Sitanshu Yashaschandra
- St. Xavier's College, Mumbai (B.A.)
- University of Bombay (M.A.; 1965)
- Indiana University
- Saraswati Samman (2017)
- Padma Shri (2006)
- Sahitya Akademi Award (1987)
- Ranjitram Suvarna Chandrak (1987)
Sitanshu Yashaschandra Mehta (born 19 August 1941), better known as Sitanshu Yashaschandra, is a Gujarati language poet, playwright, translator and academic from India.[1]
He was the President of Gujarati Sahitya Parishad. He was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award given by Sahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters, in 1987 for his poetry collection Jatayu. Subsequently, he was awarded the Padma Shri, the fourth highest civilian award by Government of India, in 2006.[2]
Life
He was born on 19 August 1941 at Bhuj, Cutch State (now in Kutch, Gujarat, India).[3][4][5] His family belonged to Petlad. His father was a Government Officer. He completed BA in Gujarati and Sanskrit from St. Xavier's College, Mumbai and later MA from University of Bombay in 1965. He taught Gujarati from 1965 to 1968. In 1970, he went to US under Fulbright Scholarship and studied MA in Aesthetics and Comparative Literature from Indiana University. He later completed PhD in 1975. He went to France for a year under Ford West European Fellowship where he studied, translated in Gujarati and did comparative study of Eugène Ionesco's Macbett and Shakespeare's Macbeth. He also completed PhD in 1977 from University of Mumbai under Ramprasad Bakshi.[3][6][7]
Sitanshu married Anjaniben on 8 May 1966. His daughter, Vipasha, was born in 1971, while his son, Aranyak, in 1978.[8]
Career
He has taught Gujarati at Mithibai College from 1972 to 1975 and later at Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda from 1983. Sitanshu served as Vice-Chancellor of Saurashtra University, Rajkot for three years.[9] He served as a visiting professor at the Sorbonne University, Loyola Marymount University, and Jadavpur University. He was an emeritus professor and national lecturer at University Grant Commission. He was appointed the chief editor of the Encyclopedia of Indian Literature published by Sahitya Akademi, Delhi in 1977.[3][7][6][10]
Works
He wrote mainly in Gujarati but his works are translated into Hindi and other languages. He has translated some works of poetry, drama and criticism from English to Gujarati.[3] Surrealism is considered as his signature style.[7][11][12]
Odysseus nu Halesu (1974), Jatayu (1986) and Vakhar (2008) are his collections of poetry. Mohen-jo-dado is a collection of poems published in August 1970 in Sanskriti magazine and later released on audio cassette in 1978.[7]
He has written and adapted several plays. He adapted Eugène Ionesco's The Lesson in Gujarati. He also adapted Thomas Hardy's story, Day After The Fair as a play, Vaishakhi Koyal in Gujarati. He also adapted Peter Shaffer's Equus as Tokhar in Gujarati.[7] It was produced by Pravin Joshi, Shafi Inamdar, and Mahendra Joshi.[9] All three literary adaptations were successful commercially.[7] His Aa Manas Madrasi Lage Chhe (This Man Looks Madrasi, 1978) was directed by Satyadev Dube.[9] Kem Makanji, Kya Chalya? (Hello Makanji, Where Are You Going?, 1985) appeared as a radio play was directed by Nimesh Desai of Chorus.[9] Grahan (Eclipse, 1989), directed by P. S. Chari, was inspired by Oedipus.[9][7]
In 1999, his six plays, all performed on stage, were published, which included Chhabili Ramati Chhanumanu, Kem Makanji, Kya Chalya?, Lady Lalkunwar, Aa Manas Madrasi Lage Chhe, Tokhar and Khagras. Lady Lalkunvar (1999) is a Gujarati adaptation of Eduardo De Filippo's play, Filumena Marturano. Ashvatthama and Grahan are his unpublished works. Jagine Joyu To is his other work. He has edited Natya-Kesuda.[7]
Simankan ane Simollanghan (1977), Ramaniyata no Vagvikalpa (1979) and Asyaha Sarga Vidhau (2002) are his works of criticism, theory of literature and literary historiography.[7]
He had written a screenplay of 1993 Hindi film Maya Memsaab, which was based on Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary.[13]
Awards
He received Sahitya Akademi Award for Gujarati writer in 1987 for his poetry collection Jatayu.[1] He also received Ranjitram Suvarna Chandrak, the highest award in Gujarati literature, in 1987. He was awarded Padma Shri, the fourth highest civilian award in India, in 2006.[14][15][16] He also received Rashtriya Kabir Samman (1998) by Government of Madhya Pradesh, Indian National Theatre – Gujarat Samachar award, Nanalal Award, Gujarat State Government Poetry award.[1][10] He was selected for Adyakavi Narsinh Mehta Award in 2008 but he had declined.[7] In 2013, he won Sahitya Gaurav Puraskar. He received Saraswati Samman (2017) for his poetry collection Vakhar.[17] The award citation said: "...Vakhar is the pinnacle of his poetic journey where he crosses the boundaries of the real world and establishes high standards of Liberty in language and creativity by evolving a balance in the contradicting elements of human emotions and thoughts".[18]
See also
References
- ^ a b c K. Satchidanandan (1996). Gestures: An Anthology of South Asian Poetry. Sahitya Akademi. p. 303. ISBN 9788126000197.
