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imranchowdhuryuk · 1 year
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imranchowdhuryuk · 2 years
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When I was adjudged as the Best Student in JOAC
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imranchowdhuryuk · 2 years
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BOOK
Birth of Bangladesh
A concise chronicle of the independence struggle & The Genocide
Imran Chowdhury B.E.M.
‘’ 16th December is knocking at the door to cross the Golden Jubilee of the Birth of Bangladesh. The country will embark soon on the road to prosperity to march ahead with an aspiration to reach for the centenary. Long before the centenary comes, the Liberation War generation will be perhaps gone by then. But today, many who are in their teens, in their thirties or even in their forties are slowly and gradually being clouded with the events leading to the Birth of Bangladesh in 1971. There were a series of protracted movements, brainwashing, campaigns, and propaganda to water down the ferocity, bloodbath, betrayal, sacrifices, and Genocide that the nation had to endure to achieve independence or the Birth of Bangladesh. I was an eleven-year-old refugee during the War of Liberation have seen these all with my own eyes. And here I am today trying to remind today's generation what kind of heavy price their ancestors have had to pay at the altar of the Birth of Bangladesh; to have an Independent country - looking through the prism of the events of 1971. ‘’
Bangladesh has come a long way from those tumultuous days of 1971 and before. Since then, many muds, sediments, and waters have rolled down the green valleys, rivers, gorges, nullahs and haors of Bangladesh. No matter how hard those betrayers and their cronies have tried to eradicate the pains, memories and heartburn, yet they have failed miserably. The present generation treasures the legacy of the sacrifices of their ancestors. They do that with a very sad and heavy heart. Language Day, Independence Day, and Victory Day reverberate in their hearts and minds all the time, and they crave paying homage, celebrating and singing those epic songs and poems of patriotism. However, the diaspora communities 4th and 5th generations are passing through a crucial juncture of erosion of losing their ancestral Bangla vocabulary and literacy.
But, let me remind them all, No matter who says otherwise - ''1971 was the Golden Hour of the Bengali race's four thousand years of existence.'' Only a handful of countries in the world had to what we had to to be an independent country. Hardly any country in the world had to sacrifice such magnitude of price like us. We have perhaps paid the highest in that bloody war of our independence; in terms of killing, rapes, ethnic cleansing, crimes against humanity, Genocide and losing all our relics, riches and infrastructure.
The story goes back a long way away. The partition of 1947 and our half-witted leadership endangered our lives in the bondage of flimsy religious string to form a country when the other part of the jigsaw was full of racism and hate deep down in their minds and hearts. The Muslim Panjabis and the Muslim Pathan and the army was looking down upon us from the outset. To them, we were black Bengalis, we were small in height, we ate fish and rice, and we smelled, and we were not a martial race either. Yet foolishly went into a marriage of convenience with those heinous haters, to begin with.
The percussion and regain of oppression against us started as soon as we signed that hidden undeclared unspoken covenant of a neo-slavery; First, they gagged our voice with declaring war against our mother tongue - they wanted us forcefully speak in a different alien language Urdu as our official language. The first of many more avalanches of suppression and colonial aggression starts to sip into the midst of the lives of an East Pakistani.
They started stealing our produces, encash all our exports proceeds, expanded all developments on the west with a measly token of a few buildings for us—the disparity in jobs and employment and in the military. The rise of Bengali nationalism starts to perpetuate, foment and ferment slowly and gradually for the next 24 years.
One by one, the heinous Pakistani Muslim Punjabi and Pathan army started capturing all the cities, towns, ports, thana towns, municipalities, unions and even up to villages. Our mother, Bengal's brave and hero sons, did not sit idle on the face of that avalanches of bullets, cannon shells, and burst fires of their machine guns. The East Bengal Regiment, The East Pakistan Rifles, Police, Ansar, Mujahid, Students, mass population Political Parties all joined in unison to repulse the siege except those ideologically leaning towards radical right-wing religious biased schools of thought.
