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{{pp|small=yes}}
{{Short description|Indo-Aryan ethnocultural group}}
{{Short description|Indo-Aryan ethnocultural group}}
{{EngvarB|date=February 2020}}
{{EngvarB|date=November 2024}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2023}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2024}}
{{infobox ethnic group
{{infobox ethnic group
| group = Sylhetis
| group = Sylhetis
| image =
| image = File:Sylheti Map.png
| image_caption = Map of Sylheti speaking areas of South Asia
| population = {{circa}} 10.3&nbsp;million<ref name=eth>{{e22|syl|Sylheti}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.visualcapitalist.com/100-most-spoken-languages/ |title=Ranked: The 100 Most Spoken Languages Around the World |publisher=Visual Capitalist |date=15 February 2020 |access-date=15 July 2020}}</ref>
| population = {{circa}} 10.3&nbsp;million<ref name=eth>{{e22|syl|Sylheti}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.visualcapitalist.com/100-most-spoken-languages/ |title=Ranked: The 100 Most Spoken Languages Around the World |publisher=Visual Capitalist |date=15 February 2020 |access-date=15 July 2020}}</ref>
| popplace = '''Bangladesh''' ([[Sylhet Division]])<br/>'''India''' ([[Barak Valley]], [[Hojai district|Hojai]], [[North Tripura]], [[Shillong]])<br/>'''Middle East''' ([[Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf|GCC countries]])<br/>'''Western world''' ([[United Kingdom]], [[United States]], [[Canada]])
| popplace = '''Bangladesh''' ([[Sylhet Division]])<br/>'''India''' ([[Barak Valley]], [[Hojai district|Hojai]], [[North Tripura]], [[Unakoti district|Unakoti]], [[Shillong]])<br/>'''Middle East''' ([[Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf|GCC countries]])<br/>'''Western world''' ([[United Kingdom]], [[United States]], [[Canada]])
| regions =
| langs = [[Sylheti language|Sylheti]] ([[First language|L1]])<br/>[[Bengali language|Standard Bengali]] ([[Second language|L2]])
| langs = [[Sylheti language|Sylheti]] ([[First language|L1]])<br />[[Bengali language|Bengali]] ([[Second language|L2]])
| religions = '''Majority:'''<br />[[File:Star and Crescent.svg|15px]] [[Islam]]<br />'''Minorities:'''<br />{{hlist|[[File:Om.svg|15px]] [[Hinduism]]|[[File:Christian cross.svg|12px]] [[Christianity]]|[[File:Dharma Wheel.svg|18px]] [[Buddhism]]}}
| religions = Predominantly:<br />[[File:Star and Crescent.svg|15px]] [[Islam]]<br />Significant minority:<br />{{hlist|[[File:Om.svg|15px]] [[Hinduism]]<br />Small minority:<br />[[File:Christian cross.svg|12px]] [[Christianity]]|[[File:Dharma Wheel.svg|18px]] [[Buddhism]]}}
| related_groups = {{hlist|[[Dhakaiyas]]| [[Miya people]]|Other [[Bengalis]]}}
| related_groups = {{hlist|[[Indo-Aryan peoples]]|Other [[Bengalis]]}}
}}
}}


The '''Sylheti''' ({{IPAc-en|lang|s|ɪ|ˈ|l|ɛ|t|i}}) or '''Sylhetis''' are an [[Indo-Aryan peoples|Indo-Aryan]] ethnocultural group<ref>Shahela Hamid (2011). '' Language Use and Identity: The Sylheti Bangladeshis in Leeds''. pp.''Preface''. Verlag Peter Lang. Retrieved on 4 December 2020.</ref> that are associated with the [[Sylhet Division]] of [[Bangladesh]]. There are strong diasporic communities in [[Barak Valley]] of [[Assam]], India,<ref name="barak-diaspora"/><ref name=eth/>{{sfn|Bhattacharjee|2013|p=59–67}}<ref>{{cite book |last1=Wouters |first1=Jelle J. P. |last2=Subba |first2=Tanka B. |title=The Routledge Companion to Northeast India |date=30 September 2022 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-1-000-63699-4 |page=61 |url=https://www.google.co.in/books/edition/The_Routledge_Companion_to_Northeast_Ind/YseEEAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=karimganj&pg=PT61&printsec=frontcover |language=en}}</ref><ref>Glanville Price (2000). ''Encyclopedia of the Languages of Europe''. pp. 91–92.</ref> [[North Tripura district|North Tripura]],<ref name=eth>{{e22|syl|Sylheti}}</ref> as well as in rest of Bangladesh and [[northeast India]]. They speak [[Sylheti language|Sylheti]], an Eastern [[Indo-Aryan language]] that is considered "a distinct language by many and a dialect of [[Bengali language|Bengali]] by some others".<ref name="mahanta-gope-variety">"Along the linguistic continuum of eastern Indic languages, Sylheti occupies an ambiguous position, where it is considered a distinct language by many and also as a dialect of Bengali or Bangla by some others."{{harvcol|Mahanta|Gope|2018|p=81}}</ref>
The '''Sylheti''' ({{IPAc-en|lang|s|ɪ|ˈ|l|ɛ|t|i}}) or '''Sylhetis''' are an [[Indo-Aryan peoples|Indo-Aryan]] ethnocultural group,<ref>Shahela Hamid (2011). '' Language Use and Identity: The Sylheti Bangladeshis in Leeds''. pp.''Preface''. Verlag Peter Lang. Retrieved on 4 December 2020.</ref> that are associated with the Sylhet region ([[Sylhet Division]] of [[Bangladesh]] and the [[Karimganj district]] of south [[Assam]], [[India]]). There are strong diasporic communities in [[Barak Valley]] of [[Assam]], India,<ref name="barak-diaspora"/><ref name=eth/>{{sfn|Bhattacharjee|2013|p=59–67}}<ref>{{cite book |last1=Wouters |first1=Jelle J. P. |last2=Subba |first2=Tanka B. |title=The Routledge Companion to Northeast India |date=30 September 2022 |publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]] |isbn=978-1-000-63699-4 |page=61 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YseEEAAAQBAJ&dq=karimganj&pg=PT61}}</ref><ref>Glanville Price (2000). ''Encyclopedia of the Languages of Europe''. pp. 91–92.