- ^ "Padma Awards" (PDF). Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. 2015. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
- ^ a b c d "Sitanshu Yashaschandra". Poetry International Rotterdam. 1 July 2008. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
- ^ George, K. M. (1992). Modern Indian literature, an anthology. Vol. 3. Sāhitya Akādemī. p. 579. ISBN 9788172013240.
- ^ "Labhshankar Thakar". Muse India ejournal. Archived from the original on 7 November 2014. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
- ^ a b "Trustees and Governing body". Adapt Org. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 8 July 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Brahmabhatt, Prasad (2010). અર્વાચીન ગુજરાતી સાહિત્યનો ઈતિહાસ - આધુનિક અને અનુઆધુનિક યુગ (History of Modern Gujarati Literature – Modern and Postmodern Era) (in Gujarati). Ahmedabad: Parshwa Publication. pp. 63–69. ISBN 978-93-5108-247-7.
- ^ Upadhyay, Darshana (31 December 2007). "Chapter 6". સર્જક સિતાંશુ યશશ્ચન્દ્ર: કાવ્ય અને નાટ્ય-સાહિત્ય સંદર્ભે: એક અભ્યાસ [Writer Sitanshu Yashaschandra: A Study in Contex of His Poems and Plays] (Ph.D) (in Gujarati). Vallabh Vidyanagar: Department of Gujarati, Sardar Patel University. pp. 772–775. hdl:10603/98131.
- ^ a b c d e Baradi, Hasmukh (2004). "Yashashchandra, Sitanshu (1941– ): Gujarati poet and dramatist.". In Lal, Ananda (ed.). Oxford Companion to Indian Theatre. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acref/9780195644463.001.0001. ISBN 9780195644463 – via Oxford Reference. (subscription required)
- ^ a b "World Poetry Fest Participants". Sahitya Akademi. Retrieved 11 July 2014.
- ^ Topiwala, Chandrakant (2001). Indian Poetry: Modernism and After : a Seminar. Sahitya Akademi. p. 93. ISBN 9788126010929.
- ^ Emmanuel Sampath Nelson, Nalini Natarajan (1996). Handbook of Twentieth-century Literatures of India. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 121–122. ISBN 9780313287787.
- ^ Sitanshu Yashaschandra at IMDb
- ^ "Padma Awards Directory (1954–2013)" (PDF). Ministry of Home Affairs.
- ^ "Corea~ Khare given Padma awards". New Delhi: Mid Day. 29 March 2006. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
- ^ "President presents second set of civil investiture Awards for 2006". Press Information Bureau, Government of India. 29 March 2006. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
- ^ PTI (27 April 2018). "Gujarati poet Sitanshu Yashaschandras "Vakhar" chosen for Saraswati Samman". India Today. Retrieved 27 April 2018.
