Pundalik Naik

Pundalik Naik
 Konkani litterateur from Goa, Pundalik Narayan Naik
Born 1952 (age 6364)
Volvoi, Goa
Occupation Writer, playwright
ex-President Goa Konkani Akademi
Language Konkani
Nationality Indian
Citizenship Indian
Notable awards Sahitya Akademi
Spouse Hema Pundalik Naik

Pundalik Narayan Naik (born 1952) is a Konkani-language poet, short-story writer, novelist, playwright, and screenwriter from Goa. He has 40 books and two films to his credit.[1][2][3]

Achievements

He served as the President of Goa Konkani Akademi (Goa Academy of Letters for Konkani) of the Government of Goa since 2002.[4] His novel Acchev (The Upheaval, 1977) and the first Konkani novel to be translated into English, is considered a landmark in the history of the language.[1] It is a story based in a Goa wrecked by rampant mining.

Acchev has been described as a novel which "describes peasant life in the Ponda [sub-]district and shows what happens when a traditional society that lives by myths and rituals comes into contact with modern mechanised ways of life."[5]

Manohar Shetty, in a review in the Deccan Herald, writes: "Pundalik Naik's novel is set in this grim backdrop, chronicling in detail the decay of a self-sufficient agricultural community with the impassive invasion of the mining industry. Naik's novel, the first to be translated from Konkani, created something of a sensation when it appeared in 1977. No other writer in Goa had portrayed in such graphic and brutal detail the ruinous fallouts on small agricultural holdings by the bulldozers of big industry. Pandhari, the protagonist of the novel, is the first to fall into the tempting shaft. Just before the auspicious day of sowing, Babuso, a wily and unscrupulous go-between, approaches him for his services as a load-bearer and to hire his bullock-cart to carry ore from the mines. Pandhari succumbs to the allure of quick money and in an instant becomes a bonded labourer and the bullocks, which once ploughed the life-sustaining fields, become a transport vehicle, the cart laden with the metallic spoils of the pillaged land."[6]

Sahitya award

He was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award in Konkani for his work, Chowrang, in 1984, by Sahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters.[7][8] He was awarded the Gomant Sharda Puraskar for Lifetime Achievement in 2010.[3][9]

Plays, short stories

In all, Naik has 32 plays,[10] and collections of short stories, novels, no[11] uvellas, translations and books of children's rhyme to his credit.[10] He is considered a pioneer in the realm of Konkani drama.[10]

Some of his plays are as follows:[10]

Name of play Year Theme
Ransundari 1974 Verse play written for children
Chhappan Thigali Yashwantrao 1980 Tragedy of a loader at a bus stand
Suring 1982 Plight of labourers building roads
Demand 1986 Realistic portrayal of illiterate folk seeking justice at courts
Dayz Dowry
Shabai Shabai Bahujan Samaj 1986 Scathing socio politico satire

Some have complained that "his works are pretty difficult to bring into English and other languages".[12] There is also an essay (translated into English by Vidya Pai) explaining how Naik's Acchev happened. This essay (in Konkani) was originally published in the special issue of the Konkani literary magazine Jaag released to celebrate 150 years of the Konkani novel in early 2012.[12]

During a five-day theatre festival on the plays of Pundalik Naik, called Natyarang Pancham, held in 2011, the plays staged were Shabay Shabay Bhaujan Samaj, Kaansulo, Suring, Chaityanak Math Naa and Shree Vichitrachi Jatra.[11]

Naik took to writing plays in 1977. The Shubham Naik Trust and the Directorate of Art and Culture had organised a festival of selected Konkani plays of Pundalik Naik at five regional centers including Masordem—Sattari, Mandrem—Pernem, Sanguem, Chaudi—Canacona and Shiroda—Ponda.[11]

Personal life

Naik was born on 21 April 1952,[10] in Volvoi village of Ponda taluka of Goa. He started his career as a schoolteacher[10] (1972–78), joined All India Radio, Panjim, as a sub-editor in 1979, and later worked there as an assistant editor in charge of scripts. In 1984, he left All India Radio to become a full-time writer, and has 32 plays to his credit. He is married to Hema Naik, also a Konkani writer. He played a prominent role in the Konkani-Marathi linguistic controversy (1985–87) in Goa. He was the Convenor[13] of the Konkani Porjecho Avaz, a campaign group promoting the cause of Konkani at the time.

Naik has also written plays for radio and television, and has edited films.

Other awards

He has edited an anthology, Chowrang, for which he got the Sahitya Akademi Award in 1984.[10] Besides, he has been bestowed the AIR's Playwright Award (1986, 1987), the Paters Award of the Australian Academy of Broadcasting and Science (1988), the Government of Goa award for children's drama (1975), and the Konkani Bhasha Mandal Prize.[10] In 2013, the Sangeet Natak Akademi award came on account of his contribution to Indian theatre as a playwright.[10]

Works in translation

Notes

External links

References

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