</ref> [[North Tripura district|North Tripura]],<ref name=eth>{{e22|syl|Sylheti}}</ref> [[Shillong]], [[Meghalaya]],{{sfn|Bhattacharjee|2013|p=62}} and [[Hojai district|Hojai]], Central Assam.<ref name=ldd>{{cite journal |last1=Simard |first1=Candide |last2=Dopierala |first2=Sarah M |last3=Thaut |first3=E Marie |year=2020 |title=Introducing the Sylheti language and its speakers, and the SOAS Sylheti project |url= http://www.elpublishing.org/docs/1/18/ldd18_01.pdf |journal=Language Documentation and Description |volume=18 |pages=5 |access-date=4 December 2020}}</ref> Outside South Asia, there are significant numbers in the [[United Kingdom]],<ref>[https://www.thedailystar.net/opinion/perspective/news/sylhetis-assamese-bongal-kheda-and-the-rolling-thunder-the-east-1630144 Sylhetis, Assamese, 'Bongal Kheda', and the rolling thunder in the east] The Daily Star. Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury. 7 September 2018. Retrieved on 5 December 2022.</ref> the [[United States]],<ref>Nazli Kibria (2011). ''Muslims in Motion''. pp. 58–61. Rutgers University Press.</ref><ref>Sook Wilkinson (2015). ''Asian Americans in Michigan''. pp. 166–167. Wayne State University Press.</ref> and [[Canada]].<ref>Harald Bauder (2012). ''Immigration and Settlement Challenges, Experiences, and Opportunities.'' Canadian Scholars' Press Incorporated. p. 239.</ref>


They speak [[Sylheti language|Sylheti]], an eastern [[Indo-Aryan language]] that is considered "a distinct language by many and a dialect of [[Bengali language|Bengali]] by some others".<ref name="mahanta-gope-variety">"Along the linguistic continuum of eastern Indic languages, Sylheti occupies an ambiguous position, where it is considered a distinct language by many and also as a dialect of Bengali or Bangla by some others."{{harvcol|Mahanta|Gope|2018|p=81}}</ref> Sylheti identity is associated primarily with its regional culture and language, alongside a broader cultural and
Sylheti identity is associated mainly with regional culture and language, while accompanied with an ethnic [[Bengalis|Bengali]] identity.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Simard |first1=Candide |last2=Dopierala |first2=Sarah M |last3=Thaut |first3=E Marie |year=2020 |title=Introducing the Sylheti language and its speakers, and the SOAS Sylheti project |url= http://www.elpublishing.org/docs/1/18/ldd18_01.pdf |journal=Language Documentation and Description |volume=18 |pages=5 |access-date=4 December 2020 }}</ref>{{sfn|Bhattacharjee|2013|p=59–67}}
ethnic Bengali identity.{{sfn|Bhattacharjee|2013|p=54–67}}<ref name=ldd/>


==History==
==History==
{{main|History of Sylhet}}
In September 1874, the [[British East India Company]] made Sylhet district a part of the [[non-regulation province|non-regulation]] [[Chief Commissioner's Province of Assam|Chief Commissioner's Province of Assam (Northeast Frontier Province)]] for commercial development.{{sfn|Bhattacharjee|2013|p=53–54}}<ref>{{cite journal |last=Hossain |first=Ashfaque |year=2013 |title=The Making and Unmaking of Assam-Bengal Borders and the Sylhet Referendum |journal=Modern Asian Studies |volume=47 |number=1 |page=260 |jstor=23359785 |doi=10.1017/S0026749X1200056X |s2cid=145546471 |quote=To make (the Province) financially viable, and to accede to demands from professional groups, (the colonial administration) decided in September 1874 to annex the Bengali-speaking and populous district of Sylhet.}}</ref> The transfer led to the natives of Sylhet protesting against the British viceroy [[Thomas Baring, 1st Earl of Northbrook|Lord Northbrook]] as they viewed themselves as a part of the [[Bengali people]], and distinct from the [[Assamese people|Assamese]]. Leaders of both the [[Hindus|Hindu]] and [[Muslims|Muslim]] communities submitted a memorandum to Northbrook on 10 August 1874.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Hossain |first=Ashfaque |year=2013 |title=The Making and Unmaking of Assam-Bengal Borders and the Sylhet Referendum |journal=Modern Asian Studies |volume=47 |number=1 |page=261 |jstor=23359785 |doi=10.1017/S0026749X1200056X|s2cid=145546471 }}</ref> Northbrook was eventually able to convince the people of Sylhet by assuring them that education and justice will still be administered under Bengal,<ref>{{cite journal |last=Hossain |first=Ashfaque |year=2013 |title=The Making and Unmaking of Assam-Bengal Borders and the Sylhet Referendum |journal=Modern Asian Studies |volume=47 |number=1 |page=262 |jstor=23359785 |doi=10.1017/S0026749X1200056X |s2cid=145546471 |quote=It was also decided that education and justice would be administered from Calcutta University and the Calcutta High Court respectively.}}</ref> and highlighting the economic opportunity for Sylhetis in Assam's tea industry.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Hossain |first=Ashfaque |year=2013 |title=The Making and Unmaking of Assam-Bengal Borders and the Sylhet Referendum |journal=Modern Asian Studies |volume=47 |number=1 |page=262 |jstor=23359785 |doi=10.1017/S0026749X1200056X |s2cid=145546471 |quote=They could also see that the benefits conferred by the tea industry on the province would also prove profitable for them. For example, those who were literate were able to obtain numerous clerical and medical appointments in tea estates, and the demand for rice to feed the tea labourers noticeably augmented its price in Sylhet and Assam enabling the Zaminders (mostly Hindu) to dispose of their produce at a better price than would have been possible had they been obliged to export it to Bengal.}}</ref> With the approach of the [[Indian independence movement|independence movement]] towards 1920, Sylhetis began forming organisations such as the ''Sylhet Peoples' Association'' and ''Sylhet-Bengal Reunion League'' which demanded Sylhet to be reincorporated to Bengal.{{sfn|Bhattacharjee|2013|p=54–55}}


