India

Literary Award Winner Donates Prize Money to lynching victim’s family


Sahitya Akademi Award winner KP Ramanunni, who is quite vocal against religious extremism, donated his entire prize money to the family of the mob lynching victim Junaid on Tuesday. He won the award on Tuesday for his book ‘God’s Own Book’, which talks of harmony among Hindus and Muslims.

The Noted Malayalam author Ramanunni donated his prize money to the mother of Hafiz Junaid Khan, the teenage boy who was killed on a train in Haryana for allegedly carrying beef.
Ramanunni kept a token amount Rs 3 from the total prize money of Rs 1 lakh and gave the rest to the deceased’s family, handing over the money to Junaid’s mother after receiving the award in New Delhi on Monday. The author is quite vocal against religious extremism, won the award for his book ‘God’s Own Book’, which talks of harmony among Hindus and Muslims.

“Junaid is someone who was killed by Hindu communal forces for just being a Muslim. Let me place this award amount as an offering at the feet of Junaid’s mother as an act of penance for that wicked sin, for penance is a special observance in true Hindu tradition,” Ramanunni said.
Junaid was allegedly stabbed to death on a local train in Haryana last year after a mob accused him and his relatives of carrying beef in a bag. The sixteen-year-old was stabbed multiple times by a mob on the Delhi-Mathura train in Ballabgarh, Haryana, on June 24. He succumbed to his injuries after nobody helped him reach a hospital.

“In the present Indian situation, ‘God’s Own Book’ (Daivathinte Pustakam) bears an enormous political mission and that is to uphold the love for other religions, something that is cherished by true Hinduism. Also to build a conceptual foundation for religious amity and to put up a bulwark against the country’s catastrophic slide into communal ruin,” he said, adding that ‘Daivathinte Pusthakam’ is a book where the Prophet, Muhammad Nabi, calls Krishnan ‘Ikka’ (elder brother) and Krishnan affectionately calls the Prophet ‘Mushy’ (precious dear).

KP Ramanunni received an anonymous threat letter last year, allegedly sent by Muslim extremists, warning him that his right arm and left leg would be chopped off if he did not convert to Islam within six months.

The sixty two-year-old’s first novel, Sufi Paranja Katha, had also won Kerala Sahitya Akademi award in 1995 while ‘Jeevithathinte Pusthakam’ bagged the 2011 Vayalar award.

Twenty four authors were awarded at the Sahitya Akademi Awards event in New Delhi on Tuesday.


Shirin Abbas

Dr. Shirin Abbas is the Bureau Chief "TheIndiaObserver.Com". She is a world-renowned journalist, winner of several national and international awards for her contribution to Media Research.The first recipient of the prestigious British Chevening Scholarship for Print Journalism in 1999 from her state of Uttar Pradesh. Under the same, she studied at the School of Media, Communication, and Design at the University Of Westminster, London and interned with The Irish Times, Dublin. She has been a journalist for over three decades, working at several national English dailies in North India. She completed her PhD. in Mass Communication in 2016.

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