Women poets Diah Hadaning rewarded MURI.
One Indonesian women poets Diah Hadaning, who are still actively at work until today, celebrate her 70 anniversary on Thursday (7 / 5). Diah also launched a new anthology of his poems, titled "700 Women Who Looking Poem Options."
"The book was published as a reward for her loyalty at poet divine commandment," said Thowaf Zuharon, from the Japek Foundation and Pustaka Yashiba, which publishes the book.
Thowaf explains, collected poems have all been published through the mass media and published in various anthologies, both single, a duet or with other poets.
"It is typical to enjoy the beauty of hundreds of poems Diah Hadaning throughout the creative process during the 37 years since 1973 up to 2010", he said.
Of his achievement that, together at her birthday celebration which was held in a simple in HB Jassin Literary Center, Taman Ismail Marzuki, a member of the Jakarta Arts Council Literature Committee was awarded the "Writers Poetry Anthology thickest on Oldest Age, 700 Pages at Age 70 Years" from the Museum Rekor Indonesia(MURI).
The oldest-old member of the Jakarta Arts Council the period 2009-2012.
Hadaning Diah was born in Jepara, Central Java, May 4, 1940. Serious in writing since the 1970s, he was contemporary with Ardianto Piek Oetoro Soepriadi and Rita. Since her first poems published in The Daily Symphony (1973), she began to work diligently. Her works such as poems, short stories, novels serialized in the form of stories and articles, often adorned the various print media since the 1980s.
Has published about 35 books, 11 of whom are single anthology of poetry, three books of poetry-themed anthology manuscripts reform, each containing 50 pieces poems, and novels.
Some of the awards she has ever achieved such Gapena Gift from the Government of Malaysia (1980) for his work Manuscript Letter from the City that contains 100 poems. Institution Research Center for Literature and Culture of Java, in Solo, who gave her grace as poet to preserve Javanese culture, as many of her poems are rooted in Javanese culture.







