Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
India

Led By Sahgal, Indian Writers Renounce Awards; Script Dissent Against Intolerance

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Oct, 2015 10:27 AM
    Public lynching over a slab of meat, cold blooded murders of writers, rationalists and a wave of crimes of intolerance has led well-known Indian writers and winners of the prestigious Sahitya Akademi award, to innovatively script their dissent.
     
    Their protest is against what they call the growing intolerance within the country and the muted response of the establishment, including the Akademi, to the series of hate crimes.
     
    Noted writer Nayantara Sahgal's decision last week to return her Sahitya Akademi award over the public lynching in Dadri last month and the murder of rationalists in Maharashtra and Karnataka has triggered a wave of similar reactions from other awardees across the country.
     
    Sahgal, a 1986 Sahitya Akademi awardee, said she was disturbed at the lynching of Mohammad Akhlaq,52, by a public mob at Dadri last month, after accusing him of storing beef at his home and the murder of rationalists like Narendra Dabolkar, Govind Pansare and Kannadiga writer M.M. Kalburgi over the last couple of years. 
     
    "I have decided to return the award as I felt that it's time to speak up. I am disturbed at the Dadri killing and the killing of rationalists," Sahgal told IANS, adding that she was upset over Prime Minister Narendra Modi's silence on the issue.
     
    Since her renouncement, nearly two dozen winners of the Sahitya Akademi award have emulated Sahgal, a niece of India' first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru.
     
    In Modi's home state of Gujarat, poet writer Anil Joshi joined another Vadodara-based writer Ganesh Devy, in returning his award.
     
    "There is no breathing space and no freedom of expression for literary writers. It is like losing oxygen because we are writers who wish for free breathing space. I do not need an oxygen cylinder in the form of awards to live. The attack on the brood of literarians is unfortunate and has taken away the freedom of expression," Joshi said in a statement.
     
     
    In Punjab, as many as seven writers and poets Surjit Patar, Jaswinder Singh, Baldev Singh Sadaknama Darshan Bhuttar, Ajmer Singh Aulakh, Atamjit Singh, Gurbachan Bhullar and Canada-based writer Waryam Sandhu also gave up their respective awards, which were instituted in 1955.
     
    In the southern state of Kerala too, poet Satchidanandan, writers P.K. Parakkadavu and K.S. Ravikumar quit all posts in the Akademi over Kalburgi's killing, while Malayalam writer Sara Joseph, who also returned the award, said that India was passing through a phase "worse than the black days of the (1975-77) emergency".
     
    "There is a fear that has engulfed in what one eats, when one expresses love, and there is some sort of curb on what one wants to write and speak. This does not augur wella Our prime minister is a frequent flyer and gives big speeches on his trips abroad. The sad thing is that while he was away a man was beaten to death because he ate beef," Joseph said, referring to the Dadri lynching.
     
    In New Delhi, former head of the Lalit Kala Akademi Ashok Vajpayi also returned his award, in Kashmir poet-writer Ghulam Nabi Khayal also followed suit, while in Bengaluru, well known author Shashi Deshpande has resigned from the Sahitya Akademi general council.
     
    In Goa too, over 30 winners of the Award are expected to deliberate on Wednesday over the issue of mass renunciation.
     
    Akademi president V.P. Tiwari, who has been criticised by the writer fraternity for his silence, insists that the situation is unprecedented.
     
    "We are facing an unprecedented situation. At present, we do not know how to respond to those wanting to give back their awards," Tiwari said, adding that a meeting of the Akademi's council would be held on October 23 to discuss the issue.
     
     
    Adding to the fire, as it were, Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma, who is emerging as the government's stormy petrel, told the Indian Express on Monday: "This is an award given by writers to writers. It has nothing to do with the government. It is their personal choice to return it...we accept it."
     
    One thing is for sure: this is an issue that is unlikely to die down soon.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    First Look: Sunita Williams Visits Taj Mahal

    First Look: Sunita Williams Visits Taj Mahal
    Renowned astronaut Sunita Williams, who spent a record 195 days in space, has visited the Taj Mahal with her sister.

    First Look: Sunita Williams Visits Taj Mahal

    Ritu Beri Meets Prime Minister Modi, Calls Him A 'True Star'

    Ritu Beri Meets Prime Minister Modi, Calls Him A 'True Star'
    Internationally acclaimed Indian designer Ritu Beri met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and found him to be a “true star”.

    Ritu Beri Meets Prime Minister Modi, Calls Him A 'True Star'

    15-Year-Old Girl Stabbed 50 Times With Scissors Near Vrindavan

    15-Year-Old Girl Stabbed 50 Times With Scissors Near Vrindavan
    A 15-year-old girl is in a serious condition in a hospital after she was stabbed 50 times with a scissors early on Thursday morning by an unidentified assailant, police said.

    15-Year-Old Girl Stabbed 50 Times With Scissors Near Vrindavan

    Uproar Over Farmer's Suicide At AAP Rally, Narendra Modi Calls For Collective Steps

    Uproar Over Farmer's Suicide At AAP Rally, Narendra Modi Calls For Collective Steps
    The suicide by a Rajasthan farmer at an AAP rally in Delhi caused political ripples inside and outside parliament on Thursday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi calling for a collective resolve to end farmer suicides and the Aam Aadmi Party accusing the government of using Delhi Police to target it.

    Uproar Over Farmer's Suicide At AAP Rally, Narendra Modi Calls For Collective Steps

    Will End Child Labour, Arvind Kejriwal Assures Nobel Laureate Kailash Satyarthi

    Will End Child Labour, Arvind Kejriwal Assures Nobel Laureate Kailash Satyarthi
    Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Thursday met Nobel laureate and child rights activist Kailash Satyarthi and assured him of his government's best efforts to remove child labour from the national capital.

    Will End Child Labour, Arvind Kejriwal Assures Nobel Laureate Kailash Satyarthi

    Maulana Azad-Najma Photo-morphing Case Posted For August 26

    Maulana Azad-Najma Photo-morphing Case Posted For August 26
    The Delhi High Court on Thursday posted for August 26 a plea over alleged morphing of a photo of India's first education minister Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and union Minister Najma Heptulla.

    Maulana Azad-Najma Photo-morphing Case Posted For August 26