==Culture==
==Culture==
Sylheti culture, while considered a subculture of [[Culture of Bengal|Bengali culture]],<ref>Ashfaque Hossain (2022). ''Colonial Globalization and Its Effects on South Asia, Eastern Bengal, Sylhet, and Assam, 1874–1971.'' Taylor & Francis. Chapter 4.</ref><ref>Dick Geary, Nicholas Hewitt (2007). ''Diaspora(s): Movements and Cultures.'' Critical, Cultural and Communications Press. p. 168.</ref> is distinguished by unique linguistic, historical, and regional characteristics.<ref name=prothom-alo>[https://www.prothomalo.com/world/usa/%E0%A6%AC%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%B6%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%AC-%E0%A6%B8%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%B2%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%9F-%E0%A6%B8%E0%A6%AE%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%AE%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%B2%E0%A6%A8%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%B0-%E0%A6%AD%E0%A7%82%E0%A6%AE%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%95%E0%A6%BE-%E0%A6%8F%E0%A6%95%E0%A6%9F%E0%A6%BF-%E0%A6%AA%E0%A6%B0%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%AF%E0%A6%BE%E0%A6%B2%E0%A7%8B%E0%A6%9A%E0%A6%A8%E0%A6%BE বিশ্ব সিলেট সম্মেলনের ভূমিকা: একটি পর্যালোচনা] ''Prothom Alo'' (in Bengali). Ziauddin Ahmed. 26 May 2017. Retrieved on 10 November 2024.</ref> The [[Sylheti language]], which some consider as a [[Bengali dialects|dialect of Bengali]],<ref>"Bengalis interviewed in the course of this study reported that the differences between Standard Bengali and Sylheti are relatively small...We have to consider though that these statements were made by people who originate from Sylhet and who speak both the local vernacular Sylheti and Standard Bengali." {{harvcol|Rasinger|2007|pp=26–27}}</ref> while many linguists consider it as a distinct language,<ref name="khan-lang">"At the geographical extremes, Chittagonian, Sylheti, Mal Paharia, and Rohingya are so unintelligible to speakers of other dialects that they are almost universally considered by linguists to be separate languages on their own." {{harvcol|Khan|2018}}</ref> is central to Sylheti identity.{{sfn|Bhattacharjee|2013|p=58}}{{sfn|Rasinger|2007|pp=28}} Its unique phonetic qualities and vocabulary often make it unintelligible to standard Bengali speakers, which contributes to a sense of separateness among Sylhetis.<ref>Hanne-Ruth Thompson (2007). Part 2: "Bangladesh" in Andrew Simpson (ed.) ''Language and National Identity in Asia.'' OUP Oxford. p.50.</ref><ref>Harald Bauder (2012). ''Immigration and Settlement: Challenges, Experiences, and Opportunities.'' Canadian Scholars' Press Incorporated. p. 239.</ref> In addition, Sylhetis have a strong regional identity that was strengthened by the historical shifts of the Sylhet region between [[Assam Province|Assam]] and [[Bengal Presidency|Bengal]] during [[Company rule in India|British rule]].<ref>Ali Riaz (2014). Part 8: "Being Bengali abroad: identity politics among the Bengali community in Britain" in Mridula Nath Chakraborty ''Being Bengali: At Home and in the World''. Taylor & Francis.</ref><ref name=prothom-alo/> These transitions were pivotal in developing a distinct Sylheti identity, due to the region’s geographical isolation and its historical and cultural ties with Bengal.{{sfn|Bhattacharjee|2013|p=53-54}}<ref>{{cite journal |last=Hossain |first=Ashfaque |year=2013 |title=The Making and Unmaking of Assam-Bengal Borders and the Sylhet Referendum |journal=Modern Asian Studies |volume=47 |number=1 |page=260 |jstor=23359785 |doi=10.1017/S0026749X1200056X |s2cid=145546471 |quote=To make (the Province) financially viable, and to accede to demands from professional groups, (the colonial administration) decided in September 1874 to annex the Bengali-speaking and populous district of Sylhet.}}</ref> Many Sylhetis today continue to identify with both the broader Bengali and their distinct Sylheti ethnocultural identities.<ref>Sobha Satyanaf (2023). "12: Sociolinguistics of the Indo-European languages in South Asia." in Chiara Meluzzi, Martin J. Ball, Rajend Mesthrie ''The Routledge Handbook of Sociolinguistics Around the World''. Taylor & Francis.</ref><ref> Chris Phillipson, Nilufer Raihan Ahmed, Joanna Latimer (2003). ''Women in Transition: A Study of the Experiences of Bangladeshi Women Living in Tower Hamlets.'' Policy Press. pp.43-45.</ref><ref>Adrian Blackledge (2001). ''Power relations and the social construction of 'literacy' and 'illiteracy'.'' in Marilyn Martin-Jones, Kathryn Jones ''Multilingual Literacies: Reading and Writing Different Worlds''. John Benjamins Publishing Company. pp.66-68.</ref>
[[File:Kazi Nazrul Islam with the Kendriya Muslim Sahitya Sangsad.jpg|thumb|[[Kendriya Muslim Sahitya Sangsad]], the leading body of Sylheti litterateurs, hosting the poet [[Qazi Nazrul Islam]] during his visit.]]


