Overview
Buniyaad is a Hindi-Urdu language television serial that aired on India's national broadcaster Doordarshan in the late 1980s. Directed by Ramesh Sippy and Jyoti Sarup, the show is widely regarded as one of the earliest and most influential family soap operas of Indian television. Set against the backdrop of the Partition of India in 1947, it traced the lives, struggles, and inter-generational journey of a Punjabi family displaced from Lahore who rebuild their lives in independent India.
Key facts
| Title | Buniyaad |
|---|---|
| Genre | Family drama, period soap opera |
| Language | Hindi-Urdu |
| Original network | Doordarshan |
| Directors | Ramesh Sippy, Jyoti Sarup |
| Writer | Manohar Shyam Joshi |
| Setting | Lahore (pre-Partition) and post-Partition India |
| Country of origin | India |
Background
By the mid-1980s, Doordarshan had begun commissioning long-format sponsored serials, leading to the success of Hum Log (1984), India's first soap opera. Buniyaad was conceived as a successor in this tradition, but with a stronger period-drama framing. The screenplay by Manohar Shyam Joshi, who had also written Hum Log, used the trauma of Partition as the foundational event around which a multi-generational narrative was built.
Ramesh Sippy, by then known for the Hindi cinema landmark Sholay (1975), brought feature-film production sensibilities to the small screen, while Jyoti Sarup co-directed several segments of the long run.
Plot and themes
The serial opens in pre-Partition Lahore, depicting the everyday life of an extended Punjabi Hindu family. The communal violence of 1947 forces the family to migrate to India, and subsequent episodes follow their resettlement, financial hardship, marriages, business ventures and disputes over decades of independent India. Major themes include displacement, refugee identity, joint-family relationships, women's agency, and the social and economic transformations of post-independence north India.
Cast
The serial featured an ensemble cast and is credited with launching or consolidating several television careers. Prominent performers associated with Buniyaad include:
- Alok Nath as Master Haveli Ram
- Anita Kanwar as Lajoji
- Kiran Juneja as Veerawali
- Vinod Nagpal as Satbir
- Dalip Tahil
- Mazhar Khan
- Sudhir Dalvi
- Kanwaljit Singh
- Vijayendra Ghatge
- Soni Razdan
Production
Buniyaad was made in the sponsored-serial format that Doordarshan had institutionalised, with episodes broadcast on a weekly schedule. Production design emphasised period detail of 1940s Lahore and post-Partition Delhi, including costumes, interiors and language register. The dialogues drew on a mix of Hindi, Urdu and Punjabi, reflecting the linguistic milieu of pre-Partition north India.
Reception and significance
Buniyaad attracted a very large viewership during its original run and became a cultural touchstone for the generation that grew up watching Doordarshan in the 1980s. It is frequently cited alongside Hum Log, Ramayan and Mahabharat as a defining work of the early era of Indian television. Critics and historians of Indian media have noted Buniyaad's importance for:
- bringing Partition memory into mainstream popular culture at a time when it was rarely depicted on screen;
- establishing the long-form family saga as a viable Indian television genre;
- demonstrating that feature-film directors could shape television aesthetics; and
- providing a launchpad for actors who later sustained long careers in television and film.
Legacy
The serial has been re-aired on Doordarshan and on digital platforms in subsequent decades, and is regularly invoked in discussions of nostalgia television in India. References to "Master Haveli Ram" and "Lajoji" entered popular vocabulary, and the show is often used as a benchmark in commentary on later Partition-themed television and cinema.