Aungsu Mostafiz:
I
am a bangladeshi, I spand my Childhood in Bangladesh. I love Bangladesh. Bangladesh
is one of the world’s poorest and most densely-populated countries.
Poverty in Bangladesh is deep and widespread: almost half the population
lives on less than $1 a day. According to UNICEF, 26.5 million Bangladeshi
children live below the national poverty line, 33 million below the
international poverty line.
Consequently the plight of poor families in Bangladesh is desperate and access to basic essentials is scarce. UNICEF estimates that over 5 million children between 5 and 14 years old are sent out to work, often in dangerous conditions, leaving them vulnerable to exploitation and abuse.
Consequently the plight of poor families in Bangladesh is desperate and access to basic essentials is scarce. UNICEF estimates that over 5 million children between 5 and 14 years old are sent out to work, often in dangerous conditions, leaving them vulnerable to exploitation and abuse.
.
Location and Geography.
Bangladesh straddles the Bay of Bengal in south Asia. To the west and
north it is bounded by India; to the southeast, it borders Myanmar. The
topography is predominantly a low-lying floodplain. About half the total area
is actively deltaic and is prone to flooding in the monsoon season from May
through September. The Ganges/Padma River flows into the country from the
northwest, while the Brahmaputra/ Jamuna enters from the north. The capital
city, Dhaka, is near the point where those river systems meet. The land is
suitable for rice cultivation. In the north and the southeast the land is more
hilly and dry, and tea is grown. The Chittagong Hill Tracts have extensive
hardwood forests. The vast river delta area is home to the dominant plains
culture. The hilly areas of the northeast and southeast are occupied by much
smaller tribal groups, many of which have strongly resisted domination by the
national government and the population pressure from Bangladeshis who move into
and attempt to settle in their traditional areas. In 1998 an accord was reached
between the armed tribal group Shanti Bahini and the government.
Emergence of the Nation. The creation of the independent nation represents the
triumph of ethnic and cultural politics. The region that is now Bangladesh has
been part of a number of important political entities, including Indian
empires, Buddhist kingdoms, the Moghul empire, the British empire and the
Pakistani nation. Until 1947 Bangladesh was known as East Bengal province and
had been part of Great Britain's India holding since the 1700s. In 1947,
Britain, in conjunction with India's leading indigenous political
organizations, partitioned the Indian colony into India and Pakistan. The
province of East Bengal was made part of Pakistan and was referred to as East
Pakistan. West Pakistan was carved from the northwest provinces of the British
Indian empire. This division of territory represented an attempt to create a
Muslim nation on Hindu India's peripheries. However, the west and east wings of
Pakistan were separated by more than 1,000 miles of India, creating cultural
discontinuity between the two wings. The ethnic groups of Pakistan and the
Indian Muslims who left India after partition were greatly different in
language and way of life from the former East Bengalis: West Pakistan was more
oriented toward the Middle East and Arab Islamic influence than was East
Pakistan, which contained Hindu, Buddhist, Islamic, and British cultural
influences. From the beginning of Pakistan's creation, the Bengali population
in the east was more numerous than the Pakistani population in the western
wing, yet West Pakistan became the seat of government and controlled nearly all
national resources. West Pakistanis generally viewed Bengalis as inferior,
weak, and less Islamic.
From
1947 to 1970, West Pakistan reluctantly gave in to Bengali calls for power
within the government, armed forces, and civil service, but increasing social
unrest in the east led to a perception among government officials that the
people of Bengal were unruly and untrust worthy "Hinduized" citizens.
Successive Pakistani regimes, increasingly concerned with consolidating their
power over the entire country, often criticized the Hindu minority in Bengal.