Sylheti folklore is influenced by [[Hinduism|Hindu]], [[Sufism|Sufi]], [[Turco-Persian tradition|Turco-Persian]] and native ideas. [[Chandra Kumar De]] of [[Mymensingh]] is known to be the first researcher of Sylheti folklore.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Research on Folklore in Sylhet Region of Bangladesh: A Study of Chowdhury Harun Akbor |last=Ahmed |first=Sofe |date=August 2014 |journal=International Journal on Studies in English Language and Literature |volume=2 |issue=8 |pages=131–134}}</ref> Archives of old works are kept in [[Kendriya Muslim Sahitya Sangsad]] in [[Sylhet]] (also known as the Sylhet Central Muslim Literary Society) – the oldest literary organisation in [[Bengal]] and one of the oldest in [[the subcontinent]].
Sylheti folklore is unique to the region, it is influenced by [[Hinduism|Hindu]], [[Sufism|Sufi]], [[Turco-Persian tradition|Turco-Persian]] and native ideas. [[Chandra Kumar De]] of [[Mymensingh]] is known to be the first researcher of Sylheti folklore.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Research on Folklore in Sylhet Region of Bangladesh: A Study of Chowdhury Harun Akbor |last=Ahmed |first=Sofe |date=August 2014 |journal=International Journal on Studies in English Language and Literature |volume=2 |issue=8 |pages=131–134}}</ref> Archives of old works are kept in [[Kendriya Muslim Sahitya Sangsad]] in [[Sylhet]] (also known as the Sylhet Central Muslim Literary Society) – the oldest literary organisation in [[Bengal]] and one of the oldest in [[the subcontinent]].


===Literature===
===Literature===
====Sylheti Nagri====
It has been argued that the first [[Bengali language|Bengali]] translation of the ''Mahabharata'' was written by [[Sri Sanjay]] of [[Sylhet]] in the 17th century.<ref>{{cite Banglapedia|author=Mohanta, Sambaru Chandra|article=Mahabharata}}</ref><ref name=sahitya>{{cite news|language=bn|url=https://thikana.us/%E0%A6%AC%E0%A6%BE%E0%A6%82%E0%A6%B2%E0%A6%BE-%E0%A6%B8%E0%A6%BE%E0%A6%B9%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%A4%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%AF%E0%A7%87-%E0%A6%B8%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%B2%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%9F/|work=Thikana|title=বাংলা সাহিত্যে সিলেট|author=Husam, Shamshad}}</ref> The 18th-century ''Hattanather Panchali'' (Hattanath chronicles) written by Ganesh Ram Shiromani was a Bengali ballad of 36,000 lines which detail the early history of Sylhet though its authenticity is questionable.<ref name=uttar>{{cite book |author=Choudhury, Achyut Charan |author-link=Achyut Charan Choudhury |title=Srihatter Itibritta: Uttorangsho |year=2000 |orig-year=1916 |publisher=Kotha |location=Kolkata |language=bn |url=https://bn.wikisource.org/wiki/%E0%A6%AA%E0%A6%BE%E0%A6%A4%E0%A6%BE:%E0%A6%B6%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%B0%E0%A7%80%E0%A6%B9%E0%A6%9F%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%9F%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%B0_%E0%A6%87%E0%A6%A4%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%AC%E0%A7%83%E0%A6%A4%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%A4_(%E0%A6%89%E0%A6%A4%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%A4%E0%A6%B0%E0%A6%BE%E0%A6%82%E0%A6%B6)_-_%E0%A6%85%E0%A6%9A%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%AF%E0%A7%81%E0%A6%A4%E0%A6%9A%E0%A6%B0%E0%A6%A3_%E0%A6%9A%E0%A7%8C%E0%A6%A7%E0%A7%81%E0%A6%B0%E0%A7%80_%E0%A6%A4%E0%A6%A4%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%A4%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%AC%E0%A6%A8%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%A7%E0%A6%BF.pdf/%E0%A7%AB%E0%A7%AD%E0%A7%AD}}</ref> When Sylhet was under the rule of the [[Twipra Kingdom]], medieval Sylheti writers using the Bengali script included the likes of Dwija Pashupati, the author of Chandravali – considered one of the earliest Sylheti works.<ref name=gon>{{cite Banglapedia|author=Bhowmik, Kalpana|article=Dwija Pashupati}}</ref> Nasiruddin Haydar of [[Sylhet town]] wrote the Tawarikh-e-Jalali, the first Bengali biography of [[Shah Jalal]]. Gobind Gosai of [[Habiganj Sadar Upazila|Masulia]] wrote ''Nirbban Shongit'', Gopinath Dutta wrote ''Dronporbbo'', ''Dotto Bongshaboli'' and ''Nariporbbo'' and Nur Ali Khan of Syedpur wrote ''Marifoti Geet''. Songwriters and poets such as [[Radharaman Dutta]], [[Hason Raja]] and [[Shah Abdul Karim]], significantly contributed to [[Bengali literature]] and their works remain popular across [[Bengal]] in present-times.<ref>{{cite Banglapedia|article=Hasan Raja|author=Tasiqul Islam}}</ref> Numerous Bengali writers emerged in Ita, such as Kobi Muzaffar Khan, Gauri Shankar Bhatta and Golok Chand Ghosh. Muslim literature was based upon historical affairs and biographies of prominent [[Islam]]ic figures. Like the rest of Muslim [[Bengal]], [[Bengali Muslim]] poetry was written in a colloquial dialect of Bengali which came to be known as [[Dobhashi]], and has had a major influence on Sylheti. Dobhashi featured the use of [[Farsi|Perso]]-[[Arabic]] vocabulary in Bengali texts. A separate script was developed in Sylhet for this popular linguistic register. Known as the [[Sylheti Nagri]] script, its most renowned writer was [[Sadeq Ali]] whose ''Halatunnabi'' was famed as household item amongst rural Muslim communities.