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Wednesday, March 25, 2009

[ALOCHONA] 38th independence day: Abuse of religion: old tricks at play

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Abuse of religion: old tricks at play

38th independence day today

This picture published in the daily Sangram in 1971 shows members of the fourth Razakar Force taking oath over the holy Quran after completing training under Rajshahi Peace Committee in 1971.
 
Religion was the major weapon of the anti-liberation elements including Jamaat-e-Islami in their attempts to foil the birth of Bangladesh and in helping the Pakistani invaders, who launched genocide triggering the nation's armed struggle for independence on March 26, 1971.
 
"Jamaat-e-Islami cherishes Pakistan and Islam as an inseparable entity," commented former Jamaat ameer Golam Azam in 1971. He was also the chief of the East Pakistan unit of Jamaat during the Liberation War.
 
Jamaat's mouthpiece the daily Sangram covered a speech by Golam Azam in 1971. "Pakistan is the house of Islam for the world Muslims. Therefore, Jamaat activists don't justify being alive had Pakistan disintegrated," Golam Azam was quoted by Sangram as addressing a reception of Jamaat ministers at defunct Hotel Empire in Dhaka.
 
Jamaat incumbent Ameer Motiur Rahman Nizami, who was the chief of Islami Chaatra Sangha, student wing of Jamaat in 1971, said in an article, "Sacred land Pakistan is the home of Allah for establishing His rules."
 
Nizami, who has succeeded Golam Azam, had also labelled the freedom fighters as "khodadrohi" [rebels against Allah].
 
He said in that article, "The cowards [freedom fighters] who are against Allah have attacked this holy land [Pakistan]."
 
"Will the holy occasion of Shab-e-Qadr be able to evoke our courage to establish true peace and welfare through resisting all the attacks launched against Pakistan and Islam?" he asked.
 
Historical documents and news reports published during and after the Liberation War show that Nizami was the commander-in-chief of Al-Badr.
The Sangram quoted him on September 15, 1971 as saying: "Everyone of us should assume the role of a Muslim soldier of an Islamic state and through cooperation to the oppressed and by winning their confidence we must kill those; who are hatching conspiracy against Pakistan and Islam."
 
These are the few examples of the anti-liberation political elements, which stood against independence of Bangladesh with the Pakistani occupation forces when the freedom fighters were sacrificing their lives to liberate motherland.
Several political elements of Bangladesh had not only campaigned against liberation but also actively helped Pakistani forces commit genocide. Although some of these elements gradually disappeared from the political scene, some others like Jamaat became more and more powerful.
 
Jamaat leaders had also formed some paramilitary wings like Razakar and Al-Badr during the Liberation War. These wings worked as the auxiliary forces of the Pakistani military and also killed many pro-liberation people across the country.
 
Records show that Jamaat formed Razakar and Al-Badr to counter the freedom fighters. Razakar force was established by former Jamaat secretary general Moulana Abul Kalam Mohammad Yousuf, while Al-Badr comprised the Islami Chhatra Sangha activists.
 
During the nine-month bloody Liberation War, Pakistani forces and their Bangladeshi collaborators committed genocide and war crimes that left three million people killed and around quarter million women violated besides the planned elimination of the best Bangali brains on December 14, 1971.
 
Anticipating sure defeat, the Pakistani forces and their collaborators -- Razakar, Al-Badr and Al-Shams [mostly leaders of Jamaat and its student front] -- picked up leading Bangali intellectuals and professionals on December 14 and killed them en masse in an attempt to intellectually cripple the nation.
 
Demand for the trial of war criminals is one of the oldest issues of the country linked to the birth of Bangladesh.
 
Despite their defeat on December 16, 1971 with the Pakistani army, remnants of the collaborators have apparently never left their fight in the last 38 years. Even the nation witnessed it in the same manner in the national elections in December last year.
While the victorious Awami League had campaigned for secular Bangladesh, their main political rivals campaigned with the slogan "save Islam" through ballots.
 
Establishing Bangladesh as a secular state was one of the major essence of the liberation struggle and to liberate the country from the Islamic republic of Pakistan.
This historical split has not ended even after 38 years of independence as the political elements against liberation have not been tried for their war crimes.
 
The trial of war criminals is still a big challenge for the newly elected AL government, which led the War of Independence, even after having huge mandate for its major electoral pledges including trying the war criminals.
 
The demand for trial of war criminals has always been ignored due to several reasons including pressures from home and abroad to save the killers.
 
