Sahitya Akademi awards conferred on 24 artistes 
The Hindu
Thursday, Feb 23, 2006  
Staff Reporter 

Only two women writers among awardees 

NEW DELHI: Twenty-four writers in as many Indian languages were honoured
with the Sahitya Akademi awards for 2005 at the Kamani Auditorium here
on Tuesday. The awardees included only two women writers.  Addressing
the gathering as the chief guest, Rajya Sabha member and noted scholar,
Karan Singh, said that though the value system was being eroded the
country was forging ahead as a nation.  President of the Sahitya
Akademi, Gopi Chand Narang, called upon the writers to bring the
disturbed social, political and religious values back on track. He
warned that there was a threat to cultural ethosin the current milieu of
politicisation and mindless consumerism.  

While the youngest writer to receive the award for his work in Santhali
language was 42-year-old Jadumani Besra, the oldest recipient was
76-year-old Nepalese writer Krishna Singh Moktan.  G. Thilakavati and
Abburi Chaya Devi were the only women to get the award for their works
in Tamil and Telugu respectively. Vice-president of the Akademi, Sunil
Bandopadhyaya, expressed concern over the dwindling number of women
writers in the past few years. 

Marathi writer Arun Kolatkar was given the award posthumously. Other
recipients included Manohar Shyam Joshi for Hindi, Jabir Hussain (Urdu),
Suresh Dalal (Gujarati), Yeshe Dorjee Thongchi (Assamese), Raghvendra
Patil (Kannada), Chetan Swami (Rajasthan), Dholan Rahi (Sindhi), G.V.
Kakkanandan (Malayalam), N. Shivdas (Konkani), Gurbachan Singh Bhullar
(Punjabi), Krishna Sharma (Dogri), Vivekananda Thakur (Maithili),
Ramchandra Behera (Oriya), M. Nabakishore Singh (Manipuri) and Hamidi
Kashmir for Kashmiri.

~(^^)~

Avelino


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