<ref name=uttar/><ref name="SYLNAG">{{cite book |last=Sadiq |first=Mohammad |year=2008 |script-title=bn:সিলেটি নাগরী: ফকিরি ধারার ফসল |title=Sileṭi nāgarī : phakiri dhārāra phasala |publisher=Asiatic Society of Bangladesh |oclc=495614347}}</ref> Manuscripts have been found of works such as ''Rag Namah'' by Fazil Nasim Muhammad, ''Shonabhaner Puthi'' by Abdul Karim, and the earliest known work ''Talib Huson'' (1549) by Gholam Huson.<ref name=nagri>{{cite book |title=Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh |author=Muhammad Ashraful Islam |chapter-url=http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Sylheti_Nagri |chapter=Sylheti Nagri |publisher=[[Asiatic Society of Bangladesh]]}}</ref> Late Nagri writers include Muhammad Haidar Chaudhuri who wrote ''Ahwal-i-Zamana'' in 1907 and Muhammad Abdul Latif who wrote ''Pohela Kitab o Doikhurar Rag'' in 1930.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Islamic Syncretistic Tradition in Bengal |url=https://archive.org/details/islamicsyncretis0000roya |url-access=registration |last=Roy |first=Asim |year=1983|isbn=9780691053875 }}</ref> In 2021, [[List of Bangla Academy Literary Award recipients (2020-2029)|Shuvagoto Chowdhury]] was awarded the [[Bangla Academy Literary Award]].<ref>{{cite web |title=বাংলা একাডেমি সাহিত্য পুরস্কার পেলেন ১৫ জন |url=https://www.prothomalo.com/bangladesh/বাংলা-একাডেমি-সাহিত্য-পুরস্কার-পেলেন-১৫-জন |work=[[Prothom Alo]]|date=23 January 2022 |access-date=23 January 2022|language=bn}}</ref>
{{Main|Sylheti Nagri}}
[[File:Halot-un-nabi-page1.gif|thumb|Front page of a Sylheti Nagari book titled Halat-un-Nabi, written in the mid-19th century by [[Sadeq Ali]]]]
A distinct linguistic register emerged in the Sylhet region through the development of the [[Sylheti Nagri]] script. Though having similar features to the more prevalent [[Dobhashi]] literary dialect of Middle Bengali, the Sylheti Nagri script fostered a unique literary culture of the Sylhet region.{{sfn|Bhattacharjee|2013|p=57–58}} Its distinction is marked with its simpler script which is related to the [[Kaithi]] script, and its phonology being deeply influenced by the [[Sylheti language|Sylheti]] vernacular.<ref name=dHubert>Thibaut d'Hubert (2018). ''Jāmī in Regional Contexts: The Reception of ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Jāmī’s Works in the Islamicate World, ca. 9th/15th-14th/20th Century''. pp.667-678. Brill.</ref> Its most renowned writer was [[Sadeq Ali]] whose ''Halatunnabi'' was famed as household item among rural Muslim communities.<ref name=uttar/><ref name="SYLNAG">{{cite book |last=Sadiq |first=Mohammad |year=2008 |script-title=bn:সিলেটি নাগরী: ফকিরি ধারার ফসল |title=Sileṭi nāgarī : phakiri dhārāra phasala |publisher=[[Asiatic Society of Bangladesh]] |oclc=495614347}}</ref> Manuscripts have been found of works such as ''Rag Namah'' by Fazil Nasim Muhammad, ''Shonabhaner Puthi'' by Abdul Karim, and the earliest known work ''Talib Huson'' (1549) by Gholam Huson.<ref name=nagri>{{cite book |title=Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh |author=Muhammad Ashraful Islam |chapter-url=http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Sylheti_Nagri |chapter=Sylheti Nagri |publisher=[[Asiatic Society of Bangladesh]]}}</ref> Late Nagri writers include Muhammad Haidar Chaudhuri who wrote ''Ahwal-i-Zamana'' in 1907 and Muhammad Abdul Latif who wrote ''Pohela Kitab o Doikhurar Rag'' in 1930.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Islamic Syncretistic Tradition in Bengal |url=https://archive.org/details/islamicsyncretis0000roya |url-access=registration |last=Roy |first=Asim |year=1983|publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=9780691053875 }}</ref> From around the middle of 20th century, Sylheti Nagri had faced near-extinction as most Sylheti Nagri printing presses fell out of use or were destroyed during the [[Bangladeshi Liberation War]] in 1971.<ref>David Kane (2021). ''Puthi-Pora''. Blurb. p. 165.</ref> Recently there have been efforts in reviving the script, including from the [[British Bangladeshi]] diaspora, as the script is viewed as a unique cultural marker that distinguishes Sylheti from Bengali identity.<ref>Various (2022). ''Routledge Revivals: Language, Education and Society Series''. Taylor & Francis. p.44.</ref>

====Bengali====
