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Indian writer Arundhati Roy returns National Award in protest


You aren't getting the point here- Kalaburgi was killed in AUgust and for two months the Academy refused to issue even two lines of condemnation against killing of rationalist writers like him. Hell they refused it. Basically the government's effort was to actually say that it is acceptable that he died because he countered religious propaganda. Two months and 20+ authors return the award and then when it becomes embarrassing they finally issue a face saving condemnation on 23rd October. WHy do you think this grew into a massive protest? Are they trying to say that all these Sadhus and Swamis now need to get a free run? That if you die countering them it's all right?
 
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Even Gulzar has returned his award in protest against Hindu terrorism against indian Muslims so your emotional comment holds no ground

You have always misunderstood terrorism. This is your national illness. That is why you guys are there in a position where you are and trying to discover terrorism in isolated crime ignoring heneous state aponsored terrorism in Baluchistan, sind and and in neighboring countries.
 
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All of them have had a lot of MALAI during Congress Government... plum postings... rich trusts and foreign trips.. now under BJP government they are getting NADA.. so they are taking out their frustration like this.

this is unfortunate to see the supporters of hindutva are even not sparing writers and defending hindu terrorism anyway about 41 writers have returned their awards so if you have any proof for your claims then please do post


Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out
- See more at: Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out | The Indian Express





Express News Service | Chandigarh/ Guwahati/ New Delhi/ Nagpur/ Kolkata | Updated: October 14, 2015 8:04 am


Dalip Kaur Tiwana
Likening the “atrocities committed on Sikhs in 1984” to attacks on Muslims now, Dalip Kaur Tiwana, a novelist and short story writer from Punjab, announced Tuesday that she will return her Padma Shri, the fourth highest civilian award in the country.

The announcement came as several other writers decided to return their Sahitya Akademi awards, and the RSS hit back, calling them “self-proclaimed contractors of intellect”.


Tiwana, 80, is the first writer to give up a Padma award as part of a protest which has seen about 25 people across the country return their Akademi awards. The writers are protesting against the killing of a man in Dadri over rumours of cow slaughter and the murder of writer and rationalist M M Kalburgi.

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- See more at: Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out | The Indian Express

Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out | The Indian Express

You have always misunderstood terrorism. This is your national illness. That is why you guys are there in a position where you are and trying to discover terrorism in isolated crime ignoring heneous state aponsored terrorism in Baluchistan, sind and and in neighboring countries.

:) well we are pulling out while you are slowly submerging into it under hindu rule. anyway balochistan can be compared to indian north east. hindutva terrorism is not isolated crime rather organized hindu terrorism
 
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this is unfortunate to see the supporters of hindutva are even not sparing writers and defending hindu terrorism anyway about 41 writers have returned their awards so if you have any proof for your claims then please do post


Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out
- See more at: Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out | The Indian Express





Express News Service | Chandigarh/ Guwahati/ New Delhi/ Nagpur/ Kolkata | Updated: October 14, 2015 8:04 am


Dalip Kaur Tiwana
Likening the “atrocities committed on Sikhs in 1984” to attacks on Muslims now, Dalip Kaur Tiwana, a novelist and short story writer from Punjab, announced Tuesday that she will return her Padma Shri, the fourth highest civilian award in the country.

The announcement came as several other writers decided to return their Sahitya Akademi awards, and the RSS hit back, calling them “self-proclaimed contractors of intellect”.


Tiwana, 80, is the first writer to give up a Padma award as part of a protest which has seen about 25 people across the country return their Akademi awards. The writers are protesting against the killing of a man in Dadri over rumours of cow slaughter and the murder of writer and rationalist M M Kalburgi.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

RELATED ARTICLE
- See more at: Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out | The Indian Express

Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out | The Indian Express

No one care in india if they give back award or not.They are just attention seekers nothing more..

By the way majority got award during UPA regime.So they should be loyal to them in some form...
 
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this is unfortunate to see the supporters of hindutva are even not sparing writers and defending hindu terrorism anyway about 41 writers have returned their awards so if you have any proof for your claims then please do post


Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out
- See more at: Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out | The Indian Express





Express News Service | Chandigarh/ Guwahati/ New Delhi/ Nagpur/ Kolkata | Updated: October 14, 2015 8:04 am


Dalip Kaur Tiwana
Likening the “atrocities committed on Sikhs in 1984” to attacks on Muslims now, Dalip Kaur Tiwana, a novelist and short story writer from Punjab, announced Tuesday that she will return her Padma Shri, the fourth highest civilian award in the country.

