Thursday, April 25, 2024
Advertisement
  1. You Are At:
  2. News
  3. India
  4. We had to dramatise our protest for visible impact: Ashok Vajpeyi

We had to dramatise our protest for visible impact: Ashok Vajpeyi

New Delhi: Authors like him had no option but to "dramatise" their protest against growing intolerance by returning awards for a "visible" impact, noted poet Ashok Vajpeyi said today.He also claimed that President Pranab Mukherjee

PTI PTI Updated on: November 26, 2015 21:07 IST
we had to dramatise our protest for visible impact ashok
we had to dramatise our protest for visible impact ashok vajpeyi

New Delhi: Authors like him had no option but to "dramatise" their protest against growing intolerance by returning awards for a "visible" impact, noted poet Ashok Vajpeyi said today.

He also claimed that President Pranab Mukherjee has expressed the view that "puraskar wapsi" was a way of expressing dissent.

Speaking on the sidelines of an event organised to mark Constitution Day here, he asserted that writers had raised voices against "intolerance" for one-and-half years, but no one took notice of it, compelling them to take such a step.

Vajpeyi, who was among the writers who returned their awards, accused RSS of "distorting" the definition of Hindu religion and insisted that the government should do its job of protecting interests of people.

"We had no option but to dramatise (protest) because no one paid attention to the issues we raised earlier. Had we not done so (returned awards), you would not be asking us questions (now).

"For a year-and-a-half, I had been writing on these issues in my column, but it had no impact. Thirty of us issued a statement, but majority of newspapers did not even carry it. So, we thought of this (returning award) as the socially visible action," Vajpeyi said.

Read Also: Return of awards triggered a debate on intolerance: President

He further claimed that during an interaction with Mukherjee yesterday, the President admitted that the return of awards by writers and intellectuals was "evidently spontaneous" and a way of protest that has triggered a nation-wide debate on the issue of intolerance.

"Now even the Parliament wants to discuss it," he added.

Vajpeyi also dismissed allegations that awards returning was a "motivated" protest and ridiculed Minister of State for External Affairs V K Singh for his reported charges that the demonstrators were "paid" for the same by Congress.

"The minister says from holy soil of US that Congress paid us for returning awards. Yesterday someone asked me that we were paid Rs 15 lakh for the protest. Forget my case, but will anyone be able to buy authors like Romila Thapar? She had refused to accept Padma award from Congress government. How can anyone question her integrity," he asked.

Vajpeyi termed the allegations as ones aimed at "character assassination" of demonstrators as the ruling class lacked logic.

The poet though maintained he will not take back the award once returned even if situation "improves" and added "puraskar wapsi" was never an issue for the scholars, but the "growing intolerance" in the country.

Advertisement

Read all the Breaking News Live on indiatvnews.com and Get Latest English News & Updates from India

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement