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Veteran writer, poet, and former BJP MLA Vishnu Wagh is under fire for his anthology of poems, Sudirsukt or Hymns of a Shudra – a book that was released in 2013.
On Tuesday, 17 October, an FIR was filed in Goa against Wagh and the publisher of the book, Hema Naik, under Section 293 (sale of obscene objects to young person) and Section 294 (obscene acts and words) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).
Vishnu Surya Naik Wagh joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in 2011 after being a general secretary and spokesperson of the Goa Pradesh Congress for 14 years. A poet, writer, journalist, and dramatist, Wagh then became an MLA from North Goa’s St Andre Constituency.
Consequently, the Manohar Parrikar-led Goa government cancelled all 32 undeclared culture and literature awards, including the one that Wagh was to receive. On 17 October, an FIR was filed against him for the way the book represents women and castes. Viegas, the woman who filed the complaint, said she always admired Wagh’s books, but felt disgraced after reading this one.
The controversy began after the lone jury member at the GKA, Sanjiv Verenkar, took to social media to oppose the book’s entry. In an interview to The Indian Express, Verenkar said Wagh’s poems were “full of filthy words, abuses, vulgarity” which he hadn’t “read in any form of literature in (his) 58 years.”
Wagh has been openly critical of the caste-oriented social order and right-wing politics. His literature has often reflected this contour of thought.
“It seems Parashuram fired an arrow,
Into the sea and it receded
Repeating this tale year in and year out
They cheated the Bahujan Samaj
Through this lie they wanted to establish
That this land was created by them
You sinners: if you were the first here
Then who were the Mahars, Bhandaris, Kharvis, Pagis,
Gawdas, Velips, Dhangars, Kunbis:
Who were they?
To make this land fertile
They gave their sweat and blood
Yes, yes:
They are us Sudhirs…”
It was surprising for many, then, that he joined the BJP in 2011. Even as a member, he critiqued the policies of the party in the state.
Wagh’s book and the controversy that has erupted from it has left the literary world to take polarised stands.
Hema Naik, a Sahitya Akademi winner and the publisher of the book, sought to defend the book as the poet’s right to expression.
On the other hand, senior activist Uday Bhembre, a Saraswat himself, characterised Sudirsukta as a “threat to the society.”
Even Sanjiv Verenkar, whose post triggered the controversy, said that he thinks the poems “have potential to stoke communal tension.”
Even as people continue to take sides, 52-year-old Wagh continues to remain immobile in a hospital following a stroke resulting in cerebral hypoxia.
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Published: 18 Oct 2017,04:22 PM IST