlotte Main Campus
Fretwell 100
https://filmfest.uncc.edu/march-24-salam/

Jan 29th | 6:30 PM
Auditorium 1 – FD Complex, Films Division
24 – Dr. G. Deshmukh Marg, Mumbai 400026
Mumbai International Film Festival
www.miff.in

Jan 6th, 2018
Raw Science Film Festival
Winner, Best Documentary
Lobero Theater
Santa Barbara, CA
www.rawsciencefilmfestival.tv

filmmakers

DIRECTOR'S STATEMENT

What draws any artist to create something is how the subject speaks to him or her on an emotional level. To me as a documentary filmmaker, it is no different.

When the producers Zakir Thaver and Omar Vandal brought this project to me, they had invested ten years scouring every aspect of the remarkable life of Abdus Salam. What they had collected was so thorough and expansive, that it was hard to ignore. Their commitment to the project was unrelenting and that was the first thing that drew me in. When I did my own cursory research on the layered life of Abdus Salam it became instantly clear to me that this was a very important story and it had to be told in the present climate fraught with Islamophobia and other prejudices.

Abdus Salam led a very rich and accomplished life. Apart from being the first Muslim to win a Nobel Prize in Physics, he was only among a handful to have accomplished this task from that part of the world. More than his accolades, what drew me to his story, was the tortured life he led, ostracized, forgotten and exiled from his own country, just for his personal beliefs. Another aspect, which I found fascinating, was how Salam reconciled being a deeply religious man, while operating at the highest reaches of science, whose primary goal in many ways was to render religion and a belief in god obsolete. This dichotomy and paradox, which was peppered through his life, is intimately explored in “Salam” making it a deeply personal and intimate portrait to watch.

Salam was born in pre-partition India and was laid to rest in Pakistan in 1996. I was born and brought up in India but currently call New York home. Zakir and Omar were both born in Pakistan. The painful history of our birth nations seventy years on, is a constant reminder and the politics surrounding it only worsens. But the camaraderie we have found as collaborators speaks volumes about why this film is what it is. For this reason alone, this project is close to my heart and we hope to share this feeling with the world through the life of “Salam”.

ANAND KAMALAKAR is a Brooklyn based film director, producer and editor. The Gowanus Canal (Winner, Best Film, Brooklyn Film Festival), Chief Engineer Conrad, Citizen Sharma, Building Bridges, 300 Miles to Freedom and Garwin are some of the films he has directed. Heart of Stone a film he produced and edited won over ten awards including Best Film at Slamdance Film Festival, Philadelphia Film Festival and Cinequest Film Festival. It also won an award for Best Editing at the Santa Fe Film Festival. Anand has worked as an editor for Primetime (ABC), Dateline (NBC) and 20/20 (ABC) and was the editor of the 2004 Emmy nominated ABC special on the Iraq war titled Brothers in Arms. Anand was also a creative consultant on the academy award-winning documentary Born Into Brothels. His last project Holy (un)Holy River premiered at the Telluride Film Festival and has won several awards around the world.

CINEMATOGRAPHER

ASAD FARUQI is an Emmy Award nominated cinematographer, photographer and filmmaker. Over the past six years he has shot a number of award-winning films, including 2016’s Academy Award winning film, “A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness,” and 2012’s Academy and Emmy Award winning film, “Saving Face.” Other notable works include Emmy and Alfred I Dupont Award winning, “Pakistan’s Taliban Generation,” “Song of Lahore,” “Peacekeepers: A Journey of a Thousand Miles,” and “Transgenders: Pakistan’s Open Secret.” Asad’s work has been featured on HBO, The New York Times, PBS, Channel 4, CBC, SBS, and Arte. Asad recently directed and produced his debut feature "Armed With Faith" which played at number of festivals and is slated for a 2018 release with PBS.

COMPOSER

Award Winning Film composer and musician JOHN McDOWELL is one of the leading pioneers of the world music scene who travels deeply into the realms of spirit and cultures and creates works of classic beauty. McDowell achieved worldwide recognition with his soundtrack to the Academy Award winning documentary Born Into Brothels. McDowell is also a highly gifted pianist, percussionist, producer, commissioned composer and conductor. He has also performed with Sting, Carlos Santana, Rusted Root, Santana, Krishna Das, and Michael Wimberly. John’s doing some quite brave things. "It’s hard to mix cultural strains together and have continuity. He does that wonderfully.” - David Bowie

PRODUCER

OMAR VANDAL received his Ph.D. in Immunology and Microbial Pathogenesis studying tuberculosis at the Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences in New York City, and now lives in Seattle.

