Английская Википедия:Annabhau Sathe
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use Indian English Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox person Dr.Tukaram Bhaurao Sathe (1 August 1920 – 18 July 1969), popularly known as Anna Bhau Sathe (Marathi pronunciation: [əɳːaːbʱaːu saːʈʰe]), was a social reformer, folk poet, and writer from Maharashtra, India.[1] Sathe was a Dalit, born into the untouchable community, and his upbringing and identity were central to his writing and political activism.[2][3] He is credited as a founding father of 'Dalit Literature' [4][5][6] and played vital role in Samyukta Maharashtra Movement. He was influenced by Chatrapati Shivaji Maharaj founder of Maratha Empire. He wrote songs about Shivaji Maharaj. He was one of early people from India who sung songs of Shivaji Maharaj crossing the boundaries of sea and land in Russia. He reached Russia on 14 September. He was invited by the Indo Soviet Cultural Society.
Early life
He was born on 1 August 1920, in Wategaon village, part of present-day Maharashtra's Sangli district, to a family that belonged to the untouchable Matang caste.[7] Members of the caste used to play traditional folk instruments in People Awarnes performances.
Annabhau Sathe did not study beyond class four.[8] He migrated from Satara to Bombay, present-day Mumbai, in 1931, on foot, over a period of six months, following a drought in the countryside. In Mumbai, Sathe undertook a range of odd jobs. Annabhau Sathe was posthumously conferred with D.Litt degree by Mahatma Gandhi Memorial University (MGMU) Chatrapati Sambhaji Nagar on 27 November 2022.
Writings
Inspite of having no formal scholastic training, Sathe wrote 35 novels in the Marathi language.They include Fakira (1959), which is in its 19th edition and received a state government award in 1961. It is a novel which tells the story of the protagonist; a stout young guy, named Fakira, his feat, his crusading for the rights of people of his community in the British Raj and his enmity towards the evil forces in the village. However, the cause from where the story progresses is the religious practice or ritual called 'Jogin' which gives a way to further actions. There are 15 collections of Sathe's short stories, of which a large number have been translated into many Indian and as many as 27 non-Indian languages. Besides novels and short stories, Sathe wrote a play, a travelogue on Russia, 12 screenplays, and 10 ballads in the Marathi powada style.[1]
Sathe's use of folkloric narrative styles like powada and Spiritual Songs helped popularise and make his work accessible to many communities. In Fakira, Sathe portrays Fakira, the protagonist, revolting against the rural orthodox system and British Raj to save his community from utter starvation.[1] The protagonist and his community are subsequently arrested and tortured by British officers, and Fakira is eventually killed by hanging.[9]
The urban environment of Mumbai significantly influenced his writings, which depict it as a dystopian milieu. Aarti Wani describes two of his songs – "Mumbai Chi Fakkad" (Song of Mumbai) and "Mumbai cha Girni Kamgar" (Mumbai's Mill-hand) – as depicting a city that is "rapacious, exploitative, unequal and unjust".[10]
Politics
Sathe was initially influenced by communist ideology.[9] Together with writers such as D. N. Gavankar and Amar Shaikh, he was a member of Lal Bawta Kalapathak (Red Flag Cultural Squad), the cultural wing of the Communist Party of India,[7] and a Tamasha theatrical troupe that challenged government thinking. It had been active in the 1940s and, according to Tevia Abrams, was "the most exciting theatrical phenomenon of the 1950s" before communism in India generally fragmented in the aftermath of independence.[11] He was a significant figure also in the Indian People's Theatre Association, which was a cultural wing of the Communist Party of India,[12] and in the Samyukta Maharashtra Movement, which sought the creation of a separate Marathi-speaking state through a linguistic division of the extant Bombay State.[10]
Sathe used his stories to amplify the life experiences of Dalits and workers. In his inaugural speech at the first Dalit Sahitya Sammelan, a literary conference that he founded in Bombay in 1958, he said that, "the earth is not balanced on the snake's head but on the strength of Dalit and working-class people," emphasising the importance of Dalit and working-class people in global structures.
He said that "Dalit writers are entailed with the responsibility of liberating and shielding Dalits from the existing worldly and Hindu tortures as the long standing conventional beliefs cannot be destroyed instantly."[9]
Legacy
Sathe has become an icon to Dalits, and especially the Mang caste. The Lokshahir Annabhau Sathe Development Corporation was established in 1985 to further the cause of the Mang people, and women in local branches of the Manavi Hakk Abhiyan (Human Rights Campaign, a Mantang body)[13] organise jayanti (processions) in his name and those of Mahatma Jyotiba Phule and Savitribai Phule.[14] Political parties, such as the Indian National Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party-Shiv Sena alliance, have attempted to appropriate his image as a means of drawing electoral support from the Mangs.[15]
Sathe was commemorated with the issue of a special Шаблон:INR postage stamp by India Post on 1 August 2002.[16] Buildings have also been named after him, including the Lokshahir Annabhau Sathe Smarak in Pune[17] and a flyover in Kurla.[18]
In 2022 a statue of Sathe was installed at the Margarita Rudomino All-Russia State Library for International Literature in Moscow.[19][20]
References
External links
Шаблон:Commons category Шаблон:Authority control
- ↑ 1,0 1,1 1,2 Шаблон:Cite journal
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- ↑ 7,0 7,1 Шаблон:Cite news
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- ↑ 9,0 9,1 9,2 Шаблон:Cite journal
- ↑ 10,0 10,1 Шаблон:Cite book
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- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
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