When the nation became hopeful about fulfilment of that demand, it has apparently been sidelined following the carnage at Pilkhana BDR headquarters in the name of a mutiny on February 25-26 that left 74 people including 57 army officers killed.
 
The brutality of the killings has again reminded the nation of many atrocities by the Pakistani occupation forces in 1971.
 
The investigators of the carnage suspect the aim of such a heinous act was, among others, to foil the government's firm move to try the war criminals.
-- Edited by Al Mamun Russell

Courtesy of Daily Star, Thursday, March 26, 2009   issue

Link: http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=81400

 



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RE: [ALOCHONA] Re: RAW Bird Farida Majid and Faruk khan

You are criticizing everybody outright. I have seen your many many postings only with bullys and not with any substance. Big brothership and learnedness work only if you can produce substantive materials. Bulleys do not really get sold out. Another Mohathir of BD.
 


To: alochona@yahoogroups.com
From: maqsudo@hotmail.com
Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 11:24:41 +0000
Subject: RE: [ALOCHONA] Re: RAW Bird Farida Majid and Faruk khan

Blaming simple people, who follow religion, is
THE  style of many pseudo-intellectuals, self-proclaimed genius in Bdesh.

They will attack any body with beard, who prays regularly.
These intellectuals don't pray, criticize islam + muslims, and quote Bertrand russel....
Karl Marx...Dr. taslima nasreen...with little excuse!

They have no time, to talk about the greedy bunch, in Bangladesh, who have looted millions, destroyed safety/ security of people.

They don't have time, to point out who nourished corruption and violence in Bangladesh.

They are scared to accept the fact that Bangladeshis, and only BANGLADESHIS,  have killed Sk. Mujib, BDR officers and Pesident Zia. We need to improve our horizon.

Pointing finger towards RAW, ISI, CIA will not improve our attitude, standard, performance.


Khoda hafez.

dr. maqsud omar







To: alochona@yahoogroups.com; ahumanb@yahoo.com; khabor@yahoogroups.com; notun_bangladesh@yahoogroups.com; uttorshuri@yahoogroups.com; mukto-mona@yahoogroups.com; amra-bangladesi@yahoogroups.com
From: afirozny@yahoo.com
Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2009 02:59:23 -0700
Subject: [ALOCHONA] Re: RAW Bird Farida Majid and Faruk khan

Dear members -
 
I want Farida Majid to define what makes a "jongi" and what makes a jongi a "Islamic jongi"? And what is the difference between the two?
 
She must be held in contempt for such behavior if she fails to explain the logic behind it.
 
In periods of turmoil and unrest such venomous fabrications[Islamic jongi] may gain credence among the ignorant and may poison their minds but the Muslim-baiter-legends Farida Majid is bound to destroy herself, like anti-Muslim myths of old. A lie may shuns the sunlight. It may thrives in darkness but it cant survive analysis and the truth must prevail.
 
If she ever uses the term "Jewish jongi" in USA then she would be kicked out or deported from United States of America.
 
Why does Farida Majid carry on a Muslim name when she can't use it where she works at? does it indicate that she is also the clone of her hidden planet? Perhaps a RAW agent in disguise planting psychological operation on behalf of raw's/mossad's causes?
 
As she suggests that she can critize the Govt. for certain actions then why does she not criticize the Govt. instead of she is tring to taking issue with the term "RAW bird" with Munshi when Mujumder who coined it? Why so such hypocracy on her part?
 
Give Munshi a break and if and when anything is chocking her throat then she must visit her primary care physician instead of acting it up.
 
 
Firoz Alam.






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[ALOCHONA] FW: [dhakamails] Un-elected democracy

He said so or she said so really does not matter at the end of the day. The fact is that the militancy must be eliminated for the country to be functional. The approach of "Shak dieya mucsh dhaka" will never work at the end. People including the religious, non-religious, traditional, moderates, khans, syeds, pathans, shadas, kalos, everyone must realize that business of mass killing will never yield any fruits to anyone. Days have changed. In this era the militancy does not work. Things have to be achieved by open talks and being flexible on the issues, accepting the adjustments. The biggest problem is that the people who firmly believe in the theology do not have considerations for adjustments. So, that is where the problem has to be resolved first.
 


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From: bd_mailer@yahoo.com
Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 09:40:46 -0700
Subject: [dhakamails] Un-elected democracy

Un-elected democracy

Sunita Paul   March 22, 2009
 
Bangladeshi newspaper, Weekly Blitz, published a front page report titled ´UN asked to return Bangladeshi Forces´, which might have drawn the attention of many readers around the world.

