In 1986, which author was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award for English, for her book “Rich Like Us”?

In 2015, Nayantara Sahgal returned the Sahitya Akademi Award she received in 1986 for her novel ‘Rich Like Us’.

Nayantara Sahgal is an Indian writer in English. Her fiction deals with India’s elite responding to the crises engendered by political change. She was one of the first female Indian writers in English to receive wide recognition. She is a member of the Nehru family (not the Nehru-Gandhi family as she so often points out), the second of the three daughters born to Jawaharlal Nehru’s sister, Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit.

Sahgal’s father Ranjit Sitaram Pandit was a barrister from Kathiawad. Pandit was also a classical scholar who had translated Kalhana’s epic history Rajatarangini into English from Sanskrit.[citation needed] He was arrested for his support of Indian independence and died in Lucknow prison jail in 1944, leaving behind his wife (Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit) and their three daughters Chandralekha Mehta, Nayantara Sehgal and Rita Dar.[citation needed]

Sahgal’s mother, Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, was the daughter of Motilal Nehru and sister of India’s first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. Vijayalakshmi had been active in the Indian freedom struggle, had been to jail for this cause and in 1946, was part of the first team representing newly formed India that went to the then newly formed United Nations, along with M.C.Chagla. After India achieved independence, Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit served as a member of India’s Constituent Assembly, the governor of several Indian states, and as India’s ambassador to the Soviet Union, the United States, Mexico, the Court of St. James, Ireland, and the United nations.

Sahgal attended a number of schools as a girl, given the turmoil in the Nehru family during the last years (1935–47) of the Indian freedom struggle. Ultimately, she graduated from Woodstock School in the Himalayan hill station of Landour in 1943 and later in the United States from Wellesley College (BA, 1947), which she attended along with her sister Chandralekha, who graduated 2 years earlier in 1945. She has made her home for decades in Dehradun, a town close to Landour where she had attended boarding school (at Woodstock).

 

Picture Credit : Google