- ^ "Gujarati poet Sitanshu Yashaschandra presented Saraswati Samman for 2017". Hindustan Times. 22 January 2019. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
External links
- Sitanshu Yashaschandra at Google Books
- Sitanshu Yashaschandra at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- K. Shankar Pillai (1954)
- Krishna Kanta Handique (1955)
- Surya Kumar Bhuyan (1956)
- Sukhdev Pande (1956)
- Nalini Bala Devi (1957)
- S. R. Ranganathan (1957)
- Ram Chandra Varma (1958)
- Magan Lal Tribhuvandas Vyas (1958)
- K. S. Chandrasekharan (1958)
- B. S. Kesavan (1960)
- Artaballabha Mohanty (1960)
- N. D. Sundaravadivelu (1961)
- Vinayaka Krishna Gokak (1961)
- Vishnukant Jha (1961)
- Jinvijay (1961)
- Evengeline Lazarus (1961)
- Ananda Chandra Barua (1970)
- Sulabha Panandikar (1971)
- Krishan Dutta Bharadwaj (1981)
- Abid Ali Khan (1981)
- Ram Punjwani (1981)
- Vaikom Muhammad Basheer (1982)
- R. V. Pandit (1982)
- Sher Singh Sher (1982)
- Gaura Pant Shivani (1982)
- Ahalya Chari (1983)
- Amitabha Chaudhuri (1983)
- Saliha Abid Hussain (1983)
- Komal Kothari (1983)
- Hundraj Lial Ram Dukhayal Manik (1983)
- Raghuvir Sharan Mitra (1983)
- Attar Singh (1983)
- Mayangnokcha Ao (1984)
- Kshem Suman Chandra (1984)
- Lakshmi Kumari Chundawat (1984)
- Shanta Gandhi (1984)
- Sadhu Singh Hamdard (1984)
- Qurratulain Hyder (1984)
- Ganpatrao Jadhav (1984)
- Syed Abdul Malik (1984)
- John Arthur King Martyn (1984)
- Sooranad Kunjan Pillai (1984)
- Syed Hasan Askari (1985)
- Jamesh Dokhuma (1985)
- Kaka Hathrasi (1985)
- Bharat Mishra (1985)
- Harishankar Parsai (1985)
- Ashangbam Minaketan Singh (1985)
- Anil Agarwal (1986)
- Binod Kanungo (1986)
- Chitra Naik (1986)
- Abdur Rahman (1986)
- Nuchhungi Renthlei (1986)
- Raghunath Sharma (1986)
- Abdul Sattar (1987)
- Nazir Ahmed (1987)
- Vanaja Iyengar (1987)
- Khawlkungi (1987)
- Badri Narayan (1987)
- Debi Prasanna Pattanayak (1987)
- Sant Singh Sekhon (1987)
- N. Khelchandra Singh (1987)
- Madaram Brahma (1988)
- Nissim Ezekiel (1988)
- K. M. George (1988)
- Mario Miranda (1988)
- Vidya Niwas Mishra (1988)
- Ali Jawad Zaidi (1988)
- Kalim Aajiz (1989)
- Barsane Lal Chaturvedi (1989)
- Anita Desai (1989)
- Moti Lal Saqi (1989)
- Rongbong Terang (1989)
- V. Venkatachalam (1989)
- M. Aram (1990)
- Vijay Kumar Chopra (1990)
- Behram Contractor (1990)
- Radha Mohan Gadanayak (1990)
- Madhav Yeshwant Gadkari (1990)
- Yashpal Jain (1990)
- Sharad Joshi (1990)
- Kanhiyalal Prabhakar Mishra (1990)
- Gopi Chand Narang (1990)
- Dagdu Maruti Pawar (1990)
- Nilmani Phookan Jr (1990)
- Shyam Singh Shashi (1990)
- Ram Nath Shastri (1990)
- Bharat Bhushan (yogi) (1991)
- Kapil Deva Dvivedi (1991)
- B. K. S. Iyengar (1991)
- Satish Chandra Kakati (1991)
- Vishnu Bhikaji Kolte (1991)
- Madan Lal Madhu (1991)
- Namdeo Dhondo Mahanor (1991)
- Keshav Malik (1991)
- Surendra Mohanty (1991)
