Montreal Gazette

Indian writers return literary awards

Novelists, poets, playwright­s protest climate of intoleranc­e

- NIRMALA GEORGE

India’s literary community is disgusted. Dozens of writers say every day brings more evidence of intoleranc­e and bigotry going mainstream — a man lynched allegedly for eating beef, an atheist critic of Hindu idol worship gunned down — all met by a deafening silence from the government.

As of Wednesday, 41 novelists, essayists, playwright­s and poets had returned the awards they received from India’s prestigiou­s literary academy to protest what they call a growing climate of intoleranc­e under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.

The writers are also angry that India’s Sahitya Akademi, or National Academy of Letters, has said little about the murder of the well-known rationalis­t Malleshapp­a Kalburgi, an award-winning Kannada-language writer, gunned down in August for his writings against superstiti­on and false beliefs.

The government has dismissed the writers’ protests, questionin­g their motives and accusing them of being politicall­y motivated.

“If they say they are unable to write, let them stop writing,” culture minister Mahesh Sharma told reporters.

The writers say they cannot remain mute spectators to numerous incidents of communal violence, attacks on intellectu­als and increasing curbs on free speech.

“It’s become a question of an individual’s right to speak, to think, to write, to eat, to dress, to debate,” said Maya Krishna Rao, a playwright and theatre actress, who returned her award to the academy this week.

When Modi won a landslide victory in May 2014, many voiced fears of right-wing Hindu nationalis­m leading to communal violence and religious intoleranc­e. Modi, who had spent years dodging allegation­s of failing to stop riots in Gujarat state in which around 1,000 Muslims died, assured the nation that he was prime minister for all and would work for everyone.

But the last year has seen a rising crescendo of violence by Hindu fringe groups, trying to force a regressive Hindu nationalis­m on all, causing fear among India’s minority communitie­s.

State government­s ruled by the BJP have cracked down on cow slaughter, and even buffalo meat, a key source of protein for poor Muslims and lower caste Hindus, has become scarce. The ban on cow slaughter has given rise to Hindu vigilante groups and mob violence has risen. Last month a Muslim man was lynched in northern India over false rumours that his family had eaten beef for dinner.

On Wednesday, in response to persistent demands that the prime minister break his silence on the lynching, Modi said the mob killing was “sad and undesirabl­e,” but added that his government could not be blamed as the local administra­tion was responsibl­e for the state.

Last week, well-known writer Nayantara Sahgal returned her academy award, triggering the return of awards by other writers. Sahgal, a niece of India’s first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, is known as a fiercely independen­t political writer who had crossed swords with her cousin and another former prime minister, Indira Gandhi, when she imposed a state of emergency in India in the mid-’70s.

Referring to recent violence by Hindu groups, Sahgal said in an interview to The Indian Express newspaper that there was “an attempt to blow up the idea of India and to put in its place a kind of travesty of Hinduism, a kind of monocultur­e, which has nothing to do with Hinduism.”

Sahgal’s views are echoed across the literary spectrum.

Ghulam Nabi Khayal, a Kashmiri language writer, said earlier government­s would try to restore peace in situations of communal conflict.

“But that’s no more the case with the rise of Hindu right wing BJP,” Khayal said in Srinagar. “For the past one year, the Indian state has become suffocatin­g and extremely intolerant.”

The government was “now brazenly and institutio­nally backing this communal hatred,” he said, justifying his decision to return his award.

It wasn’t the first time that Hindu conservati­ves silenced an author or forced a book to be withdrawn.

In January, novelist Perumal Murugan went into hiding and said he had quit writing after his latest book sparked virulent protests.

Last year, Penguin India decided to destroy all copies of historian Wendy Doniger’s book on Hinduism after an outcry. In 2011, the state of Gujarat banned Joseph Lelyveld’s biography on pacifist freedom fighter Mohandas K. Gandhi, after reviews suggested Gandhi had a homosexual relationsh­ip.

Internatio­nally renowned novelist Salman Rushdie, who was born in Mumbai, said he had received nearly 10,000 hate messages after he came out in support of the writers. Rushdie said the government’s silence was allowing a new “degree of thuggish violence” in India.

BJP has often tried to distance itself from extremist fringe Hindu groups, but the failure to crack down has emboldened them.

“The prime minister remains silent about this reign of terror,” Sahgal said in a letter to the academy while returning her award.

 ?? SAURABH DAS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Indian playwright and theatre actress Maya Krishna Rao at her residence in New Delhi on Wednesday. More than 40 novelists, essayists, playwright­s and poets have returned awards they received from India’s prestigiou­s literary academy.
SAURABH DAS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Indian playwright and theatre actress Maya Krishna Rao at her residence in New Delhi on Wednesday. More than 40 novelists, essayists, playwright­s and poets have returned awards they received from India’s prestigiou­s literary academy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada