Sachidananda Raut Ray

Born Gurujang, Khordha
Died Cuttack
Pen name Sachi Rautara
Ethnicity Oriya
Notable work(s) Pallisri

Sachidananda Rautray (1916–2004) was an Oriya poet, novelist, short-shorty writer. He received Jnanpith Award, the highest literary award of India, in 1986. He was popularly known as Sachi Routray.[1]

Contents

Life

Routray was born in Gurujang, near Khurda on 13 May 1916. He was brought up and educated in Bengal. He married a Telugu princess from the royal family of Golapalli.[1]

Routray started writing poems from the age of eleven.[1] He was also involved in freedom struggle while in school. Some of his poems were banned by British Raj for revolutionary content.

He died in Cuttack on 21 August 2004.[1]

Works

In 1943, Routray became very famous among Oriya readers when he published Baji Rout, a long poem that celebrated the martyrdom of a boatman boy who succumbed to the bullets of British police when he refused to take them in his rickety boat to cross the river Mahanadi. He was a prolific poet and published as many as twenty anthologies. His Pallishri, dealing with village life in Orissa, is as successful as his poem Pratima Nayak that portrays the suffering and the predicament of a city girl. He belonged to a group of writers who called themselves 'poets of the people'.[1]

Routray also published a few poems with religion as their theme.

Awards and recognitions

References

External links