It has been argued that the first [[Bengali language|Bengali]] translation of the ''Mahabharata'' was written by [[Sri Sanjay]] of [[Sylhet]] in the 17th century.<ref>{{cite Banglapedia|author=Mohanta, Sambaru Chandra|article=Mahabharata}}</ref><ref name=sahitya>{{cite news|language=bn|url=https://thikana.us/%E0%A6%AC%E0%A6%BE%E0%A6%82%E0%A6%B2%E0%A6%BE-%E0%A6%B8%E0%A6%BE%E0%A6%B9%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%A4%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%AF%E0%A7%87-%E0%A6%B8%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%B2%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%9F/|work=Thikana|title=বাংলা সাহিত্যে সিলেট|author=Husam, Shamshad}}</ref> The 18th-century ''Hattanather Panchali'' (Hattanath chronicles) written by Ganesh Ram Shiromani was a Bengali ballad of 36,000 lines which detail the early history of Sylhet though its authenticity is questionable.<ref name=uttar>{{cite book |author=Choudhury, Achyut Charan |author-link=Achyut Charan Choudhury |title=Srihatter Itibritta: Uttorangsho |year=2000 |orig-year=1916 |publisher=Kotha |location=[[Kolkata]] |language=bn |url=https://bn.wikisource.org/wiki/%E0%A6%AA%E0%A6%BE%E0%A6%A4%E0%A6%BE:%E0%A6%B6%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%B0%E0%A7%80%E0%A6%B9%E0%A6%9F%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%9F%E0%A7%87%E0%A6%B0_%E0%A6%87%E0%A6%A4%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%AC%E0%A7%83%E0%A6%A4%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%A4_(%E0%A6%89%E0%A6%A4%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%A4%E0%A6%B0%E0%A6%BE%E0%A6%82%E0%A6%B6)_-_%E0%A6%85%E0%A6%9A%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%AF%E0%A7%81%E0%A6%A4%E0%A6%9A%E0%A6%B0%E0%A6%A3_%E0%A6%9A%E0%A7%8C%E0%A6%A7%E0%A7%81%E0%A6%B0%E0%A7%80_%E0%A6%A4%E0%A6%A4%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%A4%E0%A7%8D%E0%A6%AC%E0%A6%A8%E0%A6%BF%E0%A6%A7%E0%A6%BF.pdf/%E0%A7%AB%E0%A7%AD%E0%A7%AD}}</ref> When Sylhet was under the rule of the [[Twipra Kingdom]], medieval Sylheti writers using the Bengali script included the likes of Dwija Pashupati, the author of Chandravali – considered one of the earliest Sylheti works.<ref name=gon>{{cite Banglapedia|author=Bhowmik, Kalpana|article=Dwija Pashupati}}</ref> Nasiruddin Haydar of [[Sylhet town]] wrote the Tawarikh-e-Jalali, the first Bengali biography of [[Shah Jalal]]. Gobind Gosai of [[Habiganj Sadar Upazila|Masulia]] wrote ''Nirbban Shongit'', Gopinath Dutta wrote ''Dronporbbo'', ''Dotto Bongshaboli'' and ''Nariporbbo'' and Nur Ali Khan of Syedpur wrote ''Marifoti Geet''. Songwriters and poets such as [[Radharaman Dutta]], [[Hason Raja]] and [[Shah Abdul Karim]], significantly contributed to [[Bengali literature]] and their works remain popular across [[Bengal]] in present-times.<ref>{{cite Banglapedia|article=Hasan Raja|author=Tasiqul Islam}}</ref> Numerous Bengali writers emerged in Ita, such as Kobi Muzaffar Khan, Gauri Shankar Bhatta and Golok Chand Ghosh. Muslim literature was based upon historical affairs and biographies of prominent [[Islam]]ic figures.

In 2021, [[List of Bangla Academy Literary Award recipients (2020-2029)|Shuvagoto Chowdhury]] was awarded the [[Bangla Academy Literary Award]].<ref>{{cite web |title=বাংলা একাডেমি সাহিত্য পুরস্কার পেলেন ১৫ জন |url=https://www.prothomalo.com/bangladesh/বাংলা-একাডেমি-সাহিত্য-পুরস্কার-পেলেন-১৫-জন |work=[[Prothom Alo]]|language=bn|date=23 January 2022 |access-date=23 January 2022}}</ref>


====Other languages====
====Other languages====
[[File:Wooden idols of Advaita Acharya and Sita Devi, Sitanath Advaita Mandir, Nabadwip 6.jpg|thumb|Sanskrit writer [[Advaita Acharya]] is venerated across [[Bangladesh]] and [[West Bengal]].]]
[[File:Wooden idols of Advaita Acharya and Sita Devi, Sitanath Advaita Mandir, Nabadwip 6.jpg|thumb|Sanskrit writer [[Advaita Acharya]] is venerated across [[Bangladesh]] and [[West Bengal]].]]
Sylhetis have contributed to [[Sanskrit literature]] throughout history. In the 15th century, [[Jagadish Tarkalankar]] wrote several Sanskrit books, many of which were made up of numerous volumes. Tarlankar's ''Shabdashaktiprakashika'' was a famous textbook for Sanskrit learners. His contemporary, [[Advaita Acharya]] of [[Laur Kingdom|Laur]], wrote two medieval Sanskrit books, ''Yogabashishta-Bhaishta'' and ''Geeta Bhaishya''.<ref name=":Momin_271">{{Cite book|last1=Momin|first1=Mignonette|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Djx131iEeYkC|title=Society and Economy in North-East India|last2=Mawlong|first2=Cecile A.|last3=Qādrī|first3=Fuz̤ail Aḥmad|date=2006|publisher=Regency Publications|isbn=978-81-89233-40-2|pages=271|language=en}}</ref> In the 16th century, [[Murari Gupta]] wrote the first Sanskrit biography of [[Chaitanya Mahaprabhu]] and [[Raghunath Shiromani]] wrote 40 books in Sanskrit.<ref>{{cite Banglapedia|author=Ray, Kanailal|article=Murari Gupta}}</ref><ref>{{cite Banglapedia|author=Ray, Kanailal|article=Raghunath Shiromani}}</ref> Some works written by Sylhetis have also been translated into other languages. For example, [[Ashraf Hussain]]'s ''Manipurer Ladai'' was translated into English by [[Dinesh Chandra Sen]] and included in the ''Eastern Bengal Ballads''.<ref>{{cite Banglapedia|author=Soaib Ahmed Gibran|article=Hossain, Sahityaratna Munshi Ashraf}}</ref><ref name=sahitya/>