The announcement came as several other writers decided to return their Sahitya Akademi awards, and the RSS hit back, calling them “self-proclaimed contractors of intellect”.


Tiwana, 80, is the first writer to give up a Padma award as part of a protest which has seen about 25 people across the country return their Akademi awards. The writers are protesting against the killing of a man in Dadri over rumours of cow slaughter and the murder of writer and rationalist M M Kalburgi.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

RELATED ARTICLE
- See more at: Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out | The Indian Express

Writer Dalip Kaur Tiwana returns Padma Shri, RSS lashes out | The Indian Express



:) well we are pulling out while you are slowly submerging into it under hindu rule. anyway balochistan can be compared to indian north east. hindutva terrorism is not isolated crime rather organized hindu terrorism

You don't even know me .. and you label me as a Hindutva supporter... wow.. very perceptive of you. I am one of the most aggressive baiter of right wingers.. but current race of returning awards has nothing to do with Hindutva or rising intolerance within the country... its about a pool of left wingers who have been privileged under previous government reacting to the current situation of not getting any attention by current government... nothing more ..nothing less... More than 90% of the people returning awards are the ones who signed petitions and open letters against Narendra Modi becoming prime minister of India.
 
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EVEN GULZAR :lol:
We don't care about gulzar. His opinion means nothing to us.


They understand terrorism the best.
Muslims die = Terrorism (but only when done by Non Muslims in self defence)

Infidels die = "Social Service"
ahh my bad i dint notice he is a Muslim but wait let us check if others are also muslims


41 writers return Indian award over ‘rising intolerance’
AFP | AP — PUBLISHED OCT 14, 2015 02:32PM




NEW DELHI: When a gang of thugs ambushed a Mumbai book launch by dousing the compere in ink, India's literati saw the attack as yet another blot on the country's reputation for tolerance since Narendra Modi came to power and dozens of writers returned India's highest literary honor to protest growing climate of intolerance in the country.

"Such attacks may have happened earlier too but this time it's different," said celebrated writer and historian Nayantara Sahgal, following Monday's incident.

"Now the ruling ideology is Hindutva, which, in a classic fascist tactic, demands that all Indians think alike," Sahgal told AFP.

The 88-year-old niece of India's first premier Jawaharlal Nehru caused a storm earlier this month when she handed back her 'Sahitya Akademi Award' which is bestowed by the government to honour India's leading writers.

As of Wednesday, 41 writers from across the country have since followed suit, several of them saying they were protesting the "rising culture of intolerance" since the right-wing Modi won a landslide election last year.

The novelists, essayists, playwrights and poets had returned the awards they received from India's prestigious literary academy, saying they cannot remain silent about numerous incidents of communal violence or attacks on intellectuals across the country over the past year.

The writers, who write in English as well as regional languages, are also angry that India's National Academy of Letters has said little about the attack on the well-known rationalist Malleshappa Kalburgi, an award-winning writer in the Kannada language gunned down in August for his writings against superstition and false beliefs.

India's overwhelmingly left-leaning cultural elite has never been a fan of Modi or his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which has an unashamedly Hindu nationalist agenda.

But while there was an uneasy truce between the two sides during Modi's first year in office, a series of recent episodes have prompted many to warn of a major threat to India's cultural and religious pluralism.

'Not my India'
The killing of a leading rationalist author in the southern state of Karnataka in August sent a shiver down writers' spines, while the recent lynching of a Muslim accused of eating beef caused further deep unease.

Police have detained for questioning several Hindu activists for applauding writer MM Kalburgi's murder.

"I cannot accept, leave aside understand, that in my country scholars are murdered because they have campaigned against religious superstition or because they've criticised Hindu idol worship," the prominent television journalist Karan Thapar wrote recently in The Hindustan Times.

"And I'm appalled that a man is barbarically battered to death for eating beef or possessing it in his fridge. This is not my India. It can never be. And, yet, it is," Thapar said.

Comments by Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma pledging to cleanse India of "cultural pollution" from the West, and that the Bible and Quran are "not central to the soul of India" in the same way as Hindu holy books, have fuelled fears that the country is being run by religious ideologues.

The government has also been accused of appointing Hindu nationalists to prominent education and cultural positions, including chairman of the Film and Television Institute of India.

Sharma, who is a close confidant of Modi, insisted the government would only tolerate protest that fell within "the democratic framework of our constitution", and condemned the murder in Karnataka.

"As a minister, as a person, even if a single person is killed in any part of the country it pains us," he told AFP at his New Delhi office.

