Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
India

24 Indian Writers, Filmmakers Return National Awards Over 'Intolerance'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Nov, 2015 11:16 AM
    In a collective move to draw the government's attention to their fears that the country's "robust democracy might be coming apart", 24 filmmakers and writers, including Arundhati Roy, Saeed Mirza and Kundan Shah, on Thursday returned their national awards. Countering this, veteran actor Anupam Kher has decided to lead a march against such protests.
     
    The 24 celebraties hoped their "symbolic gesture" persuades the government "to pay attention to our fears, that the warp and weft of our robust democracy might be coming apart in the current atmosphere".
     
    Besides Roy, Mirza and Shah, others who returned their awards on Thursday were Virendra Saini, Ranjan Palit, Tapan Bose, Shriprakash, Sanjay Kak, Pradip Krishan, Tarun Bhartiya, Amitabh Chakraborty, Madhusree Dutta, Anwar Jamal, Ajay Raina, Irene Dhar Malik, P.M. Satheesh, Satya Rai Nagpaul, Manoj Lobo, Rafiq Ellias, Sudheer Palsane, Vivek Sachidanand, Sudhakar Reddy Yakkanti, Manoj Nitharwal and Abhimanyu Dange.
     
    These were also among the 190 signatories to the letter to the government to pay heed to the "reasonable" demands of the FTII students, who ended their strike after a "protracted struggle of four months".
     
    A statement released to the media on Thursday stressed that this is their way to protest the government's handling of the FTII issue.
     
    The 24 signatories pointed out their disappointment at "how the ruling party's leaders and supporters abused" the 12 filmmakers who returned their national honours earlier, and "belittled their gesture".
     
    "This has been the consistent response of the powers that be towards the writers, academics, scientists, historians, filmmakers and artists, who have expressed their dismay over the increasing climate of intolerance," the statement read.
     
     
    As "concerned citizens of the country whose work has been recognised by the government of India", they have said that by returning their honours, they are "not rejecting the recognition" and neither are they "belittling the honour".
     
    "We are using the one possibility of making you (the government) pay attention to our plea, resolve the crisis at FTII, ensure that our prestigious right to Freedom of Speech is unambiguosly protected," they said.
     
    In an article published in the Indian Express, "The God of Small Things" author Arundhati Roy said she was returning her 1989 National Award for Best Screenplay to protest "ideological viciousness" in the country.
     
    She said she was not shocked by what was happening in the nation, and termed the lynching of a man over beef-eating rumour in Dadri in Uttar Pradesh as a "deeper malaise".
     
    "These horrific murders are only a symptom of a deeper malaise. Life is hell for the living too. Whole populations - millions of Dalits, adivasis, Muslims and Christians - are being forced to live in terror, unsure of when and from where the assault will come," she said.
     
    After the Dadri incident, over 40 writers, artistes and 10 filmmakers have returned their awards to record their protest over the rising incidents of intolerance in the country.
     
    On Saturday, actor and BJP supporter Anupam Kher has invited all Indians to march with him to Rashtrapati Bhavan to protest the voices that are being raised over "intolerance" in the country.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Taking IT Route, Haryana Gets Better Of Graft, Touts

    Taking IT Route, Haryana Gets Better Of Graft, Touts
    Revenue or tehsil offices in states are dreaded by most people as they bring to mind images of corruption, harassment and never-ending queues. But in Haryana, thanks to use of information technology (IT), a quiet change is taking place.

    Taking IT Route, Haryana Gets Better Of Graft, Touts

    Baby Survives Falling On To Rail Tracks After Indian Mother Gives Birth In Moving Train's Toilet

    Baby Survives Falling On To Rail Tracks After Indian Mother Gives Birth In Moving Train's Toilet
    A baby boy delivered inside a toilet of a train by a woman slipped through the flush pipe and fell on railway track but survived miraculously in Rajasthan's Hanumangarh district, a railway police official said Monday.

    Baby Survives Falling On To Rail Tracks After Indian Mother Gives Birth In Moving Train's Toilet

    Withdraw 'Objectionable' Fevikwik Ad: Hindu Group

    Withdraw 'Objectionable' Fevikwik Ad: Hindu Group
    The Hindu Janajagruti Samiti Monday demanded immediate withdrawal of the "objectionable" advertisement for an adhesive aired on various TV channels depicting an Indian jawan fixing the shoes of a Pakistani soldier and an apology from the manufacturer for the "extremely tasteless" ad.

    Withdraw 'Objectionable' Fevikwik Ad: Hindu Group

    Entered Politics To Serve The City, Not For Power: Bedi

    Entered Politics To Serve The City, Not For Power: Bedi
    Accepting full responsibility for the BJP's crushing defeat in the Delhi assembly elections, the party's chief ministerial candidate Kiran Bedi Monday said she opted for politics "not for position or power but for serving the city".

    Entered Politics To Serve The City, Not For Power: Bedi

    Roses, Wine And Dine: Indians Celebrate Valentine Day With Fervour

    Roses, Wine And Dine: Indians Celebrate Valentine Day With Fervour
    Couples smiling, walking hand-in-hand, holding bouquets of red roses or bags with gifts and wearing a smile were a common sight across cafes, eateries and streets across India on Valentine's Day, which was celebrated fervently by youngsters Saturday, despite strict warning from Hindu fringe groups.

    Roses, Wine And Dine: Indians Celebrate Valentine Day With Fervour

    Arvind Kejriwal Promises Corruption-free Delhi, End 'VIP Culture'

    Arvind Kejriwal Promises Corruption-free Delhi, End 'VIP Culture'
    Sounding more mature and pragmatic in his second innings, AAP leader and Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal Saturday pledged to make Delhi India's first corruption-free city and end "VIP culture" even as he warned his colleagues against "arrogance" after his party's thumping election win.

    Arvind Kejriwal Promises Corruption-free Delhi, End 'VIP Culture'