Sylhetis have contributed to [[Sanskrit literature]] throughout history. In the 15th century, [[Jagadish Tarkalankar]] wrote several Sanskrit books, many of which were made up of numerous volumes. Tarlankar's ''Shabdashaktiprakashika'' was a famous textbook for Sanskrit learners. His contemporary, [[Advaita Acharya]] of [[Laur Kingdom|Laur]], wrote two medieval Sanskrit books, ''Yogabashishta-Bhaishta'' and ''Geeta Bhaishya''.<ref name=":Momin_271">{{Cite book|last1=Momin|first1=Mignonette|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Djx131iEeYkC|title=Society and Economy in North-East India|last2=Mawlong|first2=Cecile A.|last3=Qādrī|first3=Fuz̤ail Aḥmad|date=2006|publisher=[[Regency Publications]]|isbn=978-81-89233-40-2|pages=271|language=en}}</ref> In the 16th century, [[Murari Gupta]] wrote the first Sanskrit biography of [[Chaitanya Mahaprabhu]] and [[Raghunath Shiromani]] wrote 40 books in Sanskrit.<ref>{{cite Banglapedia|author=Ray, Kanailal|article=Murari Gupta}}</ref><ref>{{cite Banglapedia|author=Ray, Kanailal|article=Raghunath Shiromani}}</ref> Some works written by Sylhetis have also been translated into other languages. For example, [[Ashraf Hussain]]'s ''Manipurer Ladai'' was translated into English by [[Dinesh Chandra Sen]] and included in the ''Eastern Bengal Ballads''.<ref>{{cite Banglapedia|author=Soaib Ahmed Gibran|article=Hossain, Sahityaratna Munshi Ashraf}}</ref><ref name=sahitya/>


Sylhet, in particular the [[Taraf (Bengal)|Taraf]], was also an esteemed centre for the study of [[Farsi|Persian]], an official language up until the [[British Raj|British period]], due to the high population of foreign missionaries from Central Asia and [[Greater Persia|Persia]] following the [[Conquest of Sylhet]]. ''Ma'dan al-Fawaid'' was written in 1534 by [[Syed Shah Israil]] who is considered to be Sylhet's first author.<ref name="kawsar">{{cite news |url=https://www.alkawsar.com/bn/article/195/ |script-title=bn:জীবন-গাঙের বাঁকে বাঁকে-(২) |trans-title=Curling through the River of Life (2) |author=Maulana Abdullah ibn Saeed Jalalabadi |publisher=Al Kawsar |date=May 2010 |language=bn |access-date=1 May 2019}}</ref> Other prominent writers include [[Muhammad Arshad (writer)|Muhammad Arshad]], [[Syed Rayhan ad-Din]] and [[Syed Pir Badshah]].<ref>{{cite book |title=Cultural similarities between Iran and the Indian Subcontinent |author=A K M Jamal Uddin}}</ref><ref name=farsi>{{cite book |title=Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh |author=Abu Musa Mohammad Arif Billah |chapter-url=http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Persian |chapter=Persian |publisher=[[Asiatic Society of Bangladesh]]}}</ref> Reyazuddin of Taraf wrote a Persian book on "Dream Fruit".<ref>স্বপ্ন ফল বিষয়ক গ্রন্থ</ref> Ala Bakhsh Mazumdar Hamed was known to have written Tuhfatul Muhsineen and Diwan-i-Hamed. Collectively, the works of these two people belonging to the [[Mazumdar]] family of Sylhet, are regarded amongst the most creative literary works in the Sylhet region. Majid Bakht Mazumdar wrote an English book on the family history.<ref>{{cite book |title=History of Bangladesh, 1704–1971 |year=1992 |last=Islam |first=Sirajul |publisher=[[Asiatic Society of Bangladesh]]}}</ref>
Sylhet, in particular the [[Taraf (Bengal)|Taraf]], was also an esteemed centre for the study of [[Farsi|Persian]], an official language up until the [[British Raj|British period]], due to the high population of foreign missionaries from Central Asia and [[Greater Persia|Persia]] following the [[Conquest of Sylhet]]. ''Ma'dan al-Fawaid'' was written in 1534 by [[Syed Shah Israil]] who is considered to be Sylhet's first author.<ref name="kawsar">{{cite news |url=https://www.alkawsar.com/bn/article/195/ |script-title=bn:জীবন-গাঙের বাঁকে বাঁকে-(২) |trans-title=Curling through the River of Life (2) |author=Maulana Abdullah ibn Saeed Jalalabadi |publisher=[[Al Kawsar]] |date=May 2010 |language=bn |access-date=1 May 2019}}</ref> Other prominent writers include [[Muhammad Arshad (writer)|Muhammad Arshad]], [[Syed Rayhan ad-Din]] and [[Syed Pir Badshah]].<ref>{{cite book |title=Cultural similarities between Iran and the Indian Subcontinent |author=A K M Jamal Uddin}}</ref><ref name=farsi>{{cite book |title=Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh |author=Abu Musa Mohammad Arif Billah |chapter-url=http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Persian |chapter=Persian |publisher=[[Asiatic Society of Bangladesh]]}}</ref> Reyazuddin of Taraf wrote a Persian book on "Dream Fruit".<ref>স্বপ্ন ফল বিষয়ক গ্রন্থ</ref> Ala Bakhsh Mazumdar Hamed was known to have written Tuhfatul Muhsineen and Diwan-i-Hamed. Collectively, the works of these two people belonging to the [[Mazumdar]] family of Sylhet, are regarded among the most creative literary works in the Sylhet region. Majid Bakht Mazumdar wrote an English book on the family history.<ref>{{cite book |title=History of Bangladesh, 1704–1971 |year=1992 |last=Islam |first=Sirajul |publisher=[[Asiatic Society of Bangladesh]]}}</ref>