"We criticise it in the strongest possible words. It should not happen." But asked to specifically condemn this week's ink attack in Mumbai, carried out during the launch of a book by a former Pakistan foreign minister, Sharma would only respond: "It should be (a) democratic protest."

Several senior BJP members who are outside Modi's inner circle have voiced disquiet at recent events, with former deputy prime minister Lal Krishna Advani condemning "increases in cases of intolerance".

Modi, a prolific Twitter user, has drawn widespread flak for either remaining uncharacteristically silent or being conspicuously slow to react to the acts of violence.

Rushdie weighs in
"I think what's crept into Indian life now is a degree of thuggish violence, which is new," Indian-born author Salman Rushdie told the NDTV network. "And it seems to be, I have to say, given permission by the silence of official bodies... by the silence of the prime minister's office."

"Modi is a very talkative gentleman, he has a lot to say on a lot of subjects and it would be very good to hear what he has to say about all this," added the British-based Booker prize winner who endorsed Sahgal's move to return her Sahitya Akademi award.

On Wednesday, Modi broke his silence over the killing of an alleged beef-eater in the volatile state of Uttar Pradesh, describing the September 28 incident as "unfortunate".

But the premier in the same interview with a local newspaper, also accused the opposition, not the BJP, of polarising the issue along communal lines.

Modi's appeal last week for peace between Hindus and Muslims, without specifically referring to any incident, sparked criticism that more was needed from the premier in the wake of the lynching.

Sharma's response to the criticism is that law and order is the responsibility of state governments and accusations that Modi's government is partly to blame says more about the political leanings of its critics.

"Before this government came, there were many high-profile murders, incidents, and riots and none of these people said anything. So you have to ask yourself why they are only raising it now?"
 
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ahh my bad i dint notice he is a Muslim but wait let us check if others are also muslims


41 writers return Indian award over ‘rising intolerance’
AFP | AP — PUBLISHED OCT 14, 2015 02:32PM




NEW DELHI: When a gang of thugs ambushed a Mumbai book launch by dousing the compere in ink, India's literati saw the attack as yet another blot on the country's reputation for tolerance since Narendra Modi came to power and dozens of writers returned India's highest literary honor to protest growing climate of intolerance in the country.

"Such attacks may have happened earlier too but this time it's different," said celebrated writer and historian Nayantara Sahgal, following Monday's incident.

"Now the ruling ideology is Hindutva, which, in a classic fascist tactic, demands that all Indians think alike," Sahgal told AFP.

The 88-year-old niece of India's first premier Jawaharlal Nehru caused a storm earlier this month when she handed back her 'Sahitya Akademi Award' which is bestowed by the government to honour India's leading writers.

As of Wednesday, 41 writers from across the country have since followed suit, several of them saying they were protesting the "rising culture of intolerance" since the right-wing Modi won a landslide election last year.

The novelists, essayists, playwrights and poets had returned the awards they received from India's prestigious literary academy, saying they cannot remain silent about numerous incidents of communal violence or attacks on intellectuals across the country over the past year.

The writers, who write in English as well as regional languages, are also angry that India's National Academy of Letters has said little about the attack on the well-known rationalist Malleshappa Kalburgi, an award-winning writer in the Kannada language gunned down in August for his writings against superstition and false beliefs.

India's overwhelmingly left-leaning cultural elite has never been a fan of Modi or his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which has an unashamedly Hindu nationalist agenda.

But while there was an uneasy truce between the two sides during Modi's first year in office, a series of recent episodes have prompted many to warn of a major threat to India's cultural and religious pluralism.

'Not my India'
The killing of a leading rationalist author in the southern state of Karnataka in August sent a shiver down writers' spines, while the recent lynching of a Muslim accused of eating beef caused further deep unease.

Police have detained for questioning several Hindu activists for applauding writer MM Kalburgi's murder.

"I cannot accept, leave aside understand, that in my country scholars are murdered because they have campaigned against religious superstition or because they've criticised Hindu idol worship," the prominent television journalist Karan Thapar wrote recently in The Hindustan Times.

"And I'm appalled that a man is barbarically battered to death for eating beef or possessing it in his fridge. This is not my India. It can never be. And, yet, it is," Thapar said.

Comments by Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma pledging to cleanse India of "cultural pollution" from the West, and that the Bible and Quran are "not central to the soul of India" in the same way as Hindu holy books, have fuelled fears that the country is being run by religious ideologues.

The government has also been accused of appointing Hindu nationalists to prominent education and cultural positions, including chairman of the Film and Television Institute of India.