The rise of Bengali unity cemented over the hours, and that was perhaps the best hour in the history of the Bengali race. Revolts by the regular forces, paramilitary forces, border security forces, auxiliary forces, the student the general public sprang out of nowhere within hours and days. Joydevpur, Chittagong, B. Baria, Shamsher Nagar, Chuadanga, Jessore, Dinajpur started revolts and repulsions. People from all walks of life joined with their single barrel and double barrel shotguns, .22 bore shooting rifles, personal pistols, revolvers, knives, swords, ramda, bows and arrows, lances, spades, shovels, lancers made of bamboos. Just anything lethal could inflict harm to those heinous, barbaric Pakistani army. The ferocity and speed of the invaders were overwhelming for the resistance movement yet the golden sons of Bengal did not flinch an eyelid of fear.
Meanwhile, on the other side of the spectrum, mass killings, rapes, and arsons continued from town after towns, ports after ports, and villages. Continuous 24 hours round the clock curfew were promulgated and with a hour or two beaks in between. Million city and town dwellers evacuated and fled their town with only their lives, leaving every valuable behind. People fled with their families and kids to save their souls from the slaughters. The seven and a half million Bengalis are under siege by those Butchers; The Commander of the Pakistani Army Lieutenant General Tikka unleashed OPERATION JACKPOT; the man himself was known as the Butcher of Bengal whose directives of the operational order was, ‘’ Paint the Green Grasses of Bengal with the Red Bloods of the Bengalis. We do not need any Bengalis - only grab the land and wipe the slate clean., kill them all.” That was the barbaric aim, plan, target, narrative, objective and directive of that infamous butcher Pakistani Army Commander Lieutenant General Tikka Khan.
Pakistan deployed its Muslim Panjabi and The Pathan army in erstwhile East Pakistan ( today's Bangladesh) to unleash one of the most brutal military operations to annihilate, uproot, eradicate the whole of the Bengali race from the face of the earth. The modus operandi was the top brasses of the heinous Pakistan Army only wanted the landmass of East Pakistan without its inhabitants. Their objectives were to kill all the Bengali men and impregnate all the Bengali women. So that in the next year, when those Bengali women will give birth, those children will have mixed blood of Pakistani Punjabi and Pathan ancestry, so that in the years to come when those children come to age will never raise their voice against their blood fathers. With those intentions, military operational directive, aim and objectives, the Pakistani Military junta's infamous Operation Searchlight started to perpetrate in 1971.
From the 26th March 1971, Bengali soldiers of East Bengal Regiments, East Pakistan Rifles, Police, Ansar, Mujahid's (additional paramilitary elements), students, Political parties supporters, the day labourers, peasants, ex and retires soldiers, Politicians all started to revolt against Pakistan. That moment was perhaps the most cementing time hours of camaraderie in the history of the Bengali race.
The nucleus of nationwide and countrywide seeds of fighting the enemy perpetuated within a flash. Revolts by the peoples' collective resistance started in Chuadanga, Chittagong, Dinajpur, Jessore, Shamshernagar.
But the irony was our men had no weapons, no ammunition, no bombs, no explosives, no binoculars, no maps, no uniform, no logistics, no supply of replenishments, no lorries, trucks, jeeps or boats to counter and withstand the vicious one of the most modern armies of the world. These shortcomings left a massive void in stopping the advance of those killers, and they started to encompass the length and the breadth of the whole country one by one. Towns, cities, ports, thanas, unions, and finally, they went into the villages to capture young women, kill the men, and enslave the kids as slave labourers. They spared no one, irrespective of colour, creed, or religion. Every town and city raided, and the long beams of fire and arson were seen from miles and miles, looting all the banks, treasuries, jewellery shops. Hundreds of thousands of women were captured and taken into their captivity every night. People started to run amok with fear of their lives. People began to abandon their dwellings from the big cities and their ancestral villages to save their lives, leaving all their assets, belonging, a lifetime of savings, ornaments, pieces of jewellery, houses and businesses. The mass exodus of the Bengalis began. A flight of massive magnitude, unseen in the history of the world since World War II, that exodus of the Bengalis were the largest.
1971 from April after the first ten days of the occupation of the whole country by the brutal Pakistani Muslim Punjabi & Pathan army was unimaginable. Their killing, torture, rapes, arson and the continuous process of the Operation Searchlight of encamping the whole 75 million population created the biggest exodus of mass people. Unarmed, peace-loving millions of Bengalis, irrespective of their religion, caste found themselves in the firing lines of these heinous killers. The whole of East Pakistan became a prison overnight. The meticulous operation planners of the Pakistan Army had chalked out a detailed operational plan with a precision execution so that the Bengali population could not have any breathing space to survive. Since the crackdown on the fateful night of the 25/26th March. The army imposed curfew in almost all the major - minor townships and some neighbourhoods. 
