Sugathakumari

Poet

Birthday January 22, 1934

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Aranmula, Kingdom of Travancore

DEATH DATE 2020-12-23, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India (86 years old)

Nationality India

#62404 Most Popular

1934

Sugathakumari (22 January 1934 – 23 December 2020) was an Indian poet and activist, who was at the forefront of environmental and feminist movements in Kerala, South India.

Her parents were the poet and freedom fighter Bodheswaran and V. K. Karthiyayini Amma, a Sanskrit scholar.

She was the founder secretary of the Prakrithi Samrakshana Samithi, an organisation for the protection of nature, and of Abhaya, a home for destitute women and a day-care centre for the mentally ill.

She chaired the Kerala State Women's Commission.

She played a prominent role in the Save Silent Valley protest.

Sugathakumari was born in Aranmula on 22 January 1934 in the modern day southern Indian state of Kerala (then in the Kingdom of Travancore).

Her father Keshava Pillai, known as Bodheswaran, was a famous Gandhian thinker and writer, who was involved in the country's freedom struggle.

V. K. Karthiyayini Amma, her mother, was a well-known scholar and teacher of Sanskrit.

Sugathakumari was the second of the three daughters of her parents, following an elder sister named Hrdayakumari, and preceding a younger sister named Sujatha Devi, both of them who excelled in literary field.

1955

After graduating from the University College, Thiruvananthapuram, Sugathakumari completed her master's degree in philosophy from Government College for Women, Thiruvananthapuram in 1955, and spent three years researching on the topic of 'Comparative Study of the Concept of Moksha in Indian Schools of Philosophy' but did not complete the thesis.

Sugathakumari was the former state vice president of Kerala Students Union (KSU).

1957

Sugathakumari's first poem, which she published under a pseudonym in a weekly journal in 1957, attracted wide attention.

1959

She worked at KSU for 3 years, from 1959-1962.

1968

Sugathakumari's notable works included Muthuchippikal, Pathirapookkal, Krishna Kavithakal, Ratrimazha, and Manalezhuthu. She won numerous awards and recognitions including Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award (1968), Kendra Sahitya Akademi Award (1978), Odakkuzhal Award (1982), Vayalar Award (1984), Indira Priyadarshini Vriksha Mitra Award (1986), Asan Prize (1991), Vallathol Award (2003), Kerala Sahitya Akademi Fellowship (2004), Ezhuthachan Puraskaram (2009), Saraswati Samman (2012), Mathrubhumi Literary Award (2014) and O. N. V. Literary Award (2017).

In 1968, Sugathakumari won the Kerala Sahitya Akademi Award for Poetry for her work Pathirappookal (Flowers of Midnight).

1970

In the late 1970s she led a successful nationwide movement, known as Save Silent Valley, to save some of the oldest natural forests in the country, the Silent Valley in Kerala, from submersion as a result of a planned hydroelectric project.

Her poem Marathinu Stuthi (Ode to a Tree) became a symbol for the protest from the intellectual community and was the opening song of most of the Save Silent Valley campaign meetings.

She was the founding secretary of the Prakrithi Samrakshana Samithi, an organisation for the protection of nature.

She was also actively involved with various women's movements of the 1970s and served as the chairperson of the Kerala State Women's Commission.

Sugathakumari also founded Abhaya (refuge), an organisation that provides shelter to female mental patients, after being appalled at conditions in the government-run mental hospital in Thiruvananthapuram.

1978

Raathrimazha (Night Rain) won the Kendra Sahitya Academy Award in 1978.

Her other collections include Paavam Manavahridayam, Muthuchippi, Manalezhuth, Irulchirakukal and Swapnabhoomi.

Sugathakumari's earlier poetry mostly dealt with the tragic quest for love and is considered more lyrical than her later works, in which the quiet, lyrical sensibility is replaced by increasingly feminist responses to social disorder and injustice.

Environmental issues and other contemporary problems are also sharply portrayed in her poetry.

Sugathakumari has been described as among the most sensitive and most philosophical of contemporary Malayalam poets.

Her poetry drew on her sadness.

In an interview, she said, "I have been inspired to write mostly through my emotional upheavals; few of my poems can be called joyous. But these days I feel I'm slowly walking away from it all, to a world that is futile or meaningless".

Sugathakumari's most famous works include Raathrimazha, Ambalamani (Temple Bell) and Manalezhuthu.

2002

Three women led by social activist and artist G. Geetha, demanded a probe into the rape of a Dalit inmate woman by two counselors and the hostel warden of 'Abhaya' in 2002.

Sugathakumari received the Bhattia Award for Social Science, the Sacred Soul International Award, the Lakshmi Award for social service, and the first Indira Priyadarshini Vriksha Mitra Award from the Government of India for her efforts in environmental conservation and afforestation.

2004

In 2004, she was given the Kerala Sahitya Akademi Fellowship.

2006

In 2006, she was honoured with Padma Shri, the country's fourth-highest civilian honour.

2008

Sugathakumari also wrote children's literature, receiving an Award for Lifetime Contribution to Children's Literature, instituted by the State Institute of Children's Literature, in 2008.

She also translated many pieces of work into Malayalam.

She won numerous other awards for her literary works, including the Vayalar Award and Ezhuthachan Puraskaram, the highest literary honour from the Government of Kerala.

2012

She won the Saraswati Samman in 2012, being only the third Malayalam writer to do so.

She also won the Pandit Karuppan Award.

She was the principal of Kerala State Jawahar Balabhavan, Thiruvananthapuram.

She was the founding chief editor of 'Thaliru', a children's magazine published by Kerala State Institute of Children's Literature.

A committed conservationist, Sugathakumari served as the secretary of the Society for Conservation of Nature, Thiruvananthapuram.