Sharma, who is a close confidant of Modi, insisted the government would only tolerate protest that fell within "the democratic framework of our constitution", and condemned the murder in Karnataka.

"As a minister, as a person, even if a single person is killed in any part of the country it pains us," he told AFP at his New Delhi office.

"We criticise it in the strongest possible words. It should not happen." But asked to specifically condemn this week's ink attack in Mumbai, carried out during the launch of a book by a former Pakistan foreign minister, Sharma would only respond: "It should be (a) democratic protest."

Several senior BJP members who are outside Modi's inner circle have voiced disquiet at recent events, with former deputy prime minister Lal Krishna Advani condemning "increases in cases of intolerance".

Modi, a prolific Twitter user, has drawn widespread flak for either remaining uncharacteristically silent or being conspicuously slow to react to the acts of violence.

Rushdie weighs in
"I think what's crept into Indian life now is a degree of thuggish violence, which is new," Indian-born author Salman Rushdie told the NDTV network. "And it seems to be, I have to say, given permission by the silence of official bodies... by the silence of the prime minister's office."

"Modi is a very talkative gentleman, he has a lot to say on a lot of subjects and it would be very good to hear what he has to say about all this," added the British-based Booker prize winner who endorsed Sahgal's move to return her Sahitya Akademi award.

On Wednesday, Modi broke his silence over the killing of an alleged beef-eater in the volatile state of Uttar Pradesh, describing the September 28 incident as "unfortunate".

But the premier in the same interview with a local newspaper, also accused the opposition, not the BJP, of polarising the issue along communal lines.

Modi's appeal last week for peace between Hindus and Muslims, without specifically referring to any incident, sparked criticism that more was needed from the premier in the wake of the lynching.

Sharma's response to the criticism is that law and order is the responsibility of state governments and accusations that Modi's government is partly to blame says more about the political leanings of its critics.

"Before this government came, there were many high-profile murders, incidents, and riots and none of these people said anything. So you have to ask yourself why they are only raising it now?"

Because they are soo liberals that they are in favour of freedom of speech,freedom of expression(for them public kissing no problem) etc...Don't you know the liberals attitude in many parts of the world ! They are liberals and self proclaimed intellectuals
 
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No one care in india if they give back award or not.They are just attention seekers nothing more..

By the way majority got award during UPA regime.So they should be loyal to them in some form...

a writer of 80 years of age does not care for attention . Anyway if anybody in India does not care for rising hindutva terrorism and does not approve of conscience based peaceful protest then I wish you such hindutva intolerance forever. May you see such rule forever
 
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ahh my bad i dint notice he is a Muslim but wait let us check if others are also muslims


41 writers return Indian award over ‘rising intolerance’
AFP | AP — PUBLISHED OCT 14, 2015 02:32PM




NEW DELHI: When a gang of thugs ambushed a Mumbai book launch by dousing the compere in ink, India's literati saw the attack as yet another blot on the country's reputation for tolerance since Narendra Modi came to power and dozens of writers returned India's highest literary honor to protest growing climate of intolerance in the country.

"Such attacks may have happened earlier too but this time it's different," said celebrated writer and historian Nayantara Sahgal, following Monday's incident.

"Now the ruling ideology is Hindutva, which, in a classic fascist tactic, demands that all Indians think alike," Sahgal told AFP.

The 88-year-old niece of India's first premier Jawaharlal Nehru caused a storm earlier this month when she handed back her 'Sahitya Akademi Award' which is bestowed by the government to honour India's leading writers.

As of Wednesday, 41 writers from across the country have since followed suit, several of them saying they were protesting the "rising culture of intolerance" since the right-wing Modi won a landslide election last year.

The novelists, essayists, playwrights and poets had returned the awards they received from India's prestigious literary academy, saying they cannot remain silent about numerous incidents of communal violence or attacks on intellectuals across the country over the past year.

The writers, who write in English as well as regional languages, are also angry that India's National Academy of Letters has said little about the attack on the well-known rationalist Malleshappa Kalburgi, an award-winning writer in the Kannada language gunned down in August for his writings against superstition and false beliefs.

India's overwhelmingly left-leaning cultural elite has never been a fan of Modi or his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which has an unashamedly Hindu nationalist agenda.

But while there was an uneasy truce between the two sides during Modi's first year in office, a series of recent episodes have prompted many to warn of a major threat to India's cultural and religious pluralism.

'Not my India'
The killing of a leading rationalist author in the southern state of Karnataka in August sent a shiver down writers' spines, while the recent lynching of a Muslim accused of eating beef caused further deep unease.