The people started to take extreme risks to flee their homes in millions through the vast paddy fields, non-metalled camouflaged small alleyways, through the canals, rivers, village to town and towns to countryside reachable tracks and aisles. The standing crops, especially the Jute plantation, the sugarcane fields, swamps, large bodies of stagnant waterlogged hoars, bills, estuaries, gave some respite for these fleeing millions from the sight of the invaders and their collaborators. 
People were abandoning their dwellings out of fear of death and saving their girls, wives, and mothers from being captured by those rapists. There were collaborators from within the populations who immediately joined hands; those killers started looting those empty houses, left abandoned by the owners to flee the massacre. The billowing plume of the flames of the arsons of those looted houses, businesses, government offices, downtown commercial districts up and down the country made it look like an apocalypse of biblical narration. 
Millions of people fled from towns to the villages, ports to islands, urban areas to marshy swamps. Thousand moved from populated localities to deep in the jungles. 
Lacs and lacs of inhabitants fled from the villages adjacent to the main road arteries into the deep unpassable swamps, canals, unpassable lakes and bills and khals. 
Imagine the plight of those millions of displaced people. No food, no running water supply. Not a penny to buy any food or provisions. Sleeping rough, no roof over their head, no clothing to wear, no quilts, pillows, blankets or tents to sleep. 
Life threw everyone at least 50 - 60 million people out of 75 million population into these deeper end of survival.
People of all walks of life fled from their dwelling en masse from the capital, from the divisional cities, from the district towns, sub-divisional towns, from the thana, headquarter townships, from the port cities to the villages, thinking this will give them the respite from the avalanche of death from the advancing barbaric Pakistani Army. The village's infrastructure could barely cope with this sudden influx of people pouring in there. The flood of people kept on precipitating day in and day out. It was unbearable although the people of the villages were the most welcoming and accommodating to give shelter to their town dwellers, relatives, relatives of relatives and even unknown people. The nation owes a great deal of respectful endorsement of their help during those tumultuous times of our history. 
However, the villages and their people were sitting redundant in their homes predominantly due to the fear of bombs, Army patrolling, indiscriminate stray bullets, projectiles; the peasants in most of the country remained homebound in fear. Never in their lives have they ever witnessed these kinds of bombing, shelling, fighter planes flying above their villages and the sheer fear abandoned all sorts of farming activities in most villages. 
The hat ( markets), the bazaars, grocery shops, fishmongers, vegetable supply chain, the rice and pulses became scarce in those villages due to the sudden rise of population and lack of transportation. Bear in mind that 95% of the country was under siege. 
The peasants could not sow the seeds for their next crops; the paddy fields near the main arteries of transportation around the country remained unharvested due to the fear of losing life and being killed indiscriminately. Children could not get milk, and the waterborne diseases started in the villages due to lack of sanitation and the sheer influx of exponential rise of inhabitants in those villages. 
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imranchowdhuryuk · 4 years
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My Book - Life of Refugee Boy of 11
My Book – Life of Refugee Boy of 11
Writing a book about the Bangladesh liberation war and my days of those tumultuous period had been bugging me for a very long time.  The liberation war was perhaps the most memorable episode of my life. It has changed the course of my life once for all. The days of the war were the hardest of days of my life. I have been battling with the lingering residual legacy of the war since those days…
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imranchowdhuryuk · 2 years
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Article published in JANOMOT newspaper UK
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imranchowdhuryuk · 2 years
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Meeting some college life friend
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imranchowdhuryuk · 4 years
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গ্লোবালাইজেসন ( বিশ্বায়ন ) এর ভবিষ্যৎ
গ্লোবালাইজেসন ( বিশ্বায়ন ) এর ভবিষ্যৎ আসুন, আবার একটু ভাবি - কিভাবে চোখের পলকে পৃথিবীটা বদলে যাবার এক অশনিসংকেতের সম্মুখীন ।এক মহামারী আসছে ধেয়ে মানব জাতিকে চিড়িয়াখানায় বন্দী করে ফেলবে আর পৃথিবী সহসা হয়ে যাবে বন্য প্রাণীদের অভয় কংক্রিট অরণ্য ?
