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[Biography
by Khaleda Zia.]
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. In an age of military coup d'etat he attained power through elections
and mass upsurge; in an age of decline of democracy he firmly established
democracy in one of the countries of Asia and in an age of "Strong
Men" he spurned the opportunity of becoming a dictator and instead chose to
become the elected Prime Minister. The way he turned a nonviolent
non-cooperation movement of unarmed masses into an armed struggle that
successfully brought into reality the liberation of a new nation and the
creation of a new state in barely ten months will remain a wonder of history.
March
7, 1971 was a day of supreme test in his life. The leaders of the military junta
of Pakistan were on that day eagerly waiting to trap him. A contingent of
heavily armed Pakistani troops was poised near the Suhrawardy Uddyan to wait for
an order to start massacre the people on the plea of suppressing a revolt that
Bangabandhu was about to declare against Pakistan at the meeting he was going to
address there.
In
fact, the entire Bangladesh was then in a state of revolt. The sudden
postponement of the scheduled session of the newly elected National Assembly and
the reluctance of the military leaders to transfer power to the elected
representatives of the people had driven the people to desperation and they were
seeking the opportunity to break away from the Pakistani colonial rule. Nearly
two million freedom-loving people who assembled at the Suhrawardy Uddyan that
day had but one wish, only one demand : "Bangabandhu, declare independence;
give us the command for the battle for national liberation."
The
Father of the Nation spoke in a calm and restrained language. It was more like a
sacred hymn than a speech spellbinding two million people. His historic
declaration in the meeting on that day was : "Our struggle this time is for
freedom. Our struggle this time is for independence". This was the
declaration of independence for Bangladeshis, for their liberation struggle. But
he did not give the Pakistani military rulers the opportunity to use their arms.
He foiled their carefully laid scheme. In the same speech he took care to put
forward four proposals for the solution of the problem in a constitutional way
and kept the door open for negotiations.
He
was taller than the average Bangalee, had the same dark complexion and spoke in
a vibrant voice. But what special power gave him the magnetic qualities of
drawing a mass of seventy-five million people to him? This question stirred the
minds of many people at home and abroad. He was not educated abroad nor was he
born with a silver spoon in his mouth. Yet he was as dear to the educated
Bangladeshi compatriots as to the illiterate and half-educated masses. He
inspired the intelligentsia and the working classes alike. He did not climb to
leadership overnight. It has been a slow and steady process. He attained his
enviable eminence the hard way. He began as an humble worker at the bottom rung.
He arduously climbed to the position of a national leader and rose to the very
pinnacle as the Father of the Nation.
He
was born in a middle class Bangalee family and his political leadership arose
out of the aims and aspirations of the ordinary Bangalee. He was inseparably
linked with the hopes and aspirations, the joys and sorrows, the travails and
triumphs of these ordinary people. He spoke their language. He gave voice to
their hopes and aspirations. Year after year he spent the best days of his youth
behind the prison bars. That is why his power was the power of the people.
Whoever
has once come in contact with him has admitted that his personality, a mingling
of gentle and stern qualities, had an uncanny magical attraction. He is as
simple as a child yet unbending in courage; as strong as steel when necessary.
Coupled with this was his incomparable strength of mind and steadfast devotion
to his own ideals. He was a nationalist in character, a democrat in behavior, a
socialist in belief and a secularist by conviction.
Bangabandbu
had to move forward step by step in his struggle. He had to change the tactics
and the slogans of the movement several times. It can thus be said that though
the period of direct struggle for freedom was only nine months, the indirect
period of this struggle spread over 25 years. This 25-year period can be divided
into several stages. These are : (a) organizational stage of the democratic
movement; (b) movement against BPC or Basic Principles Committee's report; (c)
language movement; (d) forging of electoral unity and the victory of the
democratic United Front; (e) military rule; (f) movement against the military
rule; (g) movement for autonomy; (h) the historic Six-Point movement; (i)
electoral victory and the non-cooperation movement; and j) armed liberation
struggle.
Bangabandhu
has been closely associated with every phase of this 25-year long struggle for
freedom and independence. Bangladesh and Bangabandhu have, therefore, become
inseparable. We cannot speak of one without the other.
While
still adolescent, he took his first political lesson from Hussain Shaheed
Suhrawardy, a leading political personality of the then Bangladesh. It was in
Faridpur that Young Suhrawardy and adolescent Sheikh Mujib came to know each
other. Both of them were attracted to each other from that first acquaintance.
Adolescent Mujib grew up under the gathering gloom of the storm-tossed politics
of the sub-continent and the Second World War. He witnessed the ravages of war
and the stark realities of the 1943 famine and the epidemics in which about five
million people lost their lives. The miserable plight of the people under
colonial rule turned him into a rebel.