Police have detained for questioning several Hindu activists for applauding writer MM Kalburgi's murder.

"I cannot accept, leave aside understand, that in my country scholars are murdered because they have campaigned against religious superstition or because they've criticised Hindu idol worship," the prominent television journalist Karan Thapar wrote recently in The Hindustan Times.

"And I'm appalled that a man is barbarically battered to death for eating beef or possessing it in his fridge. This is not my India. It can never be. And, yet, it is," Thapar said.

Comments by Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma pledging to cleanse India of "cultural pollution" from the West, and that the Bible and Quran are "not central to the soul of India" in the same way as Hindu holy books, have fuelled fears that the country is being run by religious ideologues.

The government has also been accused of appointing Hindu nationalists to prominent education and cultural positions, including chairman of the Film and Television Institute of India.

Sharma, who is a close confidant of Modi, insisted the government would only tolerate protest that fell within "the democratic framework of our constitution", and condemned the murder in Karnataka.

"As a minister, as a person, even if a single person is killed in any part of the country it pains us," he told AFP at his New Delhi office.

"We criticise it in the strongest possible words. It should not happen." But asked to specifically condemn this week's ink attack in Mumbai, carried out during the launch of a book by a former Pakistan foreign minister, Sharma would only respond: "It should be (a) democratic protest."

Several senior BJP members who are outside Modi's inner circle have voiced disquiet at recent events, with former deputy prime minister Lal Krishna Advani condemning "increases in cases of intolerance".

Modi, a prolific Twitter user, has drawn widespread flak for either remaining uncharacteristically silent or being conspicuously slow to react to the acts of violence.

Rushdie weighs in
"I think what's crept into Indian life now is a degree of thuggish violence, which is new," Indian-born author Salman Rushdie told the NDTV network. "And it seems to be, I have to say, given permission by the silence of official bodies... by the silence of the prime minister's office."

"Modi is a very talkative gentleman, he has a lot to say on a lot of subjects and it would be very good to hear what he has to say about all this," added the British-based Booker prize winner who endorsed Sahgal's move to return her Sahitya Akademi award.

On Wednesday, Modi broke his silence over the killing of an alleged beef-eater in the volatile state of Uttar Pradesh, describing the September 28 incident as "unfortunate".

But the premier in the same interview with a local newspaper, also accused the opposition, not the BJP, of polarising the issue along communal lines.

Modi's appeal last week for peace between Hindus and Muslims, without specifically referring to any incident, sparked criticism that more was needed from the premier in the wake of the lynching.

Sharma's response to the criticism is that law and order is the responsibility of state governments and accusations that Modi's government is partly to blame says more about the political leanings of its critics.

"Before this government came, there were many high-profile murders, incidents, and riots and none of these people said anything. So you have to ask yourself why they are only raising it now?"

I will be more than happy if they return their Indian Nationality as well :D :D :D
 
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.. More than 90% of the people returning awards are the ones who signed petitions and open letters against Narendra Modi becoming prime minister of India.

And these are the same people who signed mercy petition for scums like Yaqoob Memon and Afzal guru :D :D :D
 
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Because they are soo liberals that they are in favour of freedom of speech,freedom of expression(for them public kissing no problem) etc...Don't you know the liberals attitude in many parts of the world ! They are liberals and self proclaimed intellectuals

You need to come up with laws to define what is freedom of expression and what is not and also you have to define where your freedom of expression is literally violating any law and creating public disorder, having said that I would also add that it does not mean you should support attacking literary persons
 
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You need to come up with laws to define what is freedom of expression and what is not and also you have to define where your freedom of expression is literally violating any law and creating public disorder, having said that I would also add that it does not mean you should support attacking literary persons

This is coming from a country where youtube is banned, when minority community are declining and force conversion as a part of policy,no minority never ever come on top most position of that country,always discriminating people based on community,no reservation for minority.

Buddy don't lecture us what we have to do, just look on your own countries track record against minority is a proof that you people are the least one in the world to lecture others on communal harmony.
 
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You need to come up with laws to define what is freedom of expression and what is not and also you have to define where your freedom of expression is literally violating any law and creating public disorder, having said that I would also add that it does not mean you should support attacking literary persons
Have you seen any of the so called Intellectuals getting booked for returning awards.. or for making acquisitions against government doing nothing around so called intolerance... all of them are openly allowed to rant and claim victim...and they are givn an active media as a platform...how else you define freedom of expression....no one is supporting attack on anyone...
 
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