'Why I Write': 7 Authors Share With Us The Real Reasons They Are Compelled To Put Pen To Paper

Taslima Nasreen, Perumal Murugan, Devika Rangachari, Hansda Sowvendra Shekhar, K. R. Meera, Amish Tripathi and Rana Safvi on what inspired to start writing and what motivates them to keep doing so

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Taslima Nasreen, Perumal Murugan, Devika Rangachari, Hansda Sowvendra Shekhar, K. R. Meera, Amish Tripathi and Rana Safvi on what inspired to start writing and what motivates them to keep doing so

TASLIMA NASREEN

Physician, human-rights activist and award-winning author

I have been a reader since childhood. I read storybooks hidden under my textbooks in our Mymensingh home. My brother published little magazines, in which I was first published at the age of 13. My notebook of poems turned out to be an object of curiosity for my elders. Later, my writing appeared in the national press of Bangladesh and I wrote columns on gender equality, founded a cultural organization and a wall magazine. I was a poet mainly, but wrote my first fiction, inspired by the political turmoil in my country. We were the resistance—at the forefront of the protest movements. Our pens were our weapons against religious oppression, misogyny, regressive forces against democracy, human rights and freedom of expression. I focused mainly on women’s rights and how religion compromised them. The more I wrote, the more women started responding to it.

On the other hand, protests against me started gathering steam, until there was a fatwa against me. I was forced to go underground, and eventually left the country. I wrote Lajja, in which I criticized the Bangladesh government’s inability to provide security to Hindu minorities in the aftermath of the Babri-Masjid demolition. The government banned Lajja. All doors were closed for me. In West Bengal too, my book Dwikhandito was banned by the state, and the authorities were upset when the High Court revoked the ban later. The backlash forced me to leave Kolkata.

Today, I live in Delhi and move around with security, under the shadow of death. I am not allowed to return home, which kills me from within. I had...

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