UNESCO's
declaration of 21st February as the International Mother Language Day
has brought fresh glory and prestige to Bangladesh which is making
significant strides towards peace, progress and prosperity at home and
discharging international obligations abroad. After 1952, the people of
Bangladesh have been observing every year the 21st day of February as
their glorious and unforgettable Language Martyrs Day. What happened on
21st February 1952 is widely known. Still let me very briefly recount
the fateful happenings of that day and the circumstances that led to and
followed them.
In
August 1947, a new state called Pakistan, comprising two far-flung
wings in the west and east, separated by 1600 kilometers of foreign
territory, emerged on the world map. The ideological basis of that
strange phenomenon was the absurd and pernicious two nation theory of
Mr. Jinnah that ignored such basic elements as language and culture and
considered religion as a bond strong and sufficient enough to transform a
people into a nation.
The
language of the people of eastern wing of Pakistan, and they were the
majority, was Bangla. It had a rich tradition of literature of over a
thousand years. The Bangalees also had a highly developed culture that
had little in common with the culture of the people of western wing of
Pakistan. The Bangalees' love for and attachment to their language and
culture were great and when in 1952 the neo-colonial, power-hungry,
arrogant rulers of Pakistan declared that 'Urdu and Urdu alone would be
the state language of Pakistan, they sowed the seed of its future
disintegration.
The people
of the then East Pakistan, particularly the students, rose in angry
protest against the vicious undemocratic designs of the government.
Those designs really amounted to the destruction of Bangla language and
culture and imposition of the language and culture of the people of
western wing on the people of eastern wing. The reaction was strong and
spontaneous.
The government
decided to quell protests by brute force. The police opened fire on 21st
February 1952 on unarmed peaceful protesters, most of whom were
students, resulting in the death, among others, of Rafiq, Barkat, Jabbar
and Salam. As the news of those deaths spread, the entire people of the
eastern wing felt greatly involved emotionally. Those who lost their
lives to uphold the prestige defend the rights of their mother-language
became hallowed martyrs.
Their
sacrifice at once tragic glorious and the indignation of the people
against an autocratic government had far reaching effect. 21st February
became a symbol and attained mythic properties, it nourished the
concepts of democracy and secularism. It also contributed significantly
to the flowering of Bangalee nationalism. It led to the dawning of the
realization in the minds of the Bangalees that they constituted a
separate nation and their destiny lay not with Pakistan but elsewhere as
an independent country. The subsequent democratic mass movements of the
late fifties, throughout the sixties and the seventies, and finally the
struggle for independence and the war of liberation owed a great deal
to 21st February.
From 1953
onwards, starting from 21st February 1953, the immortal 21st February
has been observed as a great national event all over Bangladesh, and
also beyond the frontiers of Bangladesh: in several places of India, UK,
USA, Canada and elsewhere, wherever there is a sizeable concentration
of Bangla speaking people. Yet so long, it has been mainly a national
event of Bangladesh. But with the declaration of 21st February as the
International Mother Language Day, it has transcended the national
borders of Bangladesh and acquired an international significance and a
global dimension.
At the
initiative of the United Nations and its various organs, a number of
specific days have been declared over the years as international days
for observance by the people of the whole world. All these days
highlight some values, events and issues and are intended to generate a
healthy awareness in the people of the world about them with the
ultimate aim of making this world a better place to live in for the
entire human population. Thus we have the international literacy day,
international women's day. international children's day, the
international day for eradication of racial discrimination,
international day for ensuring pure drinking water, international
habitat day, international day for preservation of environment and many
others.
Some
of these international days are linked with certain specific events
that took place in some specific countries. While observing these days,
the people of the world recall those events and those countries as a
matter of course. The world is thus brought closer providing peoples of
the world with the chance to get out of their insularity.
International
Mother Language Day is particularly significant in the sense that it
has a cultural importance. From now on, 21st February — so long observed
in Bangladesh as the Bangla Language Martyrs' Day — will be observed
here simultaneously as the Bangla Language Martyrs' Day and the
International Mother Language Day. And in nearly 200 countries of the
world, various peoples speaking various languages and belonging to
various national cultures will observe 21st February as the
International Mother Language Day. They will naturally celebrate their
own mother languages, but while doing so, it is more than likely that
they will refer to Bangladesh and the Language Movement launched by her
people that reached a climactic point on 21st February 1952.
The
declaration made by the UNESCO in November 1999 designating 21st
February as the International Mother Language Day has placed Bangladesh
on the cultural map of the world with a highly positive image. We,
people of Bangladesh, should now do all that we can to further develop
our mother language Bangla in all branches of knowledge so that it can
play a worthy role in the community of world languages. We shall love,
cherish and promote Bangla, our own mother language, but we shall not
indulged in any kind of chauvinism.
While
devotedly serving our own language, we shall respect the languages of
all the peoples of the world make 21st February - The International
Mother Language Day - a great day, to be observed worldwide in the new
century and the millennium that we have recently stepped into. Long live
21st February the International Mother Language Day!
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