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YLP appointed Hindi
panel member -
The Hindu - VISAKHAPATNAM,
January 25, 2014
The Union Government has
appointed Director of
Indian Cultural Centre
of the Consulate General
of India in Canada,
Yarlagadda Lakshmi
Prasad, member of the
Kendriya Hindi Samithi.
The tenure is for three
years. The apex
committee with the Prime
Minister as chairman and
the Home Minister as
vice-chairman has Union
Ministers of HRD,
Information, Railway and
External Affairs and the
Chief Ministers of Uttar
Pradesh, Maharashtra,
Punjab, Tamil Nadu,
Andhra Pradesh and Assam
as members. Dr. Lakshmi
Prasad is a non-official
member of the Samithi.
Source:
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-andhrapradesh/ylp-appointed-hindi-panel-member/article5616943.ece |
Honour for YLP -
The Hindu - VISAKHAPATNAM, May
12, 2013
The Indian Council of Cultural
Relations has appointed Padma
Sri awardee and twice Central
Sahitya Akademi award winner Y.
Lakshmi Prasad as Founder
Director of the Indian Cultural
Centre at Toronto in Canada. Dr.
Lakshmi Prasad received the
order of appointment issued by
the ICCR Chairman Karan Singh
here on Saturday. This is for
the first time that a Telugu
scholar and a non-IFS man was
made founder-Director of a ICC
while two other noted scholars
and non-IFS personalities Girish
Karnad and Indranath Choudhury
were appointed as Directors of
ICCR’s centres in the past.
The former Andhra University
professor, who is at present
Chairman of the AP Hindi
Academy, Official Language
Committee of UGC and Lok Nayak
Foundation and former
Vice-Chairman of the
Parliamentary Committee on
Official Language, was accorded
diplomatic rank of Counsellor
with representational grant and
the pay and allowances that go
with it to him and his family.
The tenure is for three years.
Dr. Lakshmi Prasad has to look
for accommodation for the ICC
and has to organise literary and
cultural events, programmes,
etc. to propagate Indian
culture. He is leaving for the
US on Monday and from there
would go to Canada.
Literature is his first love -
The Hindu
- Metro Plus Visakhapatnam -
Saturday, Jun 11, 2005
He believes writing in tune with
the current trends, especially
on issues related to deprivation
of women
His belief in Benjamin
Franklin's saying, "If you
should not be forgotten, as soon
as you are dead and rotten,
either write things worth
reading, or do things worth
writing," brought the former
Member of Rajya Sabha,
Yarlagadda Lakshmi Prasad thus
far.
Born in a lower middle class
family in Gudivada he rose to
the heights that only a few
could dream. After his
post-graduation in Hindi he went
on to complete his Ph.Ds in
Hindi and Telugu from Andhra
University. He worked for a
brief period as Hindi lecturer
in K.V.R. College, Nandigama,
and head of the Hindi
Department, Andhra Loyola
College, before joining as Hindi
lecturer in Andhra University,
where he continues to serve till
date in addition to being the
honorary Chairman of Jan
Shikshan Samasthan.
Literary pursuits
According to Mr. Lakshmi Prasad,
the seeds of literature,
especially of Hindi and Telugu,
were sown in his mind in
childhood itself. "Both my
parents were teachers in the
village school. And my father
being a nationalist, Hindi
literature was part of the
culture at home. Moreover, the
grooming at home was nourished
at the village temple, where in
the evenings the regular
discourse of puranas and
performace of harikathas used to
take place. The rhythmic
chanting of slokas in the temple
and the recitation of verses
from the books of Hindi poets
like Harivanshrai Bachchan and
Premchand by my father at home
inspired me to take up Hindi
literature later in my academic
career. At every point of my
academic career I was motivated
by my professors to write
something worthwhile and from my
PG days I started to write and
since then had never looked
back."
So far Mr. Lakshmi Prasad has
written over 32 books in Telugu
and Hindi and over 100 articles
in various newspapers. In Hindi
his books comprise biographies
of noted poets like Bhairagi, C.
Narayana Reddy and Tripuraneni
Ramaswamy Chowdary and
translation of works of Bezwada
Gopala Reddy and C. Narasimha
Rao. In Telugu he penned the
biography of Jayaprakash Narayan
and translated the biography of
Harivanshrai Bachchan and works
of many other authors. But the
highlight was the Telugu
translation of Bisham Sahani's
novel 'Tamas' - and he did it in
22 days!
A recipient of Padmasri and
Central Sahitya Akademi award,
Mr. Lakshmi Prasad says that the
appreciation he got from people
like Amitabh Bachchan and P.V.
Narasimha Rao is much more than
the awards. "I could see tears
welling up the eyes of Mr.
Bachchan when I presented him a
copy of his father's biography,
and Narasimha Rao wrote a
preface comprising 29 pages
appreciating my Telugu book on
Hindi Sahitya Charitra. What
else could one ask for?"
Into politics
His entry on the political arena
dates back to the Mulki
agitation days. "Being the union
leader of my college I took
active part in the agitation
along with M. Venkaiah Naidu and
K. Haribabu. I was also arrested
under the Maintenance of
Internal Security Act (MISA)
during Emergency." He later took
active part in JP's movement for
purity in public life and was
the district unit president of
the Chhatra Sangarsh Committee.
"Immediately after the Emergency
I found myself at the
crossroads. I had to decide
whether to continue my academic
goals or plunge into full-time
politics. Being the eldest son
of a large middle class family I
decided to put politics in the
backseat and joined as lecturer
in Nandigama. The political
phase resurfaced when I came in
touch with the Telugu Desam
Party founder, N.T. Rama Rao. I
became his Hindi instructor, and
NTR's eldest son Harikrishna
catapulted me to the Rajya Sabha
in 1996."
It was Hindi that got him a job
and, it was Hindi that put him
in close contact with NTR and it
was again that language that
earned him a good name in
Parliament. He earned the
appreciation of scholarly
political leaders like
Narashimha Rao, Atal Behari
Vajpayee, Karan Singh and L.K.
Advani for his command over the
language.
Parliament tenure
As a parliamentarian Mr. Lakshmi
Prasad not only introduced a
number of bills but also earned
the sobriquet, the 'Hindi man
from South'. Basing on his
language prowess he was made the
Deputy Chairman of the
Parliamentary Committee on
Official Language. During his
six-year tenure he introduced a
number of private bills like
Hindu Marriage (Amendment) Bill
to benefit women affected with
epilepsy; Bill for Establishment
of Permanent High Court Bench at
Visakhapatnam to speed up
justice to commoners; Marketing
and other Facilities Bill to
benefit farmers, especially
mango growers in the districts
of Visakhapatnam and
Vizianagaram; and Prohibition of
Extravagant Expenditure in
Marriages Bill.
On many an occasion, he raised
the issues related to Hindustan
Shipyard, Alamatti, cotton
growers' plight and capital
restructuring for Visakhapatnam
Steel Plant. He received
accolades from all quarters when
he brought to light the plight
of the family members of Defence
personnel, especially the
womenfolk who were being
harassed by goondas in New
Delhi, as their husbands were
busy serving on the borders.
On his future plans he says, "It
is only going to be literature
and my students from now. No
more politics.
Apart from contributing a serial
by name 'Draupadi' in 'Andhra
Jyoti', I am concentrating on
the biography of Dr. Karan
Singh."
Yarlagadda Lakshmi Prasad
recently launched the Lok Nayak
Foundation to help and encourage
poor writers. |