He
passed his matriculation examination in 1942. His studies had been interrupted
for about four years due to an attack of beriberi. He got acquainted with the
revolutionary activities of Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose during the Hallwell
Monument movement in Calcutta. Suhrawardy's staunchly logical approach and
Subhash Bose's spirit of dedication influenced him immensely. He was influenced
by another great leader, "Sher-e-Bangla" A.K. Fazlul Huq and his
political philosophy of the plain fare ("dal-bhat") for all. At that
very early stage he realised that in a poor exploited country political
programmes must be complimentary to economic programmes.
He
completed his college education in Calcutta. His sojourn to the prisons began in
his teens. He first spent six days in a prison for participating in a political
movement. While he was a student in Calcutta, he moved the natural eddies of the
political movements of the subcontinent and got himself associated with the
Muslim League and the Pakistan movement. But soon after the creation of Pakistan
and the partition of Bengal in 1947, he realised that his people had not
attained real independence. What had happened was a change of masters.
Bangladesh would have to make preparations for independence movement a second
time.
He
graduated in the same year and came to develop a deep acquaintance with the
works of Bernard Shaw. Karl Marx and Rabindranath Tagore. The horizon of his
thought process began to expand from that time. He realised that Bangladesh was
a geographical unit and its geographical nationalism was separate; its economic,
political and cultural characters were also completely different from those of
the western part of Pakistan. Over and above, linguistic differences and a
physical distance of about 1,500 miles between them made the two parts of
Pakistan totally separate from each other.
He
could, therefore, realize that by keeping the two areas under the forced bonds
of one state structure in the name of religious nationalism, rigid political
control and economic exploitation would be perpetrated on the eastern part. This
would come as a matter of course because the central capital and the economic
and military headquarters of Pakistan had all been set up in the western part.
The
new realization and political thinking took roots in his mind as early as 1948.
He was then a student in the Law faculty of Dhaka University. A movement was
launched that very year on the demand to make Bengali one of the state languages
of Pakistan. In fact, this movement can be termed as the first stirrings of the
movement of an independent Bangladesh. This demand for cultural freedom
gradually led to the demand for national independence. During that language
movement, Bangabandhu was arrested on March 11, 1948. During the blood-drenched
language movement of 1952 also he was pushed behind the bars and took up
leadership of the movement from inside the jail.
Bangabandhu
was also in the forefront of the movement against the killing of policemen by
the army in Dhaka in 1948. He was imprisoned for lending his support to the
strike movement of the lower grade employees of Dhaka University. He was
expelled from the University even before he came out of the prison.
In
1950, Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan of Pakistan announced the Basic Principles
Committee's report for framing a constitution. This report manipulated to turn
the majority of Bangladesh into a minority through subterfuges, and to make Urdu
the state language. There was a spontaneous countrywide upsurge in Bangladesh
against this report and the Bangabandhu was at its forefront.
Bangabandhu
was elected Joint Secretary of the newly formed political organization, the
Awami League. Previously he had been the leader of the progressive students'
organization, the Chhatra League. In 1953 he was elected General Secretary of
the Awami League.
Elections
to the then Provincial Assembly of Bangladesh was held in 1954. A democratic
electoral alliance-the United Front-against the ruling Muslim League was forged
during that election. The 21 -point demand of the United Front included full
regional autonomy for Bangladesh and making of Bengali one of the state
languages.
The
United Front won the elections on the basis of the 21 -point programme and
Bangabandhu was elected member of the Provincial Assembly. He joined the Huq
Cabinet of the United Front as its youngest Minister. The anti-people ruling
clique of Pakistan dissolved this Cabinet soon and the Bangabandhu was thrown
into prison.
In
1955 he was elected member of the second Constituent Assembly of Pakistan. He
was again appointed a Minister when the Awami League formed the Provincial
Cabinet in 1956. But he voluntarily left the Cabinet in July 1957 in order to
devote himself fully to the task of reorganizing the party.
General
Ayub Khan staged a military coup in Pakistan in 1958 and the Bangabandhu was
arrested on various charges and innumerable cases were framed against him. He
got back his freedom after 14 months of solitary confinement but was re-arrested
in February 1962.
The
Awami League
The Bangabandhu revived the Awami League after the death of Mr. H.S. Suhrawardy
in 1963. By that time the military Junta had lifted the ban on political
parties. Thus the Awami League began its constitutional struggle under the
leadership of the Bangabandhu to realize the demand for self-determination of
the Bangalees.