This was evident in Prime Minister Nazimuddin's attempt in 1952 to make Urdu,
the predominant language of West Pakistan, the state language. The effect in
the east was to energize opposition movements, radicalize students at Dhaka
University, and give new meaning to a Bengali identity that stressed the
cultural unity of the east instead of a pan-Islamic brotherhood. Through the
1960s, the Bengali public welcomed a message that stressed the uniqueness of
Bengali culture, and this formed the basis for calls for self-determination or
autonomy. In the late 1960s, the Pakistani government attempted to fore-stall
scheduled elections. The elections were held on 7 December 1970, and Pakistanis
voted directly for members of the National Assembly. The Awami League, led by
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, was largely a Bengali party which called for autonomy
for the east. Sheikh Mujib wanted to reconfigure Pakistan as a confederation of
two equal partners. His party won one of 162 seats in the East Pakistan
provincial assembly and 160 of the three hundred seats in the National
Assembly. The Awami League would control national politics and have the ability
to name the prime minister. President Yahya, however, postponed the convening
of the National Assembly to prevent a Bengali power grab. In response, Sheikh
Mujib and the Awami League led civil disobedience in East Pakistan. West
Pakistan began to move more troops into the east, and on 25 March 1971, the
Pakistani army carried out a systematic execution of several hundred people,
arrested Mujib, and transported him to the west. On 26 March the Awami League
declared East Pakistan an independent nation, and by April the Bengalis were in
open conflict with the Pakistani military.
In
a 10-month war of liberation, Bangladeshi units called Mukhti Bahini (freedom
fighters), largely trained and armed by Indian forces, battled Pakistani troops
throughout the country in guerrilla skirmishes. The Pakistanis systematically
sought out political opponents and executed Hindu men on sight. Close to 10
million people fled Bangladesh for West Bengal, in India. In early December
1971, the Indian army entered Bangladesh, engaged Pakistani military forces
with the help of the Mukhti Bahini, and in a ten-day period subdued the
Pakistani forces. On 16 December the Pakistani military surrendered. In January
1972, Mujib was released from confinement and became the prime minister of
Bangladesh. Bangladesh was founded as a "democratic, secular, socialist
state," but the new state represented the triumph of a Bangladeshi Muslim
culture and language. The administration degenerated into corruption, and Mujib
attempted to create a one-party state. On 15 August 1975 he was assassinated,
along with much of his family, by army officers. Since that time, Bangladesh
has been both less socialistic and less secular. General Ziaur Rahman became
martial law administrator in December 1976 and president in 1977. On 30 May
1981, Zia was assassinated by army officers. His rule had been violent and
repressive, but he had improved national economy. After a short-lived civilian
government, a bloodless coup placed Army chief of staff General Mohammed Ershad
in office as martial law administrator; he later became president.
Civilian
opposition increased, and the Awami League, the Bangladesh National Party
(BNP), and the religious fundamentalist party Jamaat-i-Islami united in a
seven-year series of crippling strikes. In December 1990, Ershad was forced to
resign. A caretaker government held national elections early in 1991. The BNP,
headed by Khaleda Zia, widow of former President Zia, formed a government in an
alliance with the Jamaat-i-Islami. Political factionalism intensified over the
next five years, and on 23 June 1996, the Awami League took control of
Parliament. At its head was Sheikh Hasina Wazed, the daughter of Sheikh Mujib.
National Identity. Bangladeshi
national identity is rooted in a Bengali culture that transcends international
borders and includes the area of Bangladesh itself and West Bengal, India.
Symbolically, Bangladeshi identity is centered on the 1971 struggle for
independence from Pakistan. During that struggle, the key elements of
Bangladeshi identity coalesced around the importance of the Bengali mother
tongue and the distinctiveness of a culture or way of life connected to the
floodplains of the region. Since that time, national identity has become
increasingly linked to Islamic symbols as opposed to the Hindu Bengali, a fact
that serves to reinforce the difference between Hindu West Bengal and Islamic
Bangladesh. Being Bangladeshi in some sense means feeling connected to the
natural land–water systems of the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and other rivers that
drain into the Bay of Bengal.
Hello world, Allover we are well & U? U are Invited our Bangladesh. Good Bye.
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