"I can understand her agony. She comes from a tradition of secularism and better values and when she feels this thing, she must be very pained," Akhtar told PTI when asked about Sahgal returning her award in protest against rising intolerance in the society.
"I understand... What can one say? It is a protest but I think much more has to be done in the society because whatever is happening now-a-days, is not desirable at all," he said.
"The writers should actually communicate and write more and they should see to it that writings should reach people. Who am I to say whether she should have done it or not but the fact is that this is also a protest and draws attention and makes people think why she has done it," he said.
The book is a compilation of 19 short stories by various Hindi and Urdu authors and includes stories on Hindu-Muslim relations, the exodus of Kashmiri Pandits from the Valley, marginalisation of Hindus in Punjab and the persecution of Sikhs in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots.
Sahgal, who had received the Sahitya Akademi award in 1986 for her English novel 'Rich Like Us (1985)', yesterday returned her award saying, "The ruling ideology today is a fascist ideology and that is what is worrying me now. We did not have a fascist government until now... I am doing whatever I believe in.