Sohail Hashmi
Sohail Hashmi is an Indian documentary filmmaker, oral historian, and heritage conservationist based in Delhi, best known for conducting immersive heritage walks that highlight the city's layered history, architecture, and cultural narratives.[1] Born in Delhi to a family with roots in Kashmiri brocade artistry, Hashmi graduated from Kirori Mal College and Jawaharlal Nehru University, where he engaged in postgraduate studies before pursuing activism and media work.[1] Early in his career, he collaborated with slum dwellers and workers' unions, later transitioning to electronic media as a scriptwriter, producer, and executive producer, founding Delhi Heritage Walks to educate participants on underrepresented aspects of the capital's 1,000-year-old heritage amid concerns over neglect and encroachment on sites protected by the Archaeological Survey of India.[1] His notable works include documentaries on women's education, the history of Urdu, and overlooked Indian freedom fighters, as well as authoring Sanchi [Where Tigers Fly and Lions Have Horns], a UNESCO-commissioned publication exploring the ancient site's motifs.[1] Hashmi comes from a family of activists, including his brother Safdar Hashmi, a communist theater artist killed during a street play in 1989, and his sister Shabnam Hashmi, founder of the NGO Anhad.[2] Hashmi has faced scrutiny for his public positions, including a 2021 Delhi High Court imposition of a ₹1 lakh fine for filing what the court described as a motivated and non-genuine petition seeking to halt the Central Vista redevelopment project, which was dismissed for lacking merit.[2] In October 2023, his residence was raided by Delhi Police in connection with the NewsClick investigation into alleged foreign funding and pro-China propaganda, during which officers inquired about his associations with figures linked to anti-CAA protests, the farmers' agitation, and the 2020 Delhi riots; Hashmi, identifying as a filmmaker rather than a reporter, denied financial ties or journalistic coverage of those events.[3]