Arundhati, Bollywood figures return their awards
NEW DELHI: Booker Prize-winning novelist Arundhati Roy and at least 20 Bollywood award winners added their voices on Thursday to the artists, scientists and historians who have returned their national awards in protest against the government’s silence over the climate of religious intolerance and violence plaguing India.
Filmmaker Sanjay Kak, who was among film industry figures who returned their National Film Awards in Mumbai, said that those protesting “have deployed their visibility — and credibility — to articulate the growing anxiety of a vast number of Indians, those who may remain less visible but are no less perturbed at what is going on around them”.
Arundhati Roy, most famous for her 1997 novel “The God of Small Things”, said in a sharply worded editorial in The Indian Express that millions of minority people including Muslims, Christians and members of low-caste or tribal communities “are being forced to live in terror, unsure of when and from where the assault will come”.
Already a number of writers have returned awards to the country’s top literary institution, the Sahitya Akademi, over disappointment that it has not condemned the killings of atheist activists who campaigned against religious superstition or Muslims rumoured to have slaughtered cows or eaten cow meat.
Roy said she was “ashamed of what is going on in this country” and was pleased to return her 1989 national screenplay award and “to be a part of the political movement”.
“I believe what artists and intellectuals are doing right now is unprecedented, and does not have a historical parallel. It is politics by other means,” said Roy, who in recent years has become a civil rights activist.