The news in brief is one Susan Ramgopalan wrote to United Nations (UN) Secretary General on March 15, 2009 titled ´Islamist inside UN Peace Keeping Force´, where she referring to the recent statement by Bangladeshi Commerce Minister, Lt. Col. (Retired) Faruk Khan, requested the UN Secretary General to send back all the participating members of Bangladesh Armed Forces and Police in the UNPKF for possible militancy connections.

In the letter, she said, "It has come to my attention that one of the front ranking leaders in Bangladesh´s ruling party, Awami League, member of the Cabinet and Member of Parliament, Lt. Col. Faruk Khan recently told reporters that Islamist militants like Jamiatul Mujuhidin (JMB) has penetrated into country´s border security forces."

Susan also said" It is noteworthy that officers of border security forces are deputed from country´s armed forces. Under such authoritative statement from a senior member of the Bangladesh government, it is greatly assumed that there are unknown number of Islamist militants even within the other disciplined forces, including army and police.

For a number of reasons, I have confidence on the credibility of news published in Weekly Blitz. First of all, this newspaper mostly runs investigative reports on varieties of issues including terrorism. Blitz is the first newspaper in Bangladesh to disclose the silent strength gaining of Hizb Ut Tahrir (HT). During that time, at least, I did not write anything negative about HT in any other newspaper in the country. So, for sure, Blitz leads this investigative journalism. In this case, the above news item is truly worrisome for Bangladesh, its people and the Armed Forces. There is no room for anyone to be delighted at this news. Because, if Bangladeshi forces are sent back from UNPKF, international community will then turn absolutely sure about Bangladesh to have turned into another Taliban ruled avenue. Bangladeshi exports will be greatly hampered if not completely stopped. Tourism industry will be affected. Most importantly, Bangladeshis living abroad shall be treated by the international community as ´Potential Al Qaida member´. None of these are minimum good news for the people of this great nation in South Asia.

And, who should be held responsible for pushing the nation towards such dangerous fate? Bangladeshi minister for Commerce and chief coordinator of the three investigation committees, ex-army man Faruk Khan repeatedly told media in Bangladesh and abroad that militants have penetrated inside law enforcing and disciplined forces in the country.

Then he and some of his cabinet colleagues cracked another bomb saying, Bangladeshi militants have connection with Talibans. Possibly everyone understands the fact that in the international arena, Talibans are always considered to be the forefront forces of Al Qaida. So in other words, Faruk Khan and other Bangladeshi ministers wanted to convince the international community with the facts that, the country´s law enforcing and disciplined forces are containing militants and secondly, Al Qaida has already extended its network up to Bangladesh.

Anyone, with most elementary knowledge about today´s global scenario on the context of war against terror or combating religious militancy would surely agree with me that, such statements are ought to bring severe consequence for Bangladesh.

My personal curiosity is, whether Faruk Khan and others are desperately trying to welcome international intervention in Bangladesh for combating militancy and Al Qaida. They might be feeling encouraged with the 9 plus year tenure of President Pervez Musharraf, who enjoyed support from the Western world, because of his ´commitment´ in combating militant Islam.

Second reason could be, the ruling party in Bangladesh, wants to get into the top attention of the international community by pronouncing such risky statements.

But, possibly Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and her advisors as well as members of her ´Chamatkar´ (surprise) cabinet fail to realize the fact that, because of their greed in holding power for decades (Awami League announced electoral manifesto titled Vision 2021, which indicates their desire of at least continuing in power till that time), through several senseless comments and statements, they are pushing the fate of Bangladesh towards destination unknown.
 
The worst affected parties of such statements will be Bangladeshi exporters, Bangladeshi workers abroad and of course, Bangladesh Armed Forces.
Due to economic recession worldwide, Bangladesh export is already suffering numerous threats and challenges. There are series of bad news from foreign nations on Bangladeshi workers. Now, if the armed forces, disciplined forces and law enforcing agencies are affected, how the ruling party can manage this?

Bangladesh Army has been actively involved in a number of United Nations Peace Support Operations (UNPSO) since its formation in the 1970s. Its first deployments came in 1988, when it participated in two operations - UNIIMOG in Iraq and UNTAG in Namibia. When announced by the then elected President of Bangladesh, Lieutenant General Hossain Mohammad Ershad, these deployments - particularly the contribution to UNIIMOG - met with considerable criticism in Bangladesh.