- P. T. Narasimhachar (1991)
- V. G. Bhide (1992)
- Gulabdas Broker (1992)
- Krishna Chaithanya (1992)
- Rajammal P. Devadas (1992)
- Vasant Shankar Kanetkar (1992)
- V. C. Kulandaiswamy (1992)
- R. S. Lugani (1992)
- Shovana Narayan (1992)
- Nisith Ranjan Ray (1992)
- M. Kirti Singh (1992)
- B. K. Thapar (1992)
- Mark Tully (1992)
- B. N. Goswamy (1998)
- O. N. V. Kurup (1998)
- Lalsangzuali Sailo (1998)
- Gurdial Singh (1998)
- Narayan Gangaram Surve (1998)
- Ruskin Bond (1999)
- Shayama Chona (1999)
- G. P. Chopra (1999)
- Namdeo Dhasal (1999)
- Kanhaiya Lal Nandan (1999)
- Satya Vrat Shastri (1999)
- Rajkumar Jhalajit Singh (1999)
- Grigoriy Lvovitch Bondarevsky (2000)
- P. S. Chawngthu (2000)
- Piloo Nowshir Jungalwalla (2000)
- Mandan Mishra (2000)
- Rehman Rahi (2000)
- K. P. Saxena (2000)
- Nabaneeta Dev Sen (2000)
- Elangbam Nilakanta Singh (2000)
- Bala V. Balachandran (2001)
- Jeelani Bano (2001)
- Manoj Das (2001)
- Javare Gowda (2001)
- Chandrashekhara Kambara (2001)
- Gnanananda Kavi (2001)
- Kumar Ketkar (2001)
- Ravindra Kumar (2001)
- Kalidas Gupta Riza (2001)
- Padma Sachdev (2001)
- Bhabendra Nath Saikia (2001)
- Vachnesh Tripathi (2001)
- Munirathna Anandakrishnan (2002)
- Gopal Chhotray (2002)
- Gyan Chand Jain (2002)
- Madhu Mangesh Karnik (2002)
- Ashok Ramchandra Kelkar (2002)
- V. K. Madhavan Kutty (2002)
- Turlapaty Kutumba Rao (2002)
- Kim Yang-shik (2002)
- Manzoor Ahtesham (2003)
- Jagdish Chaturvedi (2003)
- Motilal Jotwani (2003)
- Yarlagadda Lakshmi Prasad (2003)
- Tekkatte Narayan Shanbhag (2003)
- Shailendra Nath Shrivastava (2003)
- Pritam Singh (2003)
- Vairamuthu (2003)
- Hamlet Bareh (2004)
- Kumarpal Desai (2004)
- Tatyana Elizarenkova (2004)
- Anil Kumar Gupta (2004)
- Gowri Ishwaran (2004)
- Leeladhar Jagudi (2004)
- Sunita Jain (2004)
- Prithvi Nath Kaula (2004)
- Ayyappa Paniker (2004)
- P. Parameswaran (2004)
- Bal Samant (2004)
- Kanhaiyalal Sethia (2004)
- Ramesh Chandra Shah (2004)
- Heinrich von Stietencron (2004)
- Sudhir Tailang (2004)
- Dalip Kaur Tiwana (2004)
- Amiya Kumar Bagchi (2005)
- Shobhana Bhartia (2005)
- Manas Chaudhuri (2005)
- Darchhawna (2005)
- J. S. Grewal (2005)
- Amin Kamil (2005)
- Gadul Singh Lama (2005)
- Mammen Mathew (2005)
- S. B. Mujumdar (2005)
- Bilat Paswan Vihangam (2005)
- Ajeet Cour (2006)
- Sucheta Dalal (2006)
- Laltluangliana Khiangte (2006)
- Lothar Lutze (2006)
- Mrinal Pande (2006)
- Sugathakumari (2006)
- Sitanshu Yashaschandra (2006)
- Temsüla Ao (2007)
- Vijaydan Detha (2007)
- Bakul Harshadrai Dholakia (2007)
- Amitav Ghosh (2007)
- Meenakshi Gopinath (2007)
- Giriraj Kishore (2007)
- Shekhar Pathak (2007)
- Pratibha Ray (2007)
- Rostislav Rybakov (2007)
- Vikram Seth (2007)
- Vaali (2007)
- Sivanthi Adithan (2008)
- Bina Agarwal (2008)
- Vellayani Arjunan (2008)
- Nirupam Bajpai (2008)
- Surjya Kanta Hazarika (2008)
