Harish Meenashru

Harish Meenashru
Native name દવે હરીશ કૃષ્ણારામ
Born Dave Harish Krishnaram
(1953-01-03) January 3, 1953
Anand, Gujarat, India
Pen name Harish Meenashru
Occupation Poet, Translator, Bank manager
Language Gujarati
Nationality Indian
Education Master of Science
Alma mater Sardar Patel University
Period Modern Gujarati literature
Genres Ghazal, Geet, Free verse
Notable works
  • Dhribaangsundar Eni Pere Dolya (1988)
  • Suno Bhai Sadho (1999)
  • Tandul (1999)
  • Banaras Diary (2016)
Notable awards

Signature

Harish Krishnaram Dave (Gujarati: હરીશ કૃષ્ણારામ દવે), better known by his pen name Harish Meenashru (Gujarati: હરીશ મીનાશ્રુ), is a Gujarati language poet and translator from Gujarat, India.[1] He is best known as a postmodern poet in Gujarati literature. Some of his significant works includes Dhribaangsundar Eni Pere Dolya (1988), Suno Bhai Sadho (1999), Tandul (1999), Parjanyasukta (1999) and Banaras Diary (2016). His poems have been translated in Hindi, Marathi, Malayalam, Kannada, German and English. He received Kalapi Award in 2010, Vali Gujarati Gazal Award in 2012 and Narsinh Mehta Award in 2014.[2]

Life

Meenashru is born on 3 January 1953 in Anand, Gujarat, India. He studied at Dadabhai Navroji High School, Anand; also known as D N High School; from 1962 to 1969. He studied B.Sc with Chemistry at V. P. Science College, Vallabh Vidhyanagar (from 1969 to 1970) and M. B. Patel Science College, Anand (from 1970 to 1973). He received Master of Science from the Department of Chemistry of Sardar Patel University in 1975.

He started his career as a Directly recruited officer at the Bank of Baroda in March 1977. He headed few branches of this bank and retired voluntarily in March 2001 as Bank of Baroda Senior Branch Manager of Amul Dairy Road branch, Anand.[3]
He married Geeta Dave on 30 May 1977. His son Tirath was born in 1979. He lives in Bakrol, a village in Anand.[2]

Works

Meenashru wrote his first poem in 5th standard. In 1974, his poem, Chadiyanu Dukaalgeet, came out for first time in Nootan Shikshan, a magazine edited by Gunvant Shah.[4]

Dhribaangsundar Eni Pere Dolya, his first anthology of poems, was published in 1988, followed by Tambul (1999), Tandul (1999), Parjanyasukta (1999), Suno Bhai Sadho (1999), Pad Pranjali (2004), Pankhipadarath (2011), Shabadman Jinkun Khas Khabaran Padi (2011) and Banaras Diary (2016). Nakhasikh (1977; compilation of selected modern Gujarati Ghazals) and Shesh-Vishesh (1984) are two of his compilation.[5] Some of his poems are edited and translated into English by Piyush Joshi as A Tree with a Thousand Wings (2008).[6]

He has also given translation of the world poetry. He has translated into Gujarati the poems of Wang Wei, an 8th-century Chinese poet and Pablo Antonio Cuadra, a Nicaraguan poet. Some of the translations done by him are published as Deshatan(Translations of World Poetry) and Hampinā Khadako (2014; Translation of poetry of Kannada poet Chandrashekhara Kambara).[3]

Recognition

Harish Minashru is an important name because of his constant preoccupation in exploring several possibilities of language by way of musicality, associations and multiple combinations of words or their fragments uniting into surprisingly new words. This creates new challenges for the meanings and poetic intentions. His basic support is minute observations of objects and phenomena along with mastery over Sanskrit, medieval and modern verse forms. He does not hesitate to take risk of anarchy while ascertaining individuality. This is the fundamental function of poetry.

Dileep Jhaveri (Muse India, Issue 68: Jul-Aug 2016)[7]

The INT - Indian National Theater awarded him the Kalapi Award in 2010 for his significant contribution in the field of Gujarati ghazal poetry. He is also a recipient of Takhtasinh Parmar Prize (1988–89), Vali Gujarati Gazal Award (2012) and Narsinh Mehta Award (2014).[2]

References

  1. Dutt, Kartik Chandra (2016-07-18). "Who's who of Indian Writers, 1999: A-M". Google Books. Retrieved 2016-07-21.
  2. 1 2 3 "Poets translating Poets". Poets - Goethe-Institut (in Latin). Retrieved 2016-07-21.
  3. 1 2 Shukla, Kirit (2008). Gujarati Sahityakosh. Gandhinagar: Gujarat Sahitya Akadami. ISBN 9789383317028.
  4. Meenashru, Harish (December 2011). Trivedi, Harshad, ed. "An article about his creative journey by poet". Shabdasrishti. Gandhinagar: Gujarat Sahitya Akademi. ISSN 2319-3220.
  5. "Mīnāśru, Harīśa [WorldCat Identities]". WorldCat.org (in Latin). Retrieved 2016-07-21.
  6. "Welcome to Muse India". Ambika Ananth – ‘A Tree with a Thousand Wings’. Retrieved 2016-07-23.
  7. "Welcome to Muse India". Welcome to Muse India. Retrieved 2016-07-21.
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