Later, as part of the UNIKOM force deployed to Kuwait and Saudi Arabia following the Gulf War the Bangladesh Army sent a mechainised infantry battalion (approx. 2,193 personnel). Since then, the Bangladesh Army has been involved in up to thirty different UNPKOs in as many as twenty five countries. This has included activities in Namibia, Cambodia, Somalia, Uganda,Rwanda, Mozambique, former Yugoslavia, Liberia, Haiti, Tajikistan, Western Sahara, Sierra Leone, Kosovo, Georgia, East Timor, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire and Ethiopia.

As of December 2008, Bangladesh was ranked second (behind Pakistan) in terms of its contribution to United Nations Peacekeeping Operations, with 9,567 personnel (military and police) attached to various UN peacekeeping forces worldwide. Today, the Bangladesh Army is one of the top foreign currency earners for the country due to the funding it receives as a result of its contribution to the UN.

Bangladesh´s present rulers are not only continuing senseless statements and comments but they also are applying various forms of repressive measures on political opponents, which may be termed as autocratic behavior of an elected government.

The government has started making use of hated Special Powers Act of 1974, which was introduced by the government of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. This Act was created mainly to harrass, repress and suppress political opponents. But, later, this law has been cotninuing to be applied on thousands of people in Bangladesh. And, ruling Awami League, being the beneficiary of Bangabandhu, now picked up this hated law as a tool of showing the muscle to political opponents and, possibly the people at a large.

People of Bangladesh has no debate about contributions of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur in the creation of independent Bangladesh. But, his era was blackaned due to massive misrule, corruption, terrorism and formation of one-party system named BAKSAL. Bangabandhu´s government suffocated freedom of expression and cancelled registration of all the newspapers in Bangladesh, except four owned or controlled by the state. Under the Special Powers Act of 1974, anyone can be held and detained for 90 or even unlimited period without any charge. Such law, causing gross violation of human and citizen rights was inacted by none but the founding father of Bangladesh. But, those who knew Mujib personally believe that, such measures might have been taken by the cabinet colleagues and advisors of Bangabandhu, as he had never been in favor of repression. Mujib loved the people of Bangladesh.

In this case, the group of people who mislead the great leader of Bangladesh are back with different names and identities now, misleading Sheikh Hasina, the daughter of Bangabandhu.

Hopefully, the Bangladeshi Prime Minister will listen to this elderly journalist´s suggestions. She should realize her errors and quickly ratify. Otherwise, people of Bangladesh may start thinking, un-elected democracy is better than elected autocracy.
 
http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/95508




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[ALOCHONA] Nation celebrates 39th Independence Day today

Nation celebrates 39th Independence Day today
 
 



 

Political parties and different cultural organisations have taken various programmes to celebrate the 39th Independence and National Day today and pay homage to the valiant sons of the soil who laid down their lives to free the country from Pakistani colonial rule.

Different political parties including the ruling party Awami League and main opposition BNP will celebrate the day through placing floral wreaths at the National Mausoleum in the morning. Besides, on the occasion, Awami League will hoist national flag in it offices and also places wreaths at the portrait of the country's founder president, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, at the Bangabandhu Memorial Mus-eum at Dhanmondi.. The programme will be organized by Dhaka Mohanagar Unit Awami League which will also hold a rally at the premises of Suhrawardi Uddain at 3 pm and after that they will go to Dhanmondi-32. Besides, Awami League will arrange discussion meeting on March 27 marking the Independence Day.

BNP Chairperson Begum Khaleda Zia along with her party leaders after placing wreaths to National Mausoleum will go to the premises of late president Ziaur Rahman's monument. Apart from these, national flag will remain hoisted in all party offices and a discussion meeting will be arranged by the party on March 27.

Freedom fighters, social and cultural organisations alongside the people irrespective of age, cast, creed and gender will visit the National memorial throughout the day and place flowers. Other political parties like Jatiya party, Workers Party of Bangladesh, Communist Party of Bangladesh (CPB), National Awami party, Gano Azadi League, Symmobadi dal, Jatiya Samjtantrik dal and Ganoforum will also arrange discussion meeting with a view to celebrating Independence Day.

Talking to this correspondent, Manjurul Ahsan Khan, President of CPB, said people from all walks of life including all political party leaders should be united on national issues in the greater interest of the country. The countrymen will have to be committed to uphold the spirit of Independence Day to save the country and its people.

Different cultural organisations including Sammilito Shangskritik Jote has also taken three day long programme on the occasion of Independence Day. The organization will stage drama marking the day at the premises of Shaheed Minar.

