1.1870256-3737068770
Indian writer Mahasweta Devi delivers the keynote address during the opening of India's Jaipur Literature Festival in Jaipur, India, Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013. This year's festival will also feature author Zoe Heller and Booker Prize winner Howard Jacobson. (AP Photo/Deepak Sharma) Image Credit: AP

Mahashweta Devi, a well-known Indian writer and social activist, who used her writing to give voice to the oppressed tribal and forest dwellers, has died. She was 90.

Devi had been in a hospital in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata where she was being treated for a kidney ailment for the past two months, Press Trust of India said.

Writing mostly in the Bengali language, Devi’s major works dealt with the suffering of poor labourers and forest dwellers who had lost their lands due to industrial and urban growth. She founded several social organisations to help fight for the rights of indigenous people.

Devi was the recipient of several awards including several of India’s highest civilian and literary awards. In 1997 she was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay award, a Philippine honour considered the Asian Nobel Prize.

Her citation for the Magsaysay award recognised her “compassionate crusade through art and activism to claim for tribal peoples a just and honourable place in India’s national life.”