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Google pays tribute to author Mahasweta Devi via doodle

The Indian Bengali fiction writer and social activist was honoured with the Jnanpith Award in 1996.

Google remembers Mahasweta Devi Google remembers Mahasweta Devi

Google often pays tribute to eminent personalities or reminds us of important days via its colourful doodle. Today, it remembered one of modern India's pre-eminent writers and activists, Mahasweta Devi with its doodle.

The search giant is celebrating the Indian Bengali fiction writer and social activist, who was honoured with the Jnanpith Award in 1996, with a new Google Doodle, marking what would have been her 92nd birthday. Well-known for her novels and short stories that limn the plights and struggles of India's tribal people and women, Devi died at the age of 90 in Kolkata's Belle Vue Clinic hospital because of the multiple organ failure.

"The reason and inspiration for my writing are those people who are exploited and used, and yet do not accept defeat", she had said. In recent years, she raised her voice against forcible land acquisition in Singur and Nandigram. She had once said, "My India still lives behind a curtain of darkness".

Mahasweta Devi (PC: Twitter/ Maha info centre)

Over the years, several of her novels have been turned into films. Award winning films Hazar Chaurasi ki Ma and Rudali were based on her novels. Her other literary landmarks, Aranyer Adhikar or The Occupation of the Forest, Imaginary Maps, Breast Givers, Our Non-Veg Cow, won her every literary award in India, the Padma Vibhushan and the Magsaysay.

(With ANI inputs)

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