On March 26, 1971, independence of Bangladesh was formally declared and the people launched an armed struggle against the Pakistani occupation forces who pounced on the unarmed people on the night of March 25 after the military junta refused to hand over power to the majority Bangalees. The nine-month war culminated in the emergence of an independent and sovereign Ban-gladesh on the world map on December 16, 1971.



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[ALOCHONA] ‘I won against Pakistan but lost to poverty’

'I won against Pakistan but lost to poverty'

Mushfique Wadud searches out Kakon Bibi, a Khasia woman and wife of a Pakistani soldier who helped the Mukti Bahini win over 20 battles until her eventual capture, torture, abandonment and poverty...
 

photo by Al-Emrun Garjon
It is 1971. A secret midnight meeting is going on at Dowarapara Thana, Chhatak Upazilla of Sunamganj district. Silence and darkness permeate. The plan is to capture the enemy camp at Tengratilla. The Pakistani soldiers from this camp have been carrying out attacks on the Mukti Bahini for too long. But the Mukti Bahini commander has no information about the capacity or numbers of the enemy. Everyone at the meeting is tense. No one speaks. The long silence is broken by a woman.

   'I will get you information about the Tengratilla camp,' she says.

   'But how will you do that?' the commander asks her. She is the same woman who tends to the wounded freedom fighters.

   'I will go there disguised as a beggar and collect information for you.'

   She was successful in her task, and with her help, Mukti Bahini was able to capture Tengratilla camp.

   That woman was Kakon Bibi. Like a professional spy, she would go out, sometimes as a beggar, sometimes a hawker, and sometimes a pedestrian, and collect information about the Pakistani camp's capacity. During the war of liberation, Dowarapara area was an important front for freedom fighters in Sylhet as the area was at the border.

   With the help of Kakon Bibi, the freedom fighters of this area defeated the Pakistani soldiers. Kakon Bibi provided strong support in 20 operations of Mukti Bahini in this area. In the East Banglabazaar fight, in the Dowarabazaar fight, the Tengratilla fight, the Roshlay fight, the Betigoan fight, the Kandigoan fight and the Mohabbatpur fight, Kakon Bibi was the main reason for Mukti Bahini's success. Kakon Bibi maintained contact with Sector Commander Mir Shawkat Ali and supplied important information to him.

   'I knew that one bullet could easily end my life as I wandered as a beggar, but the Pakistan Army's inhumane activities stirred me to do what I did,' she says.

   Kakon Bibi now lives in Lokhipur village, Dowarapara Thana in Sunamganj district. She is difficult to reach. After arriving in Sylhet, we had to go to Chhatok of Sunamganj district. From Chhatok we went to Dowarapara by boat and then by CNG auto-rickshaw. From there to Kakon Bibi's home in Lokhipur, there is no easy route. Part of the road was traversed by motorbike and the rest on foot. In a remote corner of the village of Lokhipur, Kakon Bibi's home is situated. She was homeless earlier until she got a tiny plot of land from the government. She lives in this house with her daughter, son-in-law and two grand-daughters.

   We arrived at her house at around 4pm. She had not eaten lunch. 'It is no exception for me. Many a day I stay without having a single meal, as I have no son and my son-in-law is the only earning member of my family,' she says.

   Known as 'Khasia Mukti beti' in this area, Kakon Bibi was born in Tripura, India. She belongs to the Khasia ethnic minority. She had an affair with a Bangladeshi, Shahed Ali. For him, she migrated to Bangladesh from India. At the same time she converted to Islam and took the name Nurjahan Begum. Kakon Bibi is her nickname. She then married Abdul Majid Khan, a Pakistani border security jawan. The rest of her family members remained in India. Even now her three brothers live in India, financially much better off than she.

   'Her brothers wanted to take her to India but she refused to leave Bangladesh,' says Sokhina, Kakon Bibi's daughter. When asked why she did not go to India though she was living in poverty here, Kakon Bibi says 'I love Bangladesh. Though I was born in India, Bangladesh is my soul. I fought for Bangladesh and I will never leave this country.'

   In 1971, when the war of independence started, Kakon Bibi could not get any news about her husband Abdul Majid Khan. She became anxious. In the meantime, she met some members of the Mukti Bahini. When she was asked to work for Mukti Bahini she agreed, thinking that she might find out her husband's whereabouts while visiting different places with them. Then she became a spy for the Mukti Bahini.

