"I have considered the Award a high honour, but my 'credibility' had been established decades before 1986 through my long career as a writer, as had the 'goodwill' and recognition I have received over many years in India and abroad.
"You (Tiwari) have mentioned 'profits'. The Award in 1986 would perhaps have been Rs 25,000, but not more than Rs 50,000. In consultation with Ashok Vajpeyi, who has also returned his Award, I am enclosing a cheque for one lakh rupees," she said.
Sahgal, in her letter, also said "the fact that so many writers are returning their awards or resigning from Akademi posts makes it clear how anguished we are that you have remained silent over the murder and intimidation of writers and the threat that hangs over dissent and debate".
"Has the Sahitya Akademi, like Pontius Pilate, washed its hands of its responsibility to safeguard our Constitutional right to freedom of speech?" she asked.
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"The Akademi is not a government organization but an autonomous body. The award is given to a writer for a chosen work and there is no logic to return the award because it is not like the Padma awards," Tiwari had said.
Several authors including Nayantara Sahgal, Sara Joseph, Uday Prakash and Ashok Vajpeyi have returned their Sahitya Akademi awards and others like poet Satchidanan and Keki Daruwalla have protested the Akademi's "silence" over the killing of writer MM Kalburi and against "rising intolerance".