- Vinod Dua (2008)
- M. Leelavathy (2008)
- Amitabh Mattoo (2008)
- Bholabhai Patel (2008)
- Rajdeep Sardesai (2008)
- Sukhadeo Thorat (2008)
- Srinibash Udgata (2008)
- Suresh Gundu Amonkar
- Abhay Chhajlani
- Birendra Nath Datta
- Shashi Deshpande
- Bannanje Govindacharya
- Panchapakesa Jayaraman
- Mathoor Krishnamurty
- Jayanta Mahapatra
- Laxman Mane
- John Ralston Marr
- Alok Mehta
- A. Sankara Reddy
- Lalthangfala Sailo
- Ngawang Samten
- Ranbir Chander Sobti
- Ram Shankar Tripathi
- Lalzuia Colney (2010)
- Maria Aurora Couto (2010)
- Romuald D'Souza (2010)
- Bertha Gyndykes Dkhar (2010)
- Surendra Dubey (2010)
- Sadiq-ur-Rahman Kidwai (2010)
- Hermann Kulke (2010)
- Ramaranjan Mukherji (2010)
- Govind Chandra Pande (2010)
- Mrs YGP (2010)
- Sheldon Pollock (2010)
- Arun Sarma (2010)
- Jitendra Udhampuri (2010)
- Granville Austin (2011)
- Mahim Bora (2011)
- Urvashi Butalia (2011)
- Pullella Sriramachandrudu (2011)
- Mamang Dai (2011)
- Pravin Darji (2011)
- Chandra Prakash Deval (2011)
- Deviprasad Dwivedi (2011)
- Balraj Komal (2011)
- Krishna Kumar (2011)
- Rajni Kumar (2011)
- Devanur Mahadeva (2011)
- Barun Mazumder (2011)
- Ritu Menon (2011)
- Avvai Natarajan (2011)
- Bhalchandra Nemade (2011)
- Karl Harrington Potter (2011)
- Koneru Ramakrishna Rao (2011)
- Devi Dutt Sharma (2011)
- Nilamber Dev Sharma (2011)
- Geeta Dharmarajan (2012)
- Eberhard Fischer (2012)
- Kedar Gurung (2012)
- Surjit Patar (2012)
- Sachchidanand Sahai (2012)
- Allan Sealy (2012)
- Pepita Seth (2012)
- Vijay Dutt Shridhar (2012)
- Ralte L. Thanmawia (2012)
- Anvita Abbi (2013)
- Nida Fazli (2013)
- Radhika Herzberger (2013)
- Noboru Karashima (2013)
- Salik Lucknawi (2013)
- J. Malsawma (2013)
- Devendra Patel (2013)
- Christopher Pinney (2013)
- Mohammad Sharaf-e-Alam (2013)
- Rama Kant Shukla (2013)
- Jagdish Prasad Singh (2013)
- Akhtarul Wasey (2013)
- Naheed Abidi (2014)
- Ashok Chakradhar (2014)
- Keki N. Daruwalla (2014)
- G. N. Devy (2014)
- Kolakaluri Enoch (2014)
- Ved Kumari Ghai (2014)
- Manorama Jafa (2014)
- Rehana Khatoon (2014)
- P. Kilemsungla (2014)
- Sengaku Mayeda (2014)
- Waikhom Gojen Meitei (2014)
- Vishnunarayanan Namboothiri (2014)
- Dinesh Singh (2014)
- Huang Baosheng (2015)
- Bettina Bäumer (2015)
- Lakshmi Nandan Bora (2015)
- Jean-Claude Carrière (2015)
- Gyan Chaturvedi (2015)
- Raj Chetty (2015)
- Bibek Debroy (2015)
- Ashok Gulati (2015)
- George L. Hart (2015)
- Sunil Jogi (2015)
- Usha Kiran Khan (2015)
- Narayana Purushothama Mallaya (2015)
- Lambert Mascarenhas (2015)
- Taarak Mehta (2015)
- Ram Bahadur Rai (2015)
- J. S. Rajput (2015)
- Bimal Kumar Roy (2015)
- Annette Schmiedchen (2015)
- Gunvant Shah (2015)
- Brahmdev Sharma (2015)
- Dhirendra Nath Bezbaruah (2016)
- S. L. Bhyrappa (2016)
- Kameshwar Brahma (2016)
- Jawahar Lal Kaul (2016)
- Sal Khan (2016)
- Ashok Malik (2016)
