Saud Jubaer
- Writer
- Director
- Art Director
Saud Jubaer, is a New York City-based, young painter and filmmaker, an admirer of Ingmar Bergman. His first short film Hands (2012) screened at Girls Impact The World Film Festival organized by Harvard University. Saud's art was exhibited at British Council and the City University of New York. His most recent work The God of Small Things (2017) is a Neorealist film shot in Bangladesh, was inspired by his childhood memories of religious rituals and its trauma.
Saud Jubaer grew up at the crossroads of Islam, Christianity, and Hindu. He was born on August 18, 1992 - in an Islamic country (Bangladesh), surrounded by great Mughal architecture. He was home schooled in the Qur'an by a personal Mullah, educated in a private Christian school with the Bible study classes and daily morning prayers. Saud immersed in the Bengali Hindu literature of Rabindranath Tagore, Bengali Renaissance, the Ramayana, and the world of Satyajit Ray.
Saud Jubaer grew up at the crossroads of Islam, Christianity, and Hindu. He was born on August 18, 1992 - in an Islamic country (Bangladesh), surrounded by great Mughal architecture. He was home schooled in the Qur'an by a personal Mullah, educated in a private Christian school with the Bible study classes and daily morning prayers. Saud immersed in the Bengali Hindu literature of Rabindranath Tagore, Bengali Renaissance, the Ramayana, and the world of Satyajit Ray.