Nandini Sidda Reddy (or Sidhareddy, Sidha Reddy; Telugu: నందిని సిధారెడ్డి; born 12 June 1955) is a teacher, writer, poet, songwriter and social activist from the state of Telangana, India.
He is known for promoting Telugu culture.
Several of his songs have been featured in Telugu language films.
He was one of the leaders of the Telangana movement to make Telangana a separate state from Andhra Pradesh, which took place in 2014.
He was the first Chairman of the Telangana Sahitya Akademi.
Life
Education and teaching career
Nandini Sidda Reddy was born in 1955 in Bandaram village, Medak district, Telangana, India.
His father, Narra Balasiddhareddy, was a communist who fought against the Razakars.[1]
After completing his MA at Osmania University, Hyderabad, he did his MPhil degree on "The Sun in Modern Telugu Poetry" (1981) and then graduated with his Ph.D. on "Modern Poetry – Reality – Surrealism" in 1986.[2]
After teaching in Medak from 1984 to 1991, he worked as a Telugu lecturer in Siddipet Government Degree College and retired in 2012.[2]
Author and poet
Nandini Sidda Reddy began to write stories and poetry in his student days.
Later he ran an organization called the Navasahiti and Medak Study Circle and a small magazine called Rose.[2]
He founded the Manjeera Writers' Association and organized several literary events, edited the Manjeera bulletin and published seven collections of poetry.
He edited a magazine called Soi.
In 2001, he was the founding president of the Telangana Writers' Forum.[2]
In August 1997, written in just one hour, Siddhareddy's poem on the need for a special Telangana movement became known as "Nageti salalo na Telangana".
In this poem, Sidhareddy describes the whole culture of Telangana.
The same poem was used as a song in the movie Poru Telangana.[3]
The song also received a Nandi Award.
Sidhareddy wrote the poem on Telangana long before Ande Sri's Jaya Jaya He Telangana and Goreti Venkanna's Ganama Telanganama.
There are ten verses in this poem, which is sung all over Telangana as a Bathukamma song.
Nandini Sidda Reddy appeared in the 2011 Telugu historical drama film Jai Bolo Telangana,[4] which featured his song Oka Puvvu Oka Navvu rendered by Sri Krishna, Adarshini.[citation needed]
In 2016 he was chosen for the Potti Sreeramulu Telugu University’s annual Vishista Puraskaram award.
This was the first time the award had gone to someone outside Hyderabad. It recognized Reddy's role in the separate Telangana movement.[5]
Telangana official roles
In 2014 Nandini Sidha Reddy was a member of a committee to review Telugu language textbooks.
A key issue was whether they should be in the spoken Telangana dialect or the traditional "Sanskritised" Telugu.[6]
In 2015 he was appointed to a Telangana state government committee on the syllabus for recruitment exams. The old syllabus drafted by the Andhra Pradesh Public Service Commission in the united Andhra Pradesh would be replaced by a "Telangana-centric new syllabus".[7]
Nandini Sidda Reddy was appointed as the first Chairman of the Telangana Sahitya Akademi formed on 2 May 2017.[2][8]
The academy was established to ensure regular research, analysis, publishing and propagation of the Telugu language.[9]
In August 2017 he headed a panel to select an eminent personality eligible for Kaloji Narayana Rao award.[10]
His academy was in charge of the World Telugu Conference held in Hyderabad from 15 to 19 December 2017.[9]
As of 2020 he was still Chairman of Telangana Cultural Academy.[11]
Works
Essays
Modern Telugu Poetry - Reality - Surrealism (Theory)
Adhunika Telugu Kavithvam Vasthavikatha - Adhivasthavika' - Theoretical Essay as part of PhD - 1986
Iguram - Essays on Telangana Language and culture - 2007
Kula Vruthula - Telangana Sahityam – Essay - 2008
Avarthanam - Essays on Telangana Literature - 2011
Poetry
Diviti – Mini Collection of Poems with two other poets - 1974
^కందుకూరి రమేష్బాబు (Kandukuri Rameshbabu) (16 March 2014), "బతుకమ్మ (Bathukamma)", నమస్తే తెలంగాణ దినపత్రిక ఆదివారం అనుబంధం (Namaste Telangana Daily: Sunday Supplement)
^Nandini Sidha Reddy (1994), "A pair of hands", in Kundurti Satya Murty (ed.), Down to the Earth: An Anthology of Post Modern Telugu Poetry, Free Verse Front, pp. 45–, retrieved 14 July 2020
^Nandini Sidha Reddy (November–December 2000), "Dreams and Life", Indian Literature, 44 (6 (200)), translated by K. Suneetha Rani, Sahitya Akademi: 96–97, JSTOR23343330