Gujarat cops knock at writer Ganesh Devy's doors after he returns Sahitya Akademi Award

Gujarat-based writer Ganesh Devy, who last week returned his Sahitya Akademi Award, has claimed that he is now being hounded by police.

Gujarat cops knock at writer Ganesh Devy's doors after he returns Sahitya Akademi Award
Image courtesy: DNA

Vadodara: Gujarat-based writer Ganesh Devy, who last week returned his Sahitya Akademi Award amid similar moves by other writers, has claimed that he is now being hounded by police.

As per a news channel, Devy was visited by Vadodara cops after he returned the award to express solidarity with the writers, who have recently given up their awards to condemn the "shrinking space for free expression and growing intolerance towards differences of opinion" in the country.

Not only this, even an Intelligence official called on Devy.

Also Read: Writers returning awards is 'manufactured revolt', says Arun Jaitley

As per the writer, he was asked whether writers in the country had launched a campaign against the Central government.

A number of writers, including Nayantara Sahgal and Ashok Vajpeyi, have returned their Sahitya Akademi awards in the recent days.

"It is high time that writers take a stand," Devy had said in a letter addressed to the president of Sahitya Akademi Prof Viswanath Pratap Tiwari.

"It is with utmost regret that I would like to convey to you that I wish to return the 1993 Sahitya Akademi Award given in the category of books in English to my work 'After Amnesia' (1992)," he had written in the letter.

Devy, the founder director of the Vadodara-based Bhasha Research and Publication Center, said, "I do this as an expression of my solidarity with several eminent writers, who have recently returned their awards to highlight their concern and anxiety over the shrinking space for free expression and growing intolerance towards difference of opinion.

"These eminent writers have already stated their concerns in statements sent to you as well as through media interviews and discussions. I need not, therefore, state again what has already been conveyed to you."

"I hope you will give this country the assurance that it is the writers and thinkers who have come forward to rescue sense, good-will, values, tolerance and mutual respect in all past ages. Had this not been so, why would we be remembering the great saint poets who made our modern Indian languages what they are today?

"The great idea of India is based on a profound tolerance for diversity and difference. They far surpass everything else in importance. That we have come to a stage when the honourable Rastrapatiji had to remind the nation that these must be seen as non-negotiable foundations of India should be enough of a reason for the Sahitya Akademi to act," Devy said in the letter.

Nayantara Sahgal, the 88-year-old niece of Jawaharlal Nehru, had announced her decision to return her Sahitya Akademi award. In an open letter titled "Unmaking of India", she had referred to the Dadri lynching of a Muslim man by a mob over suspicion of eating beef, and also the killings of Kannada writer MM Kalburgi and rationalists Narendra Dabholkar and Govind Pansare. Sahgal had also questioned the silence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi on these incidents.

Former Lalit Kala Akademi chairman Ashok Vajpeyi has also returned the Sahitya Akademi Award to protest the "assault on right to freedom of both life and expression".

Meanwhile, ANI reported today that Kannada writers K Neela, RK Hudugi and Kashinath Ambalgi have also decided to return their Sahitya Akademi awards alleging rising intolerance in the country.

(With PTI inputs)

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