   Initially when she was asked why she came to the Pakistani camp, she told them that she was in search of her husband, Abdul Majid Khan. The Pakistani officials contacted other camps with the wireless network to ask whether there was a soldier by the name of Abdul Majid Khan and learned that Kakon Bibi was Majid Khan's wife. Then the Pakistani Army officials requested her to work for them. Kakon Bibi agreed, and did not demur when they asked her to find out about the Mukti Bahini. They gave her a document that would verify her mission with other Pakistani camps and said 'If Pakistani soldiers find you, they will help you when they see this document. But if you are caught by Mukti Bahini soldiers, you must eat this paper.'

   'I told them that I would follow their instructions exactly. They trusted me,' Kakon Bibi says. She assured the Pakistani soldiers that she would work for and act as their spy on the Mukti Bahini, but even the written document helped her in her role of double agent. 'They thought I supported the Pakistani army as my husband was a Pakistani soldier, but I did the opposite,' she says.

   Once she was caught, the Pakistani Army showed her no pity. 'The Pakistani soldiers tortured me by pressing white-hot iron into my flesh, all over my body. Till today, I can feel the burns,' she says.

   When the war ended, her husband returned to Pakistan but did not take Kakon Bibi with him, as she was an ally of Mukti Bahini. To support herself financially, she started a grocery shop. She and her daughter spent days and nights in this shop. But within time she lost her shop due to lack of capital. Then she started to work on farming lands. When she could not manage her livelihood anymore, she started begging – the same profession she had pretended to take up to help the Mukti Bahini. 'Finding no other way, I had to become a beggar. This is also my fight. A fight against poverty,' she says.

   The brave woman who was so vital in freeing the country now leads a miserable life. 'I was successful in the fight against the Pakistan Army, but I failed in my fight against the poverty,' she says. 'Now I cannot even manage two meals a day.'

   However, Kakon Bibi is not a beggar now – though perilously close to one. After the publication of a report on her begging status in some dailies, the government and some other organisations extended aid to her in 1997. But the help ended there. Now she is almost back to her begging life. According to her, as a freedom fighter she now receives Tk 5000 every six months from the government. This amount is not enough for her to live on.

   'I do not have a son. My son-in-law is the only earning member of my family. He is a van driver. In this profession he does not get enough money to manage our five member family. So we are struggling to survive,' she says. 'Some days ago I went to the local Union Parishad Chairman Amirul's office to collect VGF card. He said "Hey woman, get out of my office. You won't get anything from us,"' she says. 'I risked my life for this country, and now I must receive foul words like "Get out" from Amirul,' she says with tears.

   Kakon Bibi's daughter Sokhina says that some days ago the local Union Parishad chairman made a list of freedom fighters but Kakon Bibi was not on that list. 'When I asked why my mother is not on the list, the chairman Amirul told us "You are the government's people. You won't get any help and won't be listed",' she says.

   Independence Day will have many programmes and many people celebrating, but on that day, Kakon Bibi may not have a single meal. 'How much longer will I fight against poverty? At the age of 85 I want to live a peaceful life. I want to live a poverty-free life,' Kakon Bibi says.
 



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FW: [ALOCHONA] FW: [Sonar Bangladesh] who is radical anyway?

Kamal Ataturk was not a Jew. He was born of muslim parents. But he was moderate, and as jesus found that the root of all evils were the Jewish Raabis, similarly Kamal Atatrk found that the muslim mullahs were the root of all evils in Turkey. So, he founded the modern Turkey putting the mullahs down. The same thing happened for Jesus. He rejected the rabbis and talked about establishing humanism. But the rabbis plotted against him, made him a rebellion against Rome and so he was caught by the Romans and was crucified. Kamal succeeded what Jesus failed.  Later about 70 years after the death of Jesus, the religious minded so called saints turned Jesus' philosophy upside down and turned into a new christian religion that was almost alike judaism. Muslims are having the same problem as were found by Jesus and Kamal Ataturk. If every muslim country would be lucky enough to have a leader like Kamal Ataturk, who could put the muslim rabbis down and could establish humanistic states, the world would be lot more peaceful.
 


Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 14:58:05 -0700
From: thoughtocrat@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: [ALOCHONA] FW: [Sonar Bangladesh] who is radical anyway?
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com; aktel_bangladesh@yahoogroups.com; bangla_boys_and_grils@yahoogroups.com; banglachat@yahoogroups.com; futureofbangladesh@yahoogroups.com; banglarnari@yahoogroups.com; bd_nokia_club@yahoogroups.com; bdresearchers@yahoogroups.com; bdgirls@yahoogroups.com
CC: Kraisuddin@hotmail.com

Kamal Ataturk was a Jew? And he is being "worshiped" in many countries? Wow...is it the idiot season again or did I just missed out on my history lesson? Where do these people come from !!?#$
 
The Caliphate is not a part of Islam. The caliphate was a political "state", so to speak, by the "Khilafas" or successors of Prophet Muhammed (pbuh). No where in Quran it says the establishment of a "Political State" or Caliphate. It was the equivalent of an "Islamic Kingdom", . Prophet himself didn't leave behind any successor. He left behind only followers. The "caliphate" was the political embodiment of the Ummah that the prophet first established in Madina.


