New Delhi-based Chhabra's work focusses on social issues. Some of her films are
Global Warming (awarded
United Nations World Food Day award and produced by
The Energy Resource Institute (
TERI)),
Now I Will Speak (this 40-minute film is on custodial rape, child rape and rape as a tool of oppression on violence against women, and it won an award from the
International Association's Women in Radio & Television and
NIFA awards of excellence in production and direction),
Tatva (
Essence) (a fiction film about a woman in search for herself and her identity in contemporary India that was awarded the
Rajat Kamal, an Indian national award). Chhabra's other work includes
Hunger in the Time of Plenty and
The Word and the World (on Indian writers), among others.
Hunger in the Time of Plenty, which is directed and co-produced by Chhabra, deals with starvation deaths at the time of food surplus in India. The film-maker meets families where there has been a starvation death and seeks to find out the condition of the other family members. The film has been shot in the deserts of
Rajasthan, the lush tropical forests of
Orissa and in the Indian capital city of New Delhi.
Asli Azaadi (
True Freedom) is a 45-minute film, directed and produced by Chhabra that deals with the contribution of women freedom fighters in India's struggle for freedom from
British imperialism. Shot on location, where many historical events took place, the film is infused with music and archival footage and ends with the "struggle for true freedom today", in the words of the film-maker. The film has been selected for screenings at the
Golden Gate Festival, San Francisco, and
Norwegian Film Festival, among others. ==Screenings==