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'For Children of Palestine': Writer Jacinta Kerketta Turns Down Award Co-Sponsored by USAID

'How can the arms business and care for children continue simultaneously when the world of children is being destroyed by the same weapons?'
Jacinta Kerketta. Photo: X/@JacintaKerkett2
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New Delhi:  Adivasi activist and writer Jacinta Kerkatta has refused to accept an award jointly given by the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and Room to Read India Trust, in solidarity with the victims of war waged by Israel against Palestine. 

Her book, Jirhul, which is a collection of poems, was selected for ‘Room to Read Young Author Award’ in the Children’s Book Creators’ Awards. The awards have not yet reacted to this decision publicly. Its website notes that the ceremony of the 2nd edition of the Children’s Literature Awards is scheduled for October 7. 

Kerkatta said books for children were important but adults have not been able to save children – thousands of whom are being killed in Palestine.

She also told The Wire, “I saw that Room to Read India Trust is also associated with [the company] Boeing for children’s education. How can the arms business and care for children continue simultaneously when the world of children is being destroyed by the same weapons?” 

Aerospace giant Boeing has been associated with the Israel army for “75 years”, it claims. Reports last year noted the partnership between the Trust and Boeing over an education programme flagged off by then Union minister Smriti Irani.

Kerketta has written, declining the award and offering her reasons, to both USAID and the Room to Read India Trust who had selected her for the award. 

The Wire has written to Room to Read for a reaction. This report will be updated if a response is received.

The poems in Jirhul are on flowers that are ‘related to the life of people in the forests of Adivasi areas’. 

“They were written to awaken social political consciousness, especially at a time when children in the country are growing up reading only about roses and lotus,” she said.

The book was published this year by Jugnu Prakashan, the publishing imprint of Iktara Trust, Bhopal.

“Very little work is being done keeping children in mind while preserving diversity in the field of literature. In such a situation, it would have been nice to get an award for the poetry collection written for children,” Kerketta said. 

But, she said, it was difficult for her to accept this award for children’s literature considering the current circumstances.

Kerketta has written seven more books including Ishwar aur Bazar, Jecinda ki Diary and Land of the Roots.

Last year, Kerketta had refused an award from the India Today group for her work, in protest against the lack of respect being given to Adivasis in Manipur.

Last week, author Jhumpa Lahiri declined an award from New York’s Noguchi Museum citing the fact that it fired three employees for wearing keffiyeh scarves, an emblem of Palestinian solidarity.

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