Hillol Ray
Index of Writings
Biographical Sketch

Hillol Ray, Poet Laureate, Author, and Song Writer, is an Environmental Engineer and Manager of Drinking Water Supply Enforcement Program, with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in Dallas, Texas. Born and raised in a suburb of Calcutta, India, he has been writing poetry since the age of six, in his native language “Bengali”. His poems are regularly published in Bengali magazines from Asia, Europe, Canada, Sweden, and North America and are currently being translated into English, Swedish, Spanish, German and French languages.
Many issues of “Six Country Reporter” at EPA in Dallas have also published his English poems. But one of his recent poems, “Earth Day”, has made him an “overnight” sensation. It was read at several local, national, and international observations, presented at celebrations in U.S.A. and abroad, displayed by the Dallas Museum of Art, and has been published worldwide. It also earned him letters of personal recognition from the U.S. President Bill Clinton, Vice President Al Gore, Jr. and Indian Ambassador S.S. Ray (no relation) in Washington, DC. In addition, he has received letters of personal appreciations for his poems from Madame Francine Cousteau, President of the Cousteau Society, Inc. in Paris, France, (and wife of world renowned Oceanographer Jacques-Yves Cousteau), and also from Mother Teresa of Calcutta, India.
Recently his poems “Old Wine in New Bottle”, “Homogenization – A Millennium Dream” have been selected as “Choice Poem” by the Australian Poetic Society. His poems have been displayed by the J.C. Penney, Inc., University of San Francisco in California, Cultural Association of Bengal in New York, Southern Methodist University in Dallas, TX; University of New Hampshire in Durham, New Hampshire; University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor, Michigan; Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C.; Roane State Community College in Harriman, Tennessee; Nazareth College in Rochester, New York; Saint Vincent College in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, Junior League of Annapolis (JLA), Inc. in Annapolis, Maryland; Broward County Independent School District in Fort Lauderdale, Florida; DFW Green Alliance in Dallas, Texas; Rangsit University in Thailand, Bangkok; Colegio Jefferson of Caracas, Venezuela; Shanghai Jiao Tong University (SJTU) in Shanghai, China; NetFriends of Tibet Site in Stockholm, Sweden; “China Campus” from Beijing, China, and also on the web pages of EPA in Washington, DC, the Asian-American Village from Boston, Massachusetts, and many other web sites from the USA and abroad. He was invited as a Distinguished Judge at the Earth Day Kids Art Contest 2003, organized by the Asian Pacific American Council (APAC) at EPA in Washington, D.C.
The lyrics from his poem “Diversity” have been included in the song album “Star Route U.S.A.” released by Amerecord from Hollywood, California. He is frequently invited as a Guest Poet, Keynote Speaker, and Seminar Moderator by the various cultural organizations, educational institutions, and public and university libraries and has been interviewed by numerous television stations. He was the winner of Bronze Medal for Commendable Service in implementing a Consumer Confidence Rule (CCR) Strategy in 2001 and Excellence in Regional Customer Service Award in 2002 – both from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in Dallas, Texas. His biography has appeared in the Special Commemorative Edition of “500 Leaders of Science”, and also in International Directory of Distinguished Leadership (Eighth and Ninth Editions) – both published by the American Biographical Institute, Inc. from Raleigh, North Carolina, and poems have appeared in many popular anthologies. To name a few, “The Crystal Prism” published by the CGS Communications in Fort Worth, Texas; as well as “Edge of Twilight”, “Best Poems of the 90s”, “A Delicate Balance”, “Best Poems of 1995”, “Of Sunshine and Daydreams”, “Essence of a Dream”, “Through the Looking Glass”, “Best Poems of 1997”, “Chambers of Time”, “Beneath A Rainbow”, “ Chasing the Wind”, “A Painted Garden”, “Melodies of The Soul”, “Verdant Lands of Spring”, “Best Poems of 1998”, “Fabric of Life”, “The Rustling Leaves”, “Of Summer’s Passing”, “The Peace We Knew”, “The Promise of Dawn”, and “Outstanding Poets of 1998”, published by the National Library of Poetry in Owings Mills, Maryland.
Hillol features prominently on the Envirolink website, which has links to more of his poems, articles and publications
- Bikini Atoll: Guinea Pig Of Nuclear Detonation
- Breathing In Love’s Captivity
- Building Leadership: Embrace Cultural Values And Inclusion
- Challenges Of A Changing World
- Chernobyl: A Continuing Catastrophe
- Children’s Health: Why, When, And How
- Dialogue: A Seed for Global Relations
- Disability And Older Workers – In “H-Ray Vision”
- Disaster Reduction: Blueprint For Global Alliance
- Disease of the Spirit
- Diversity
- Diwali – The Festival of Lights
- Hibakusha In “Hillolian Conclave”
- HIV/AIDS: A Threat to Global Stability
- Horror of Conflict
- Human Development And Hillonomics
- Human Rights: A Cross-Cutting Issue
- Hunger and Poverty: A Universal Shame
- Indigenous Peoples: The Fabric of Global Humanity
- Indisputable Legend Of Mount Everest
- International Criminal Court: The Beacon of Human Rights
- Irresistible Dynamics Of Environmental Crisis
- Migrants: Hapless Maladies of Misconceptions
- Modern Poems: Tintinnabulation of Future Humanity
- Mother Of The Universe
- Nanotechnology: A Promise Or Peril For Humanity?
- Ngawang Choephel: The Epitome of Human Tragedy
- Nuclear Non-Proliferation: A “Treaty” that Counts
- “One EPA” Born In “USA”
- One Vision, One Mission, One Voice
- Only Race: Human
- Our Ailing Planet: As it Matters
- Our Own Mortality in “H-Ray Vision”
- Pain of My Pen
- Pandiculation (Italian Version)
- Peace: The Touchstone of Lasting Humanity
- Plight of the Chechens
- Prisoner of Hope
- Salute to Liberty
- Striving For Excellence In Leadership, Diversity, And Inclusion
- Swami Vivekananda: Epitome Of Love And Humanity
- Tempest In A Can
- The “Fantastic” in “H-Ray Vision”
- The Marvel of Ingenuity
- The Turning Point
- Tibet: A Millennium’s Melancholy
- Tomorrow May Be Too Late
- Truth: Be Told or Untold?
- Twenty-First February