Bangladesh Birth of a nation

From The Daily Star, reading and sharing:

On 21 February 1952, a few brave Bengali youths laid down their lives to protect the dignity of their mother tongue. With that tragic event taking place on the streets of Dhaka, the seed of bangladeshi nationhood was sown, which eventually sprouted and gave the strength and fortitude to press for autonomy and eventually freedom from exploitation of the Pakistani regime.

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They tried to deny the right to speak, think and write in Bengali mother tongue, when they most unjustly declared that Urdu would be the only official language of the state of Pakistan. This declaration from the ruling quarters was a blatant denial of the right of the Bengalis who formed the majority of the population of Pakistan.

When the brave sons of that land most unselfishly embraced martyrdom to counter the designs of the Pakistani rulers, this step was written into history as the courageous act of a people who fought to uphold the dignity of their national pride. For the Bengalis, as the years passed by, the yearning to free themselves from the shackles of exploitation gained momentum as the world witnessed the political movements of the sixties ushering in the six-point charter of the Awami League, the 11-point demands of the students, the mass movement of 1969, and ultimately the Liberation War of 1971 that gave birth to Bangladesh.

Bangladesh is the only country in the world that had to spill its blood for the right to speak its language. Bengalis were some of the few in history to have faced a trained, well-equipped army and defeated them.

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By 1969 Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib ur Rahman raised the issue of full regional autonomy for East Pakistan. The election of 1970 saw the Awami League led by Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman winning a majority of seats in the National Assembly to form a government. But that was never to happen.

The Pakistani military regime blatantly rejected the result and openly threatened the legitimate elected people’s representatives of dire consequences.

On the night of March 25, 1971 the Pakistan Army executed “Operation Searchlight” and the World saw brutality the likes of which has rarely been seen. Bengal lost 3 million lives and 2 million women were brutally raped. But the resilient people of the soon-to-be Bangladesh did not give up and they won. They won their freedom. They won their rights, and they won their mother tongue.

It has been 64 years from 1952 to 2016. Bengalis have crossed all major hurdles Bangladesh could have faced and still stand tall and so they shall as long as they remember their history and culture. As long as they remember their past, present and future nothing will and no one can deter Bangladesh.