PRODUCERS' STATEMENT

We (Zakir and Omar) met in college the year Salam passed (1996) and it was there, outside of Pakistan that we discovered how prominent Salam was on the global stage. Saddened by the absence of Salam’s story in our own books and popular culture, in 2004 we decided to begin researching and developing a film on Abdus Salam. This was a 10-year long process as we raised funds, travelled far-and-wide to get-to-know and film those who knew Salam, and meticulously collected, researched and digitized old photos, audio recordings, and video clips that were discovered in dusty old cabinets with family members, at University physics departments, and at television networks in all corners of the globe from South Korea to Kuwait. In 2015 we were introduced to Anand Kamalakar by a mutual friend who described him as "a strong intellect able to handle the role of editor and director" and "a great fit, brainiac for the project". Other plusses were that Anand speaks Hindi/Urdu, had studied physics as an undergraduate, and had just completed a biopic of another illustrious physicist, Richard Garwin. Together we embarked on the journey to complete this definitive biopic on Salam.

ZAKIR THAVER is a Science/Education Media Producer. He worked as Consultant for Granada America in New York. He also produced a UNESCO-funded science TV series in Pakistan, and has worked in curriculum development as well as distance learning via TV at the Aga Khan University. Zakir majored in physics at the College of Wooster, in Ohio.

timeline

1926
Abdus Salam is born on 29 January in the country town of Jhang, British India's Western Punjab .
1940
At 14, scores the highest marks ever recorded for the Matriculation Examination at the University of the Punjab and wins a scholarship to join the Government College, Lahore.
1943
Publishes his first scientific paper, entitled: “A Problem of Ramanujam” at the age of 17.
1946
Graduates from the Government College obtaining a Master's degree in mathematics. Awarded a scholarship to St. John's College, Cambridge.
1949
Obtains a Bachelor of Arts degree with double first-class honours in mathematics and physics in only two years, instead of the normal three.
1950
Completes Ph.D. in theoretical physics at the age of 24.
1952
Becomes head of the Mathematics Department of the University of Punjab.
1954
Returns to Cambridge as a lecturer in mathematics and Fellow of St. John's College. Visits Pakistan occasionally as adviser on science policy to the Government.
1955
Attends and serves as scientific secretary at the first Atoms for Peace Conference convened by the United Nations in Geneva and helps set-up the United Nations Advisory Committee for Science and Technology.
1956
Develops the groundbreaking idea of neutrino parity violation, but postpones publication until next year, losing first claim rights. Joins the Imperial College, London.
1957
Becomes Professor of Applied Mathematics at Imperial College.
1959
At age of 33, becomes the youngest Fellow of the Royal Society of London.
1960
Proposes the creation of the International Centre for Theoretical Physics to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
1961
Becomes Chief Scientific Adviser to the President of Pakistan.
1964
With the help of the IAEA, the Italian Government and the city of Trieste, establishes the International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP) in Trieste.
1968
Presents the theory which shows how the electromagnetic and weak forces may be considered manifestations of a single more fundamental force, the electroweak force.
1974
Pakistani Parliament declares Ahmadis non-Muslims. As a member of the Ahmadiyya Community, resigns from his position as Chief Scientific Adviser to the President, grows a beard in protest, and adopts the name Muhammad "to prove himself a Muslim".
1979
Shares the Nobel Prize for Physics with Steven Weinberg and Sheldon Glashow, Harvard University (USA), "for their contribution to the theory of the unified weak and electromagnetic interaction between elementary particles, including, inter alia, the prediction of the weak neutral current".
1980-1981
Is conferred numerous honours and awards for his scientific work as well as receives recognition for his contribution to the progress of peace and international scientific co-operation.
1984
Publishes the first edition of his collected essays "Ideals and Realities". It will be translated into ten different languages.
1988
Establishes the Third World Network of Scientific Organizations (TWNSO) in Trieste, in order to improve the status of science and technology in the developing world.
1990-1994
Develops a project to set up a network on 20 international centres of excellence in various fields of applied science, technology and environment modelled on ICTP, to be located in the South.
1994
Retires as Director and becomes President of ICTP.
1996
Passes away in Oxford, England on 21 November 1996 after a long battle with Progressive Suprauclear Palsy. He is buried next to his parents in Rabwah, Pakistan.
1997
On the occasion of a memorial meeting in November, ICTP is renamed "The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics".
1998
To honour his services, the Government of Pakistan issues a commemorative stamp carrying his portrait. In an accompanying statement, declares him to be "one of the most outstanding scientists of Pakistan".

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