Government to ensure support to folk artistes and artisans

Government to ensure support  to folk artistes and artisans
Sundeep Bhutoria

Kolkata: Responding to an open letter to the Prime Minister by Kolkata-based cultural and social activist, Shri Prahlad Singh Patel, Minister of State for Culture and Tourism (IC), Government of India, has – in a letter – assured that the Government will take suitable measures to support the poor folk artistes and artisans who faced immense hardship in the wake of Covid-19 pandemic.

Kolkata-based cultural and social activist, Sundeep Bhutoria, had written a letter to the Prime Minister of India, Shri Narendra Modi, seeking urgent intervention to address the plight of the thousands of poor craftsmen and artistes earning their livelihood by promotion Indian art, culture and heritage.

Shri Prahlad Singh Patel, in an official letter to Mr. Bhutoria, wrote, “I have instructed the Regional Cultural Centres across the country to prepare a list of such artists and artisans, including those who have not been included in the list so far.”

Mr. Bhutoria, who is associated with many national and international NGOs said, “I wrote to the Honourable Prime Minister because I felt that the thousands of poor artisans, folk artists and others, who are engaged in various artistic and cultural activities, did not have a proper forum or lobby to articulate the grievances and problems. I am glad that the Government has taken note and initiated steps to alleviate their hardship.

Thousands of artisans eke out a living by promoting Indian folk art, culture, and heritage. Even during normal times these poor unsung torch-bearers of India’s rich culture legacy barely manage to make ends meet. In the face of this pandemic, thousands of such artisans, cultural workers, and craftsmen are enduring immense hardship.

Mr. Bhutoria is also the Trustee of Prabha Khaitan Foundation, an NGO which works with several such performing artists and writers. The Foundation organizes events in 30 cities in India and overseas on a non-commercial basis to provide them with a platform and contribute to the sustenance and spread of Indian art, culture, and heritage.

The crisis caused by the coronavirus outbreak threatens to wipe out vast swathes of India’s cultural legacy and heritage built over thousands of years.