Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman |
Some of the biographers of the Father of the Nation
Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman have said that he was the most astonishing
and much talked about leader in South East Asia. Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman charismatic leader, President
and Prime Minister of Bangladesh. Bangabandhu, the architect of Bangladesh, was
a founding member of the East Pakistan Muslim Students League (est. 1948), one
of the founding joint secretaries of the East Pakistan Awami Muslim League
(est. 1949), general secretary of the awami league (1953-1966), president
of the Awami League (1966-1974), president of Bangladesh (in absentia from 26
March 1971 to 11 January 1972), prime minister of Bangladesh (1972-24
January1975), president of Bangladesh (25 January 1975-15 August 1975).
Birth:
Born on 17 March 1920 in the village Tungipara under the
gopalganj Sub-division (currently district) in the district of Faridpur. He was
born in a middle class Bangalee family. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's father, Sheikh
Lutfar Rahman, was a serestadar in the civil court of Gopalganj.
Education:
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman passed his matriculation from
Gopalganj Missionary School in 1942, IA (Twelfth Grade) from Islamia College,
Calcutta in 1944 and BA from the same College in 1947.
Early Political Life:
His political life began as an humble worker while he was
still a student. He was fortunate to come in early contact with such towering
personalities as Hussain Shaheed Suhrawardy and A K Fazlul Huq, both charismatic
Chief Ministers of undivided Bengal. Adolescent Mujib grew up under the
gathering gloom of stormy politics as the aging British raj in India was
falling apart and the Second World War was violently rocking the continents. He
witnessed the ravages of the war and the stark realities of the great famine of
1943 in which about five million people lost their lives. The tragic plight of
the people under colonial rule turned young Mujib into a rebel.
This was also the time when he saw the legendary revolutionary
Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose challenging the British raj. Also about this time he
came to know the works of Bernard Shaw, Karl Marx, Rabindranath Tagore and
rebel poet Kazi Nazrul Islam. Soon after the partition of India in 1947 it was
felt that the creation of Pakistan with its two wings separated by a physical
distance of about 1,200 miles was a geographical monstrosity. The economic,
political, cultural and linguistic characters of the two wings were also
different. Keeping the two wings together under the forced bonds of a single
state structure in the name of religious nationalism would merely result in a
rigid political control and economic exploitation of the eastern wing by the
all-powerful western wing which controlled the country’s capital and its
economic and military might.
Early Movement:
In 1948 a movement was initiated to make Bengali one of the
state languages of Pakistan. This can be termed the first stirrings of the
movement for an independent Bangladesh. The demand for cultural freedom
gradually led to the demand for national independence. During that language
movement Sheikh Mujib was arrested and sent to jail. During the blood-drenched
language movement in 1952 he was again arrested and this time he provided
inspiring leadership of the movement from inside the jail.
In 1954 Sheikh Mujib was elected a member of the then East
Pakistan Assembly. He joined A K Fazlul Huq’s United Front government as the
youngest minister. The ruling clique of Pakistan soon dissolved this government
and Shiekh Mujib was once again thrown into prison. In 1955 he was elected a
member of the Pakistan Constituent Assembly and was again made a minister when
the Awami League formed the provincial government in 1956. Soon after General
Ayub Khan staged a military coup in Pakistan in 1958, Sheikh Mujib was arrested
once again and a number of cases were instituted against him. He was released
after 14 months in prison but was re-arrested in February 1962. In fact, he
spent the best part of his youth behind the prison bars.
Supreme Test:
Bangabandhu In 7 March 1971 |
March 7, 1971 was a day of supreme test in his life. Nearly
two million freedom loving people assembled at the Ramna Race Course Maidan,
later renamed Suhrawardy Uddyan, on that day to hear their leader’s command for
the battle for liberation. The Pakistani military junta was also waiting to
trap him and to shoot down the people on the plea of suppressing a revolt
against the state. Sheikh Mujib spoke in a thundering voice but in a masterly
well-calculated restrained language. His historic declaration in the meeting was:
"Our struggle this time is for freedom. Our struggle this time is for
independence." To deny the Pakistani military an excuse for a crackdown,
he took care to put forward proposals for a solution of the crisis in a
constitutional way and kept the door open for negotiations.
The crackdown, however, did come on March 25 when the junta
arrested Sheikh Mujib for the last time and whisked him away to West Pakistan
for confinement for the entire duration of the liberation war. In the name of
suppressing a rebellion the Pakistani military let loose hell on the unarmed
civilians throughout Bangladesh and perpetrated a genocide killing no less than
three million men, women and children, raping women in hundreds of thousands
and destroying property worth billions of taka. Before their ignominious defeat
and surrender they, with the help of their local collaborators, killed a large
number of intellectuals, university professors, writers, doctors, journalists,
engineers and eminent persons of other professions. In pursuing a scorch-earth
policy they virtually destroyed the whole of the country’s infrastructure. But
they could not destroy the indomitable spirit of the freedom fighters nor could
they silence the thundering voice of the leader. Tape recordings of Bangabandhu
Sheikh Mujib’s 7th March speech kept on inspiring his followers throughout the
war.
Return and
Reconstruction:
Forced by international pressure and the imperatives of its
own domestic predicament, Pakistan was obliged to release Sheikh Mujib from its
jail soon after the liberation of Bangladesh and on 10 January 1972 the great
leader returned to his beloved land and his admiring nation.
But as he saw the plight of the country his heart bled and
he knew that there would be no moment of rest for him. Almost the entire nation
including about ten million people returning from their refuge in India had to
be rehabilitated, the shattered economy needed to be put back on the rail, the
infrastructure had to be rebuilt, millions had to be saved from starvation and
law and order had to be restored. Simultaneously, a new constitution had to be
framed, a new parliament had to be elected and democratic institutions had to
be put in place. Any ordinary mortal would break down under the pressure of
such formidable tasks that needed to be addressed on top priority basis.
Although simple at heart, Sheikh Mujib was a man of cool nerves and of great
strength of mind. Under his charismatic leadership the country soon began
moving on to the road to progress and the people found their long-cherished
hopes and aspirations being gradually realized.
Assassination:
But at this critical juncture, his life was cut short by a
group of anti-liberation reactionary forces who in a pre-dawn move on 15 August
1975 not only assassinated him but 23 of his family members and close
associates. Even his 10 year old son Russel’s life was not spared by the
assassins. The only survivors were his two daughters, Sheikh Hasina - now the
country’s Prime Minister - and her younger sister Sheikh Rehana, who were then
away on a visit to Germany. In killing the father of the Nation, the
conspirators ended a most glorious chapter in the history of Bangladesh but
they could not end the great leader’s finest legacy- the rejuvenated Bengali
nation. In a fitting tribute to his revered memory, the present government has
declared August 15 as the national mourning day. On this day every year the
people would be paying homage to the memory of a man who became a legend in his
won lifetime. Bangabandhu lives in the heart of his people. Bangladesh and
Bangabandhu are one and inseparable. Bangladesh was Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman’s vision and he fought and died for it.
No comments:
Post a Comment