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Amrita
Pritam
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(31
August
1919
–
31
October
2005)
was
an
Indian
writer
and
poet,
who
wrote
in
Punjabi
and
Hindi.
She
is
considered
the
first
prominent
woman
Punjabi
poet,
novelist,
and
essayist,
and
the
leading
20th-century
poet
of
the
Punjabi
language,
who
is
equally
loved
on
both
sides
of
the
India-Pakistan
border.
With
a
career
spanning
over
six
decades,
she
produced
over
100
books
of
poetry,
fiction,
biographies,
essays,
a
collection
of
Punjabi
folk
songs
and
an
autobiography
that
were
translated
into
several
Indian
and
foreign
languages.
She
is
most
remembered
for
her
poignant
poem,
Ajj
aakhaan
Waris
Shah
nu
(Today
I
invoke
Waris
Shah
Ode
to
Waris
Shah),
an
elegy
to
the
18th-century
Punjabi
poet,
an
expression
of
her
anguish
over
massacres
during
the
partition
of
India.
As
a
novelist,
her
most
noted
work
was
Pinjar
(The
Cage)
(1950),
in
which
she
created
her
memorable
character,
Puro,
an
epitome
of
violence
against
women,
loss
of
humanity
and
ultimate
surrender
to
existential
fate;
the
novel
was
made
into
an
award-winning
film,
Pinjar
in
2003.
When
the
former
British
India
was
partitioned
into
the
independent
states
of
India
and
Pakistan
in
1947,
she
migrated
from
Lahore,
to
India,
though
she
remained
equally
popular
in
Pakistan
throughout
her
life,
as
compared
to
her
contemporaries
like
Mohan
Singh
and
Shiv
Kumar
Batalvi.
Known
as
the
most
important
voice
for
the
women
in
Punjabi
literature,
in
1956,
she
became
the
first
woman
to
win
the
Sahitya
Akademi
Award
for
her
magnum
opus,
a
long
poem,
Sunehade
(Messages),
later
she
received
the
Bharatiya
Jnanpith,
one
of
India's
highest
literary
awards,
in
1982
for
Kagaz
Te
Canvas
(The
Paper
and
the
Canvas).
The
Padma
Shri
came
her
way
in
1969
and
finally,
Padma
Vibhushan,
India's
second
highest
civilian
award,
in
2004,
and
in
the
same
year
she
was
honoured
with
India's
highest
literary
award,
given
by
the
Sahitya
Akademi
(India's
Academy
of
Letters),
the
Sahitya
Akademi
Fellowship
given
to
the
immortals
of
literature
for
lifetime
achievement.
Amrita
Pritam
was
born
as
Amrit
Kaur
in
1919
in
Gujranwala,
Punjab,
in
present
day
Pakistan,
the
only
child
of
Raj
Bibi,
who
was
a
school
teacher
and
Kartar
Singh
Hitkari,
who
was
a
poet,
a
scholar
of
Braj
Bhasha,
and
the
editor
edited
a
literary
journal.
Besides
this,
he
was
a
pracharak
a
preacher
of
the
Sikh
faith.
Amrita's
mother
died
when
she
was
eleven.
Soon
after,
she
and
her
father
moved
to
Lahore,
where
she
lived
till
her
migration
to
India
in
1947.
Confronting
adult
responsibilities,
and
besieged
by
loneliness
following
her
mother's
death,
she
began
to
write
at
an
early
age.
Her
first
anthology
of
poems,
Amrit
Lehran
(Immortal
Waves)
was