  ইমরান আহমেদ চৌধুরী
ফ্রি ট্রেড এর মাধ্যমে এক দেশ আরেক দেশে তার কাজগুলো ঐ দেশের কর্মীবাহিনীকে দিয়ে কম শ্রম মূল্য দিয়ে উৎপাদন করানোর নামই মনে হয় গ্লোবালাইজেসন । এটার ফলে বিশ্বের বিভিন্ন দেশ তার জনশক্তিকে দিতে পেরেছে কর্মসংস্থান এবং দেশ গুলো পেয়েছে অর্থনৈতিক সমৃদ্ধি । 
যদিও গ্লোবালাইজেসন দিয়েছে এক নতুন সীমান্তবিহীন পৃথিবী এবং নতুন নতুন উদ্ভাবন । অপর দিকে এটা এনেছে অনেক ধরনের সমস্যা ও…
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imranchowdhuryuk · 4 years
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ঘড়ে বন্দী ব্রিটেন ও ভবিষ্যৎ
ঘড়ে বন্দী ব্রিটেন ও ভবিষ্যৎ
ইমরান আহমেদ  চৌধুরী
নিস্তব্দ প্রায় মহাসড়ক, কোলাহল মুক্ত শহর, বন্দর, নগরী । আজ প্রায় দুই মাস হতে চললো – পুরা ব্রিটেনবাসিরা ভাইরাস সংক্রামণের কারনে ঘরের চার দেওয়ালের মাঝে বন্দি প্রায় । কেমন জানি স্থবির চারিদিক, গাড়ী বিহীন রাস্তা, খদ্দের বিহীন দোকান, ট্রেন শূন্য রেল লাইন, বিমান বিহীন বন্দর, জাহাজ বিহীন পোর্ট , কর্মচারী- চাকরিজীবী  শূন্য বিশাল অফিস অট্টালিকা,  একবিংশ শতাব্দীর এই রূপ…
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imranchowdhuryuk · 4 years
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আমার স্বাধীনতা যুদ্ধ ; এক বালক মুক্তিযোদ্ধার স্মৃতিকথা
আমার স্বাধীনতা যুদ্ধ ; এক বালক মুক্তিযোদ্ধার স্মৃতিকথা
আমার স্বাধীনতা যুদ্ধ ;  এক বালক মুক্তিযোদ্ধার  স্মৃতিকথা
স্বাধীনতা যুদ্ধ আমার জীবনের একটা সবচে’ বড় অধ্যায় – স্বাধীনতা সংগ্রাম আমার জীবনের মোড় ঘুরিয়ে দিয়েছে ভিন্ন ভাবে । ১৯৭১ থেকে ২০২০ সাল এই ৪৯ টি বছর যাবত বহন করে আসছি এক বিশাল গল্প, এক বিভীষিকাময় অন্নুছেদ, এক দুঃস্বপ্ন, মহা এক আতঙ্ক, এক ভয়, এক ভীতি, এক যন্ত্রণা এবং এক না বলা বিরগাথা  । সেই উত্তাল দিন গুলোর কথা বার বার প্রত্যহ মনের…
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imranchowdhuryuk · 4 years
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How a Martyr’s sibling becomes Interfaith Campaigner
How a Martyr’s sibling becomes Interfaith Campaigner
How a Martyr’s sibling becomes Interfaith Campaigner 
It is almost half a century ago my country – Bangladesh;  was liberated as an Independent State. My family was displaced during the war and had to seek refuge to India. On the tumultuous day of the 16th December 1971 we heard from Akashbani Radio announced the surrender of Pakistan Army to the Indian Army; The bloody war ended. Next morning…
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imranchowdhuryuk · 4 years
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An Obituary - Sir Fazle Hassan Abed KCMG
An Obituary – Sir Fazle Hassan Abed KCMG
Obituary 
1936 – 2019
‘My organisation is 100% non profit organisation, like I don’t take no money from the profit, I don’t own anything; still living in a rented accommodation.” Fazle Hassan Abed 
Told this to a journalist once. Perhaps this is called true philanthropy. an eminent gentleman whose social enterprise which turns over circa $700 million and the entrepreneur of that NGO…
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imranchowdhuryuk · 5 years
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A Tv Debate on Brexit
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imranchowdhuryuk · 5 years
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A TV DEBATE ON BREXIT
A TV DEBATE ON BREXIT
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imranchowdhuryuk · 2 years
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