(Web Desk) - ‘To Kill a Tiger’, filmmaker Nisha Pahuja’s documentary about a sexual assault survivor in rural India, is nominated in the best documentary feature category at Sunday’s Academy Awards.
Chopra Jonas, 41, who signed on as an executive producer ahead of its March 10 streaming premiere on Netflix, has multiple reasons to “catapult the conversation that this film starts,” as the actress exclusively tells PEOPLE.
“I seek and attach myself to work that really pushes the conversations of issues that I feel close to or passionate about, and sexual violence against women definitely is one of them,” says the founder of the production company Purple Pebble Pictures.
“In India, we say one-third of women in India have experienced sexual violence, and that statistic has to be higher because of underreporting.”
To Kill a Tiger takes audiences inside one Indian farmer’s quest for justice after his 13-year-old daughter is raped, but Chopra Jonas points out how universally its depiction of “a worldwide epidemic” resonates.
“The justice systems in many parts of the world are not the most empathetic to the victims and put them through trauma all over again,” she says.
Chopra Jonas also sees Pahuja’s documentary as a call to action for men. “The film speaks to not just survivors, but their allies as well, men supporting women,” explains the Citadel star.
“It’s very interesting to have a window into that and to see how a father fights his entire community, the justice system, against what he's told is the norm for his daughter's rights.”
Ranjit, the farmer and father waging that war, was “very inspiring,” she adds, “knowing how deep-rooted these societal norms are.” Chopra Jonas was born in Jharkhand, India — the same state in which To Kill a Tiger was filmed. “That's what a village in India looks like," she says. "It's very authentically shot.”
The actress saw the movie soon after its 2022 Toronto International Film Festival premiere, and she remembers Ranjit’s struggle moving her to tears for even more personal reasons.
“I lost my father in 2013 and he was my biggest champion,” she says. “Ranjit and his quiet resolution — my dad was that kind of champion for me.... There is something about just having a dad that's your champion. That's such a universal feeling.”
It’s in that spirit that Chopra Jonas and her fellow producers, including Mindy Kaling and Dev Patel, are “bringing it to its glory on Netflix right before the Academy Awards.”
“I'm very happy to be a part of a group of EPs who are Indian and have come together to support Nisha and her journey to the Oscars,” she says of the “incredible” Pahuja. “We'll be championing her, Mindy, Dev and I.”
“I am so excited to be a part of the entertainment industry at a time where films from all over the world are being accepted,” she says.
“Subtitled movies are winning Oscars in main categories. As an artist that started my work in India and had a major career there, I really believe in [being] at the forefront of bringing cinema and filmmakers from different parts of the world into mainstream entertainment, into Hollywood.”
It’s why Chopra Jonas will continue to “put my head down and work” as a film producer and activist. “I'm not one to think about what legacy I'm going to build,” she says when asked about passing on values to her two-year-old daughter, Malti Marie, whom she shares with husband Nick Jonas.