From: "kgmowla@att.net" <kgmowla@att.net>
To: alochona@yahoogroups.com; alochona@yahoogroups.com; aktel_bangladesh@yahoogroups.com; bangla_boys_and_grils YG <bangla_boys_and_grils@yahoogroups.com>; banglachat YG <banglachat@yahoogroups.com>; Bangladesh Future of - YG <futureofbangladesh@yahoogroups.com>; banglarnari YG <banglarnari@yahoogroups.com>; bd_nokia_club YG <bd_nokia_club@yahoogroups.com>; BD_Researchers YG <bdresearchers@yahoogroups.com>; bdgirls YG <bdgirls@yahoogroups.com>
Cc: K. Raisuddin <Kraisuddin@hotmail.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 22, 2009 10:41:40 AM
Subject: Re: [ALOCHONA] FW: [Sonar Bangladesh] who is radical anyway?

Muslim and Arab Muslims have forgot Khilafah/Caliphate and even some Muslims in Bangladesh and Pakistan, India worship Ataturk, who was a Jew and who abolished Caliphate. Caliphate is part of Islam and without Caliphate under unity Arabs and Muslims are busy destroying their wealth and killing since Caliphate was destroyed in 1914/196 with first invasion of Iraq. According to Justice Syed Ameer Ali whi is first Muslim to write several books in english, Muslims cannot accept 13 Ireland though Arabs are silent about those illegal Arab client States under illegal Governors who are now rulling Arab World as kings, Amir etc.  

More historical fact  is in following books and URLs.

 

USA

 

http://www.authorho use.com/Bookstor e/ItemDetail. .aspx?bookid= 44552

 

http://www.authorho use.com/Bookstor e/ItemDetail. .aspx?bookid= 55528

 

http://www.universa l-publishers. com/book. php?method= ISBN&book=1581128770

UK

http://www.authorho use.co.uk/ BookStore/ ItemDetail~ bookid~44552. .aspx

 

http://www.authorho use.co.uk/ BookStore/ ItemDetail~ bookid~55528. aspx

 

Link of my previous book and interview is available in following link of Santa Clara University.

 

http://www-relg- studies.scu. edu/facstaff/ murphy/courses/ sctr132/prep- 17.htm

 

Press release of my present book is available in thousands of site including in following URL

 

http://www.forbes. com/feeds/ prnewswire/ 2008/11/28/ prnewswire200811 280845PR_ NEWS_USPR_ ____NEF007. html

 

http://www.google. com/search? hl=en&q=the+Judgment+ against+Imperial ism%2C+Fascism+ and+Racism+ against+Caliphat e+and+Islam

 

Best regards,

-------------- Original message from "K. Raisuddin" <Kraisuddin@hotmail.com>: --------------

In bangla, the proverb says, "Mounota Shmmotir Lakkhon". For Muslims, this is something more than true. It is a fact that most muslims are not fanatic islamist radicals, rather peace loving people. But peace has to keep. It automatically does not remain in place. When a child does something wrong, the parents take appropriate actions to rectify. With the same token these peaceful muslims needed to strongly protest altogether against these criminal islamists. Did they do that? Certainly not. So, Who is responsible? People who are criticizing the islamic terrorists for their heinous actions or the peaceful muslims who are not protesting these heinous acts against the humanity in general. These problems are coming out of the muslim tent? So, it is the responsibility of the muslims to clean up this mess. Peace is not going to stay with the muslims if they do not attempt to keep it. My two cents.

To: dahuk@yahoogroups. com; witness-pioneer@ yahoogroups. com; sonarbangladesh@ yahoogroups. com; inquisitive_ sisters@yahoogro ups.com; ei_sumon@yahoo. com
From: mohebbollah@ yahoo.com
Date: Wed, 18 Mar 2009 23:17:03 -0700
Subject: [Sonar Bangladesh] who is radical anyway?


MUHAMMED ÇETİN cetin.m@todayszaman .com Columnists
Who is radical anyway?

