Award-winning Indian-origin writer and playwright Kamaladevi Aravindan was among six women who were inducted into the Singapore Women’s Hall of Fame recently, making up a total of 198 women who have been honored since 2014.
Initiated by the Singapore Council of Women’s Organizations (SCWO), which marks its 45th anniversary this year, the Women’s Hall of Fame celebrates progress in gender equality and recognizes inductees’ contributions to Singapore’s history, society, and progress.
Aravindan, 75, writes in both Tamil and Malayalam, and some of her works have been translated into English and published in India, Canada, and Malaysia, Channel News Asia reported on Sunday.
She has published more than 160 short stories and essays, 18 stage plays, 300 radio dramas, and five books. She also conducts creative writing workshops organized by the National Library Board and the Association of Singapore Tamil Writers.
Balancing the roles of a mother and wife was never easy for her. She devoted her days to caring for her children and would write through the quiet hours of the night. Despite the challenges, her love for writing never wavered.
She holds that reading the works of Tamil writer-journalist and advocate of women’s rights Subramania Bharati, also known as Bharathiyar, sparked her interest in writing.
She also shared that she observed the struggles women faced as they navigated their many roles, yet she also saw their resilience. No Singaporean woman is ever truly defeated. Writing became her own way of capturing that strength and perseverance.
Aravindan joined five other Singapore women in the Hall of Fame. Liu Bin, 51, who is an internationally recognized scientist, engineer and innovator.
Ivy Ng, 67, who is a clinician and former group chief executive officer of SingHealth and KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital. June Rusdon, 65, who has grown her business into a regional network of 142 centers with an enrolment of more than 15,000 children, and two teacher training colleges.
A pioneer art curator of the National Museum of Singapore, Constance Sheares, 84, helped establish the National Museum Art Gallery in 1976. Vivien Goh, 77, who is a pioneer music educator. She founded the Singapore National Youth Orchestra in 1980, now regarded as one of the best youth orchestras in Asia.
Kamaladevi Aravindan (maiden name Kamala Devi Nair) was born in Malaysia and moved to Singapore after her marriage. She is a prolific author who has in her lifetime published near 500 short stories, essays, stage plays, radio dramas as well as books. She has earned numerous awards and is a celebrated author among established writers since the start of her writing career in her teens.
At fifteen years of age, she was awarded “The Best Writer” in the Johor state (Malaysia) and was praised to be the pride of Tamils. She later studied postmodern literature from Koothupattarai Muthusamy from Tamil Nadu and from Ramanujan, Professor from Thanjai University. She also specializes in ‘Parikshartha’ drama literature in Tamil Nadu.
In addition to Singapore and Malaysia, her short stories have been in periodicals from Tamil Naadu, USA and Canada such as Kanaiyazhi, Yukamayini, Oodaru and Uyirmmai. Several of her work has been translated into English as well such as her short story collection Nuval by Sithuraj Ponraj; a short story, _“_Soorya Grahana Theru” (from the short story collection, Soorya Grahana Theru), by Kavitha Karum, featured in Fiction of Singapore in 2014 by National Arts Council, Singapore. Her historical fiction novel, Sembawang: A Novel was translated by Dr Anitha Devi Pillai.
Her writing continues to be studied at higher institutions too such as the short story collections, Nuval and Karavu at the University of Malaya by both undergraduates and postgraduates. Many of her short stories have been selected as examination texts too. Her research articles too have been included at tertiary institutions to represent female writers from Malaysia and Singapore.
In 2014, Kamaladevi Aravindan’s non-fiction book, Nigazhkalayil Naan, that traces her journey in the theatre field received the Jeyanthan Foundation Lifetime Playwright Award. In the same year, her short story, Mugadugal, from the collection Nuval, was chosen as the 2014’s best Tamil short story during the Singapore Writers Festival that year and released as a short film, which won three other awards.
Kamaladevi won the Karigarsozhan Award from Thanjai University in 2011. The Tamil Language and Cultural Society’s Bharathiyar-Bharathidasan Award, Association of Singapore Tamil Writers’ Tamizhavel Award during Muthamizh Vizha in 2016, and Artists Association’s Best Playwright Award are some of the other awards she has acclaimed as a personality in the literary scene.
She has also won the Indian Muslim Association’s Societal Literature Contributor Award during the annual literary recognition in 2000, the Research Award for Malaysian Tamil Female Writer in 2013 and the Malaysia Scholars Award in Kedah State in 2017.
Similarly, Kamaladevi has also received many awards in Singapore for her literary works in Malayalam. Her Malayalam plays have been staged at various venues in Singapore and have acclaimed awards. She won Singapore’s Best Playwright Award, Best Director Award and Best Author Award at the drama competition organized by Kairalee Kala Nilayam, Singapore, in 1992. Her play, Silanthivala (Spider Web), has brought her fame in the Malayalam literary scene for being a female script-writer and director.
Three of her books Nuval, Karavu and Sembawang were published under the auspices of a National Arts Council, Singapore grant. Her latest novel, Sembawang, is a Tamil historical fiction which traces the lives of those who lived in the Semawang area in the early 1960s over a span of fifty years also received a National Heritage Board, Singapore, Grant. The English translation of the novel was synchronously published in 2020 by Marshall Cavendish International Asia.
In 2018, her literary journey was documented as part of the Indian Community Oral History Project.
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