The Asian Age

Malayalam writer withdraws novel

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Another novel has fallen victim to fundamenta­list wrath. Writer S. Hareesh has withdrawn his novel ‘ Meesha,’ being serialised in Mathrubhum­i weekly, following threats by radical elements allegedly for hurting the sentiments of believers of Hindu religion.

Hareesh, winner of the Kerala Sahitya Akademi award for short story for his anthology Adam last year, said he could no longer hold on against the threats raised on the social media and over phone against him and his family members.

It may be recalled that renowned Tamil writer Perumal Murugan had stopped writing in 2015 after alleged Hindu- groups protested against his novel Madhorubha­gan.

Mathrubhum­i weekly editor Kamal Ram Sajeev confirmed that the weekly had received a letter from Hareesh asking it not to publish the remaining parts of the novel. “Hareesh withdraws his novel Meesa, literature is being mob- lynched, darkest day in Kerala’s cultural history, lightless days to follow,” Sajeev tweeted.

Sajeev told this newspaper that the developmen­t showed where society has

Hareesh, winner of the Kerala Sahitya Akademi award, said he could no longer hold on against the threats raised on the social media and over phone against him and his family members

been heading to. In the past, M. T. Vasudevan Nair’s film ‘ Nirmalyam’ or O. V. Vijayan’s book Khashakint­e Ithihasam had portions which can be termed as hurting the religious sentiments by today’s standards. However, none had turned hostile to the writers, he said.

Hareesh had told the this newspaper a few days ago that most of the people who abused him on the Facebook had fake IDs. “They even abused my wife and mother,” said Hareesh.

Hareesh has switched off his phone after withdrawin­g the novel.

“I am too weak to take on the people who rule the country. I worked on the novel for five long years. I will publish the novel as a book when I feel that the people are mature enough for it,” Hareesh told a television channel.

Writer S. Saradakutt­y said on the Facebook, “a language which forces a writer to flee is poor. Its culture is obscene. I am ashamed.”

What offended the fundamenta­lists about the book is a conversati­on by a character, a pervert, with his friend, in which he ridicules young women who dress up in their best attire while visiting temples.

 ??  ?? S. Hareesh
S. Hareesh

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