Ramesh Veluskar

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Born(1947-11-10)10 November 1947
Died21 October 2018(2018-10-21) (aged 70)
OccupationWriter, poet, retired teacher
LanguageKonkani
Ramesh Veluskar
Konkani poet Ramesh Bhagvant Veluskar
Veluskar in 2011
Born(1947-11-10)10 November 1947
Died21 October 2018(2018-10-21) (aged 70)
OccupationWriter, poet, retired teacher
LanguageKonkani
Notable awardsRashtriya Hindi Seva Sahastrabdi Samman (2000), Sahitya Akademi award (1990), Kala Academi Puraskar (1983)
SpouseMithilesh Srivasthava
Children3

Ramesh Bhagvant Veluskar (10 November 1947 – 21 October 2018) was an Indian Konkani poet and litterateur. He died on 21 October 2018 at Raebareli, Uttar Pradesh.

Veluskar was a school teacher for 33 years, and has taught Konkani, Marathi and Hindi.[3] Veluskar has written poetry, essays, novellas, and dramas for children.[3]

While in Bhubaneswar to study Bengali in order to understand art appreciation in Delhi, he met the Uttar Pradesh-born Mithilesh Kumari Srivastava, whom he married in 1982.[3] He has mastered Marathi, Konkani and Bengali languages.[3]

Interests, skills

He was trained in Indian classical vocals, does caricatures, and also acted in drama. Veluskar translated Sant Tukaram's abhangs and Rabindranath Tagore's Geetanjali to Konkani, and took the Portuguese poet Carlos Drumond de Andrade's works to Hindi readers.[3]

On his writing

In a video uploaded in 2010, scholar and writer Dr Nandkumar Kamat says of Veluskar: "Ramesh Bhagwant Veluskar is one of Goa's best known modern Konkani poet[s]. A Sahitya Akademi award winner, he has several Konkani and a Hindi poetry collection to his credit and is known as pioneer to introduce folklorical and mythological elements in Konkani and offer a new ecoerotic and ecoastehtic idiom."[4]

Veluskar had "25 odd books to his credit, including translations from languages like Sanskrit, Hindi, Marathi and English", and some of his recent books include Zen Kavita and Pandurang Pandurang (2014).[5] According to Bharati Pawaskar, writing in The Goan, "Wordsmiths like Manoharrai Sardesai, Ravindra Kelekar, Bakibab Borkar, Madhav Borkar, Dharmanand Kamat, R. V. Pandit, S S Nadkarni, Muralidhar Kulkarni, Nagesh Karmali, Evágrio Jorge encouraged Veluskar to write."[5]

Awards

References

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