At least 36 writers including Nayantara Sahgal, Ashok Vajpeyi, had returned their state awards in protest against the Sahitya Akademi's "muted response" to killings of writers and rationalists.
New Delhi:
Continuing their protest against what they call growing intolerance, prominent writers including those who had returned their Sahitya Akademi awards today wrote to the National Academy of Letters urging it reinvent itself.
"This is an urgent matter at this moment of spiraling hatred and intolerance," a group of 41 writers said a statement to the Akademi President, and also asked the literary body to "reinvent" itself.
At least 36 writers including Nayantara Sahgal, Ashok Vajpeyi, had one after another returned their state awards in protest against the Akademi's "muted response" to killings of writers and rationalists, besides on incidents such as the Dadri lynching and the ink attack on aide to BJP veteran LK Advani Sudheendra Kulkarni's in Mumbai.
Five writers had also stepped down from the literary body's official positions.
Yielding to the writers' unrelenting protests, the Akademi had on October 23 strongly condemned the killings of Kannada writer MM Kalburgi and others and supported the right to freedom of speech of every writer in the country, while urging litterateurs to take back the awards that they have returned.
Noting that the resolution could have come earlier, the writers said, "but now that it has come, we urge you to build on this resolution to rethink how the Akademi can truly support its constituency of all writers in India and, by extension, the people of the country."
"As writers, we strongly feel that the Akademi can play a real and positive role by being independent and autonomous; and by responding to the situations in a strong, humane and robust manner," it said.
The authors, who have written the letter include Nayantara Sahgal, Ashok Vajpeyi, Ganesh Devy, Githa Hariharan, Gurbachan Singh Bhullar, K Satchidanandan, Keki Daruwalla, Krishn Sobti, Kum Veerabhadrappa, Sara Joseph, Shashi Deshpande and Waryam Sandhu, among others.
Commenting on the Akademi's appeal to writers to "take back" their awards and positions in the literary body, the writers said, "Whatever each writer decides, may we jointly appeal, in turn, that the Akademi reinvent itself to connect with the India we writers, our readers, and our fellow citizens live in."