New Delhi: Writer Arundhati Roy said on Thursday that “almost all the people we call ‘antenational’ are those who cares” while those who project themselves as nationalists often work only to protect their wealth only.“Almost all people whom we call ‘Entire’ are those who cares. And then those who call themselves great nationalists, I can bet you that 99 percent of them are dodging taxes, sent their children to America, or doing everything to ensure that whatever their personal money or their personal money or their bullying does not affect, said that the news agency said. She was speaking at the launch of her memoir Mother Mary comes to meThe book focuses on her relationship with her mother, Mary Roy, a female rights activist, who fought in the case of landmark heritage for Syrian Christian women in Kerala. Roy said that she wrote a memoir after Mary’s death in 2022, describing her mother’s passing as “born of the emotions of memories and emotions”. “I wrote this book because I think my mother is the one who is worthy of sharing with the world,” she said, as PTI quoted. 63 -year -old, who won the Booker Award in 1997 Deity of small thingsSaid that his writing has always come from “the place of love and to care about something”.Roy told PTI in an interview, “I write that when it becomes difficult to keep quiet compared to writing,” Roy told PTI in an interview. He said, “People don’t understand why someone gets so upset? Why do I write? Because it comes from a place of love. It comes from cares about something. Otherwise, why should I be disturbed? Like, why should I not enjoy my Booker Award or whoever was.” She said that she does not see herself as both a writer and a worker. “This is a label that I feel absurd, some clunk word is something like a sofa-bed,” he commented. Roy described himself as a risky chase. “Writing the most dangerous place in the history of time. I have never been under any confusion that it was a safe place. So I am fine here. Because it is security that succumbs to me,” she said. The memoir described her hard relationship with her mother, which she remembers, addresses her children as “Mrs. Roy” like other students at her school in Kerala. Roy writes, “It was almost to throw light on his students and to give all those who were with us, we – that (brother) and I (Roy) – had to absorb the darkness,” Roy writes. He said, “She was rough, and that roughness put some steel in my spine … so when all those people were around me – protesting and telling me the name – I am just going, ‘Do you know whose daughter I am?” Like, my needle is not running at all. , Over the years, Arundhati Roy has faced matters, protests and even a day in jail to support Narmada Bachao Endool. His book independence The reportedly was allegedly banned in Jammu and Kashmir with 24 other titles to promote “false tale and separatism”.