Last week the international magazine Newsweek featured a striking cover. The main headline was in Arabic with an English translation in smaller type below: "Radical Islam is a fact of life. How to live with it."

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Fareed Zakaria's article and editorial argued that not all groups that find support in Muslim communities advocate jihadist ideologies and not all Muslim communities host terrorists -- in fact, most do not. The managing editor, Daniel Klaidman, also emphasizes: "We must be smart about distinguishing between true threats and irrational fears. What we need is more analysis and less anger." As he hints, different readers see such covers and topics in different ways -- deceptive with a twist, or menacing -- and the graceful Arabic calligraphy is beautiful, but commercially catchy, too. Such media analyses deserve attention in many respects.
While approaching issues related to Muslims or Islam, the naming and framing of issues is mostly erroneously misconstrued or used falsely and specific terms are used with ideological motives. For instance, many Muslims rightly object to the phrase "radical Islam" and refuse to accept or use it. Individuals or people can be radical, the interpretation of certain principles of a religion by some of its followers can be radical, but not the whole faith or religion itself. Expressions such as "radical Islam" imprint themselves and mold people's minds even before they start reading and thinking about the religion and Muslims.
This deepens communication problems. Any individual follower of a religion, male or female, can be radical, extremist or even terrorist, but not the religion. The term "Islamic terrorist" is used so often and in such a slack or even ill-intentioned way, whereas the media and politicians never refer to "Christian terror" or "Christian terrorists," or "Jewish terror" or "Jewish terrorists" or any other religion or faith, for that matter. At most they become "Christian rebels," "the far right" or some other dignified term, but never terrorists for their faith. The Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), which claims to be guided by the Bible's Ten Commandments, has wreaked havoc in the regions bordering Congo, Uganda and Sudan for two decades. The LRA is notorious for cutting off the limbs, lips, ears and throats of civilians, torture, executions, rape, forced displacement and forcing thousands of children to serve as soldiers or sex slaves.
A second issue is the visual imagery used to depict Muslims. While discussing violence and terrorism, the Western media use pictures of mosques, people praying or reading the Quran or innocent children and women in traditional clothing. Even as it argued against stereotyping Muslims, Newsweek's March 9 edition itself fell prey to this error: It showed children in traditional white gowns walking down the stairs of a modern mosque, young girls and women wearing headscarves at a university during Friday prayer and children reading the Quran in an underprivileged, remote area of a country. The reader is not brought to understand that these people have nothing to do with "nihilistic philosophies and expansionist aims," as the Newsweek editor put it. Instead, this associates all Muslims, man, woman and child, all their resources and institutions, the Quran, the mosque and their universities with fear; they are all seen as potential sources of radicalism, fundamentalism or ideological violence.
So even when people start with the right diagnosis of the issues, if they pursue the discussion with the wrong language and imagery, it does not help to resolve any ongoing dehumanizing of another group, especially of Muslims in this case.
The range of issues to confront, and they are many -- various sociopolitical and economic backgrounds, dysfunctional systems or regimes, disruption or disorientation of modernity in traditional societies, imposed cultural alienation, the negative effects of globalization, the role and weight of authoritarian regimes or militaries, media or judicial systems, transnational corporate and international agencies intervening or interfering with the domestic and international affairs of a country, regional conflicts and wars, the backlash produced by a colonial past or former or present foreign military interventions -- are all experienced and resolved differently in the varied and vast lands in which Muslim communities or societies live. So it is misleading to talk about "global Islamic insurgency." The different interests, issues and conflicts facing a particular society are represented by a range of political, ideological and sectarian groups. None of these stand for all Muslims, Islam or Islamic teachings, meanings and values. They are not part of a single global movement. Groups, motives, interests and movements are far more local or regional than that. They each have their own specific issues and grievances. Many do not have much in common in terms of tactics, strategies, reactions or positive responses. Thus, so-called radicalism, extremism or fundamentalism in various parts of the world cannot be resolved by bombing, killing, capturing, torturing, dehumanizing and demonizing individuals, people, communities or countries, as Newsweek also points out.
The problems are not the same in every society, and neither are the people. The same medicine cannot be used for all patients. As modern, educated and sophisticated people, we should demonstrate our political, moral, intellectual and spiritual superiority to extremists and radicals by sustaining civic, educational, philanthropic and altruistic efforts and projects. We need to bring people into our fold, not repel, stigmatize or compartmentalize them with artificial ideological labels. In the end, we have one world and one life to live. The world is not the property or responsibility of only a few.



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