write the languages of indian author bakwant gargi ,nanak singh amrita oritam
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Explanation:
The Panjab University has made the payment for 50,000 postage stamps on famous writer-dramatist Balwant Gargi and appealed to the Union ministry of communications to release the stamps on the university campus on Baisakhi.
The other eminent writers being honoured over a 100 years after their birth are Krishan Chander, Bhisham Sahni, Shrilal Shukla and KV Puttappa.
PU vice-chancellor (V-C) Arun Grover, who had worked hard to follow up the request for a postal stamp on Gargi during the dramatist’s birth-centenary celebrations last year, told HT, “Although the request for Chander and Sahni had come from other quarters, yet we can proudly own them too for three of the five writers have a close bond with Panjab University”. While Sahni studied at Government College, Lahore, and later obtained his doctorate from PU at Chandigarh, Gargi and Chander studied in FC College at Lahore. Interestingly, all three were Punjabis whose talent blossomed with the freedom struggle and they wrote in the three Indian languages popular in the region: Gargi in Punjabi, Chander in Urdu and Sahni in Hindi.
Gargi was also the founder head of the department of Indian theatre and played a significant role in promoting modern theatre in the region and his students include Anupam and Kirron Kher, Rani Balbir Kaur, Satish Kaushik, Poonam Dhillon, Gurcharan Channi, Kamal Tewari, Amrik Gill, Anita Kanwar and many others.
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Answer:
BALWANT GARGI
On 4 December 1916 in Neeta Khandan in Sehna, Barnala (Punjab), Balwant Gargi was born in a house in the Neeta Mal street, near the 1800-year-old historical Gobind Fort, famous for being the spot where Razia Sultan was imprisoned. The second son in the family of Shiv Chand, a head clerk in the Irrigation Department, he would go on create history in the world of Indian and Punjabi literature
NANAK SINGH
Nanak Singh, (b. July 4, 1897 as Hans Raj - December 28, 1971), was an Indian poet, songwriter, and novelist of the Punjabi language. His literary works in support of India's independence movement led the British to arrest him. He published novels that won him literary acclaim.
AMRITA ORITAM
Amrita Pritam; About this soundlisten (help·info); 31 August 1919 – 31 October 2005) was an Indian novelist, essayist and poet, who wrote in Punjabi and Hindi.[1] She is considered the first prominent female Punjabi poet, novelist, 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 all translated into several Indian and foreign languages.