Home 5 News 5 Jhumpa Lahiri Declines Noguchi Museum Award After Keffiyeh Ban

Jhumpa Lahiri Declines Noguchi Museum Award After Keffiyeh Ban

by | Oct 1, 2024 | News

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jhumpa Lahiri declined to accept an award from New York City’s Noguchi Museum after it fired three employees for wearing keffiyeh head scarves, an emblem of Palestinian solidarity, following an updated dress code.

“Jhumpa Lahiri has chosen to withdraw her acceptance of the 2024 Isamu Noguchi Award in response to our updated dress code policy,” the museum said in a statement. “We respect her perspective and understand that this policy may or may not align with everyone’s views.” Lahiri received the Pulitzer Prize in 2000 for her book “Interpreter of Maladies.”

The museum, founded nearly 40 years ago by Japanese-American designer and sculptor Isamu Noguchi, announced in August that employees could not wear clothing or accessories that expressed “political messages, slogans or symbols” during their working hours.

Lahiri’s readers, as well as pro-Palestinian activists, praised the author for having a “principled” and  “moral” stance and underlined the potential influence of such a move by a respected icon in the literary world.

The daughter of Indian immigrants, Lahiri was born in London and moved to the United States when she was three.

In 2000 she won the Pulitzer for fiction for her debut story collection, Interpreter of Maladies. She has since published several books of fiction and nonfiction in English and Italian, after living in Rome, Italy.

Lahiri is also the director of the creative writing programme at Barnard College, Columbia. The New York women’s college was under public scrutiny in recent months for deleting a post on its Instagram account featuring a Barnard student who is seen holding up the latest issue of ArabLit Quarterly.

The issue’s front cover showed a flower-filled map of occupied Palestine, with flowers blooming out of Gaza.

The keffiyeh scarf has become a symbol of Palestinian self-determination across the world, with many protesters wearing it in solidarity with the people of Gaza while demanding an end to Israel’s war on the besieged enclave.

Lahiri, was also one of thousands of scholars who signed a letter in May to university presidents in the US, expressing solidarity with campus protests against Israel’s war in Gaza, calling it “unspeakable destruction”.

 

 

 

Recent News

09Jul
Is The Salt Path Story as True as It Claims

Is The Salt Path Story as True as It Claims

The author of the best-selling memoir The Salt Path has been accused of stealing £64,000 before losing her home after she failed to pay off her debts, as well as fabricating or giving misleading information about some elements of her book. The 2018 book, and recent film adaptation, told the story of a couple who […]

08Jul
Bibliotheca Alexandrina Celebrates Knowledge

Bibliotheca Alexandrina Celebrates Knowledge

Amid a vibrant cultural atmosphere, the Bibliotheca Alexandrina inaugurated the 20th edition of its International Book Fair, which will run until 21 July 2025. This milestone edition sees broad participation from Egyptian and Arab publishing houses, organized in collaboration with the General Egyptian Book Organization and the Egyptian and Arab Publishers Association.   Marking two […]

08Jul
Boualem Sansal’s Sentence Causes Global Protest

Boualem Sansal’s Sentence Causes Global Protest

The International Publishers Association (IPA) has called the continuing detention of the Franco-Algerian author Boualem Sansal’s an “afront to freedom of expression”. This week a court in Algeria upheld Sansal’s five-year prison sentence.  The author was charged in March under Algeria’s anti-terrorism laws and convicted of “undermining national unity”. Kristenn Einarsson, Chair of the IPA’s […]

Related Posts

Bibliotheca Alexandrina Celebrates Knowledge

Bibliotheca Alexandrina Celebrates Knowledge

Amid a vibrant cultural atmosphere, the Bibliotheca Alexandrina inaugurated the 20th edition of its International Book Fair, which will run until 21 July 2025. This milestone edition sees broad participation from Egyptian and Arab publishing houses, organized in...

Boualem Sansal’s Sentence Causes Global Protest

Boualem Sansal’s Sentence Causes Global Protest

The International Publishers Association (IPA) has called the continuing detention of the Franco-Algerian author Boualem Sansal's an “afront to freedom of expression”. This week a court in Algeria upheld Sansal's five-year prison sentence.  The author was charged in...

New Era for Intellectual Property in UAE Academia

New Era for Intellectual Property in UAE Academia

Building on its growing international presence in intellectual property protection while reinforcing the UAE’s standing as a regional and international hub in this field, the Emirates Reprographic Rights Management Association (ERRA) has announced the signing of the...

Previous Next
Close
Test Caption
Test Description goes like this