The
Bangabandhu placed his historic Six-Point programme at a political conference in
Lahore in 1966. This programme called for a federal state structure for Pakistan
and full autonomy for Bangladesh with a parliamentary democratic system. The
Six- Point programme became so popular in a short while that it was turned into
the Charter of Freedom for the Bangladeshis or their Magna Carta. The Army Junta
of Pakistan threatened to use the language of weapons against the Six-Point
movement and the Bangabandhu was arrested under the Defence Rules on May 8,
1966. The powerful mass upsurge that burst forth throughout Bangladesh in
protest against this arrest of the Bangabandhu came to be known as June
Movement.
On
June 17, 1968 he was removed from Dhaka Central Jail to Kurmitola Cantonment and
was charged with conspiring to make Bangladesh independent with the help of
India. This case is known as the Agartala Conspiracy case. He was the No. 1
accused in the case. While the trial was in progress in the court of a military
tribunal the administration of the military junta collapsed as a consequence of
a great mass upsurge in Bangladesh at the beginning of 1969.
As
a result, he was released together with all the other co-accused. The case was
withdrawn and the Bangabandhu was invited to a Round Table Conference at the
capital of Pakistan. At this conference President Ayub Khan requested
Bangabandhu to accept the Prime Ministership of Pakistan. Bangabandhu rejected
the offer and remained firm in his demand for the acceptance of his Six-Point
programme.
President
Ayub Khan stepped down from power on March 25, 1969 and General Yahya Khan took
over the leadership of the army junta, Apprehending a new movement in Bangladesh
he promised to re-establish democratic rule in Pakistan and made arrangements
for holding the first general elections in December, 1970. Under the leadership
of the Bangabandhu. the Awami League won an absolute majority in the elections.
The military junta was unnerved by the results of the elections. The conspiracy
then started to prevent the transfer of power. The session of the newly elected
National Assembly was scheduled for March 3, 1971. By an order on March 1,
General Yahya postponed this session.
It
acted like a spark to the powder keg; entire Bangladesh burst into flames of
political upheaval. The historic non-cooperation movement began. For all
practical purposes Bangabandhu took over the civil -administration of
Bangladesh. The military junta however began to increase the strength of its
armed forces in Bangladesh secretly and to kill innocent Bangalees at different
places.
Yahya
Khan came to Dhaka by the middle of March to have talks with Bangabandhu. Mr.
Zulflqar Ali Bhutto and other leaders also came a few days later. When everybody
was feeling that the talks were going to be successful Yahya Khan stealthily
left Dhaka in the evening of March 25. The barbarous genocide throughout
Bangladesh began from that midnight.
Bangabandhu
was arrested at midnight of March 25 and was flown to the western wing. But
before he was arrested, he formally declared independence of Bangladesh and
issued instructions to all Bangladeshis, including those in the armed forces and
in the police to take up arms to drive out the Pakistani occupation forces.
For
ten long months from March 1971 to January 1972 Bangabandhu was confined in a
death-cell in the Pakistani prison. His countrymen did not even know if he was
dead or alive. Still, stirred by his inspiration, the nation threw itself heart
and soul into the hick of the liberation war and by the middle of December the
whole of Bangladesh was cleared of the occupation forces.
Freed
from the Pakistani prison, the Bangabandhu came back home on January 10, 1972
and stepped down from the Presidentship and took up the responsibility as the
Prime Minister of independent Bangladesh on 12 January 1972. Immediately he took
steps for the formulation of the Constitution of the country and to place it
before the Constituent Assembly. After the passage of the Constitution on 4
November 1972, his party won an overwhelming majority in the elections held on 7
March 1973 and took up the responsibility of running the administration of the
country for another five-year term. After the fourth amendment of the
constitution on 25 January 1975 (changing the form of Government from the
Parliamentary to the Presidential system), the Bangabandhu entered upon the
office of the President of Bangladesh. Within three years of independence he put
the war-ravaged country along the path of political stability and economic
reconstruction. On 15 August 1975, he along with all the members (excluding two
daughters, Sheikh Hasina and Sheikh Rehana who were abroad) of his family were
brutally assassinated by a splinter group of armed forces.
The
Bangabandhu is the Father of the Nation. His state philosophy has four pillars:
Nationalism, Democracy, Socialism and Secularism. His foreign policy opened up
new horizons of peace, cooperation and non-alignment throughout Asia. He visited
many countries of Asia and Europe including China and the Soviet Union.
Statesmen of many countries of Asia countries were his personal friends. He was
awarded Julio Curie Peace Prize for his being a symbol of world peace and
cooperation. In the eyes of the people in the third world, he is the harbinger
of peace and development in Asia.
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