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Karan Johar's memoir has factual errors, claim his Delhi relatives

Updated on: 18 May,2017 06:00 AM IST  |  Mumbai
Mohar Basu | mohar.basu@mid-day.com

Karan Johar's extended Delhibased family disturbed by portrayal in his memoir. They have problem with how KJo describes his late dad, Yash Johar, was treated by them and claims that they had a 'halwai ki dukan'

Karan Johar's memoir has factual errors, claim his Delhi relatives

 Karan Johar


Filmmaker Karan Johar was refreshingly uninhibited while describing his professional and personal life in the recently-released autobiography titled, 'An Unsuitable Boy'. But, his extended family hasn't taken well to his candour. The book that was received with enthusiasm by fans for its heartwarming revelations, sees Johar describe how his late father, Yash Johar, was treated by the family. 


The 44-year-old filmmaker's claim that the family ran a 'halwai ki dukan' is the first of many unpleasant details that the Delhi-based family is taking objection to. Rajiv Nayar, senior advocate at the Supreme Court, who is husband to one of Johar's cousins, tells mid-day, "My family is extremely hurt about the picture that has been painted. We are all on the same page in concurring that his book contains inaccuracies and gross factual errors."


Nayar is especially upset with a chunk where the director says his father was assigned the job of sitting at the sweetmeat shop counter, "probably because he was the only one who had been educated up to a point and spoke English well."

This, says Nayar, has hurt family members, some of whom have retired from noteworthy positions. Sources say the late filmmaker's eldest brother, Ved Prakash Johar, even earned a degree from New York's Columbia University.


Rajiv Nayar

In the book, Johar says it was his grandmother who persuaded Yash Johar to run away and fulfil his dreams. "You are made for greater things", she is believed to have told her son, even designing a robbery at her home to hand him money to move to Mumbai, where he landed his first job as film photographer.

KJo's relatives are apprehensive about taking legal recourse, given that "it's a family matter". They hope to resolve the issue amicably, failing which they will "take up the matter legally," Nayar says. Mid-day reached out to KJo and his spokesperson but didn't receive a comment.

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