Susanna Arundhati Roy the first Indian woman to have won
Britain's prestigious Booker Prize, was born on 24th November 1961 in Bengal
and grew up in Aymanam village, Kottayam, Kerala. She was born to parents Mary
Roy a well known social activist who won a landmark Supreme Court verdict that
granted Christian women in Kerala the right to their parent's property and
father a Bengali Hindu tea planter. Arundhati's parents separated when she was
small and she did her formal education in Corpus Christi school run by her
mother in Kottayam District, Kerala. When she was just 16, she left
her home and settled in Delhi. There she did her degree in Architecture at the
Delhi School of Architecture. During this period she met Gerard Da Cunha a fellow architecture student
and married him but their marriage lasted only four years. After a brief stint
in the field of architecture, she found that it was not for her. She left for
Goa, making a life out at the beach, got
tired of it after a few months, came back to Delhi. She took a job at the
National Institute of Urban Affairs, met Pradeep Krishen, a film director now
her husband who offered her a small role in 'Massey Saab'. She went to Italy on
a scholarship for eight months to study the restoration of monuments. She
realised she was a writer during those months in Italy. After she returned from
Italy she worked with Pradeep Krishen and they planned an episode television
for Doordarshan called the 'Banyan Tree' which didn't materialise and was shelved
by the producers after shooting 2-3 episodes. She wrote and starred in 'In
Which Annie Gives it Those Ones', a film on college life in India, based on her
experiences in the University of Delhi, and wrote the screenplay for Pradip
Krishen's film 'Electric Moon' (1992). She quickly became known for her work as
screenwriter.
Then she wrote a series of essays called 'The Great Indian
Rape Trick' which attracted media attention, in defense of former dacoit
Phoolan Devi, who she felt had been exploited by Shekhar Kapur's film 'Bandit
Queen'. Then came her debut novel 'The God of Small Things' which shot her into
prominence in 1997, by winning the prestigious British Booker prize in London
and becoming an international best seller. The book, which took almost five
years to complete, gives an insight to the social and political life in a
village in South India through the eyes of seven year old twins and how it
effects/disrupts their small lives. The book won £20,000 as prize and sold
nearly 400,000 copies globally by October that year. In the years following her
success, she has turned to activism, writing 'The Cost of Living' a book
comprising two essays 'The Greater Common Good'(1999) and 'The End of
Imagination'(1998); the former against Indian Governments massive dam projects
which displaced millions of poor people and the latter; its testing of Nuclear
weapons. She has been an active participant in public demonstrations against
the construction of the Sardar Sarovar Dam on the Narmada river in Western India
and has donated a substantial amount around 1.5million rupees, equivalent to
her Booker Prize money, for the cause.
She was even arrested along with other protestors for campaigning for the
cause. 'Power Politics' her latest book published, takes on Enron the power
corporation based in Houston trying to take over Maharashtra's energy sector.
She has also spoken on and published several articles such as 'Promotion of
equal rights' supporting equal rights for lower caste in India and 'War on
Terrorism' (2001)against the Iraq war. ?
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