- Haldhar Nag (2016)
- Pushpesh Pant (2016)
- Dahyabhai Shastri (2016)
- Prahlad Chandra Tasa (2016)
- Anant Agarwal (2017)
- Eli Ahmed (2017)
- Michel Danino (2017)
- Narendra Kohli (2017)
- Akkitham Achuthan Namboothiri (2017)
- Kashi Nath Pandita (2017)
- Vishnu Pandya (2017)
- V. G. Patel (2017)
- H.R. Shah (2017)
- Chamu Krishna Shastry (2017)
- Bhawana Somaaya (2017)
- Punam Suri (2017)
- Harihar Kripalu Tripathi (2017)
- G. Venkatasubbiah (2017)
- Prafulla Govinda Baruah (2018)
- Shyamlal Chaturvedi (2018)
- Arup Kumar Dutta (2018)
- Arvind Gupta (2018)
- Digamber Hansda (2018)
- Anwar Jalalpuri (2018)
- Piyong Temjen Jamir (2018)
- Joyasree Goswami Mahanta (2018)
- Zaverilal Mehta (2018)
- Tomio Mizokami (2018)
- Habibullo Rajabov (2018)
- Vagish Shastri (2018)
- Maharao Raghuveer Singh (2018)
- A Zakia (2018)
- Narsingh Dev Jamwal (2019)
- Nagindas Sanghavi (2019)
- Mohammed Hanif Khan Shastri (2019)
- Devendra Swarup (2019)
- Abhiraj Rajendra Mishra (2020)
- Binapani Mohanty (2020)
- Damayanti Beshra (2020)
- H. M. Desai (2020)
- Lil Bahadur Chettri (2020)
- Meenakshi Jain (2020)
- N. Chandrasekharan Nair (2020)
- Narayan Joshi Karayal (2020)
- Prithwindra Mukherjee (2020)
- Robert Thurman (2020)
- S. P. Kothari (2020)
- Shahabuddin Rathod (2020)
- Sudharma (2020)
- Vijayasarathi Sribhashyam (2020)
- Yeshe Dorjee Thongchi (2020)
- Yogesh Praveen (2020)
- Benichandra Jamatia (2020)
- Carlos G. Vallés (2021)
- Dadudan Gadhvi (2021)
- Imran Shah (2021)
- Mangal Singh Hazowary (2021)
- Mridula Sinha (2021)
- Namdeo Kamble (2021)
- Rangasami L. Kashyap (2021)
- Srikant Datar (2021)
- Solomon Pappaiah (2021)
- Asavadi Prakasarao (2021)
- Lalbiakthanga Pachuau (2021)
- Najma Akhtar (2022)
- T Senka Ao (2022)
- J K Bajaj (2022)
- Sirpi Balasubramaniam (2022)
- Akhone Asgar Ali Basharat (2022)
- Harmohinder Singh Bedi (2022)
- Maria Christopher Byrski (2022)
- Khalil Dhantejvi (Posthumous) (2022)
- Dhaneswar Engti (2022)
- Narasimha Rao Garikapati (2022)
- Girdhari Ram Gonjhu (Posthumous) (2022)
- Shaibal Gupta (Posthumous) (2022)
- Narasingha Prasad Guru (2022)
- Avadh Kishore Jadia (2022)
- Tara Jauhar (2022)
- Rutger Kortenhorst (2022)
- P Narayana Kurup (2022)
- V L Nghaka (2022)
- Chirapat Prapandavidya (2022)
- Vidyanand Sarek (2022)
- Kali Pada Saren (2022)
- Dilip Shahani (2022)
- Vishwamurti Shastri (2022)
- Tatiana Lvovna Shaumyan (2022)
- Siddhalingaiah (Posthumous) (2022)
- Vidya Vindu Singh (2022)
- Raghuvendra Tanwar (2022)
- Badaplin War (2022)
- Radha Charan Gupta (2023)
- C. I. Issac (2023)
- Rattan Singh Jaggi (2023)
- Anand Kumar (2023)
- Prabhakar Bhanudas Mande (2023)
- Antaryami Mishra (2023)
- Ramesh Patange (2023)
- B. Ramakrishna Reddy (2023)
- Mohan Singh (2023)
- Prakash Chandra Sood (2023)
- Janum Singh Soy (2023)
- Vishwanath Prasad Tiwari (2023)
- Dhaniram Toto (2023)