In the 19th century, [[Urdu]] had a somewhat aristocratic background in Sylhet and notable families that spoke it included the [[Nawabs of Longla]] and the [[Mazumdars of Sylhet]]. Moulvi Hamid Bakht Mazumdar, who was also fluent in Persian, wrote the Urdu prose ''Ain-i-Hind'', a history of the [[Indian subcontinent]].<ref name=uttar/> Literature written in this period included Nazir Muhammad Abdullah Ashufta's ''Tanbeeh al-Ghafileen'', written in 1894, and the poems of Moulvi Farzam Ali Bekhud of [[Baniachong]]. Hakim Ashraf Ali Mast and Fida Sylheti were prominent Urdu poets of Sylhet in the 19th century, the latter being a disciple of [[Agha Ahmad Ali]].<ref name=urdu>{{cite book |title=Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh |author=Dr Kaniz-e-Butool |chapter-url=http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Urdu |chapter=Urdu |publisher=[[Asiatic Society of Bangladesh]]}}</ref> In 1946, the [[Anjuman-i Taraqqi-i Urdu]] performed a [[mushaira]] in Sylhet attracting the likes of [[Hafeez Jalandhari]], the lyricist of the [[National Anthem of Pakistan]].<ref>{{cite book |title=Abdul Matin Chaudhury (1895–1948): Trusted Lieutenant of Mohammad Ali Jinnah |page=125 |author=Atful Hye Shibly |year=2011}}</ref>
In the 19th century, [[Urdu]] had a somewhat aristocratic background in Sylhet and notable families that spoke it included the [[Nawabs of Longla]] and the [[Mazumdars of Sylhet]]. Moulvi Hamid Bakht Mazumdar, who was also fluent in Persian, wrote the Urdu prose ''Ain-i-Hind'', a history of the [[Indian subcontinent]].<ref name=uttar/> Literature written in this period included Nazir Muhammad Abdullah Ashufta's ''Tanbeeh al-Ghafileen'', written in 1894, and the poems of Moulvi Farzam Ali Bekhud of [[Baniachong]]. Hakim Ashraf Ali Mast and Fida Sylheti were prominent Urdu poets of Sylhet in the 19th century, the latter being a disciple of [[Agha Ahmad Ali]].<ref name=urdu>{{cite book |title=Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh |author=Dr Kaniz-e-Butool |chapter-url=http://en.banglapedia.org/index.php?title=Urdu |chapter=Urdu |publisher=[[Asiatic Society of Bangladesh]]}}</ref> In 1946, the [[Anjuman-i Taraqqi-i Urdu]] performed a [[mushaira]] in Sylhet attracting the likes of [[Hafeez Jalandhari]], the lyricist of the [[National Anthem of Pakistan]].<ref>{{cite book |title=Abdul Matin Chaudhury (1895–1948): Trusted Lieutenant of Mohammad Ali Jinnah |page=125 |author=Atful Hye Shibly |year=2011}}</ref>

<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Halot-un-nabi-page1.gif|Front page of a [[Sylheti Nagari]] book titled Halat-un-Nabi, written in the mid-19th century by [[Sadeq Ali]] of Daulatpur, Longla, [[Moulvibazar District|Moulvibazar]]
File:Bipin-Chandra-Pal.jpg|[[Bipin Chandra Pal]] was one of the main architects of the [[Swadeshi movement]] and played a crucial role in the [[Indian independence movement]].
File:Rowshan Ara Bachchu 02.jpg|[[Rawshan Ara Bachchu]] is a Sylheti activist best known for her role in the [[Bengali language movement]] of 1952.
File:Boys at Primary School - Srimangal - Sylhet Division - Bangladesh (12906116925).jpg|Muslim primary school students in [[Srimangal]], [[Sylhet division]].
</gallery>


==Distribution==
==Distribution==
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[[File:Sylheti food in diaspora.jpg|thumb|left|Sylheti food stall at the [[Queens Night Market]] in New York City]]
[[File:Sylheti food in diaspora.jpg|thumb|left|Sylheti food stall at the [[Queens Night Market]] in New York City]]


[[Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis|Lord Cornwallis]] introduced the [[Permanent Settlement]] Act of Bengal in 1793 and it altered the social, political and economic landscape of the Sylhet region; socioeconomic ramification for former landlords was severe as the land changed hands. On juxtapose, colonial administration opened new windows of opportunities for young men, who sought employment merchant ship companies. Young men from Sylhet boarded ships primarily at [[Kolkata]], [[Mumbai]] and Singapore. Many [[Sylheti people]] believed that seafaring was a historical and cultural inheritance due to a large proportion of Sylheti Muslims being descended from foreign traders, [[lascar]]s and businessman from the Middle East and Central Asia who migrated to the [[Sylhet region]] before and after the [[Conquest of Sylhet]].<ref name=lascars>{{cite thesis |title=Lascars, c.1850 – 1950: The Lives and Identities of Indian Seafarers in Imperial Britain and India |last=Fidler |first=Ceri-Anne |publisher=[[Cardiff University]] |year=2011 |page=123}}</ref> Kasa Miah, who was a Sylheti migrant, claimed this was a very encouraging factor for Sylhetis to travel to [[Calcutta]] aiming to eventually reach the United States and United Kingdom.<ref>{{cite book |title=Sons of the Empire: Oral History from the Bangladeshi Seamen who Served on British Ships During the 1939–45 War |last=Choudhury |first=Yousuf |year=1995}}</ref> By virtue of [[Magna Carta]] ''Libertatum'', Sylhetis could enter and settle Britain freely (while a declaration of intent was required to enter the US). Diaspora patterns indicate a strong connection between Sylheti diaspora and the movement of Sylheti seamen.<ref>''Across Seven Seas and Thirteen Rivers: Life Stories of Pioneer Sylheti Settlers in Britain'', Caroline Adams, Tassaduq Ahmed and Dan Jones, THAP (1987), London, {{ISBN|978-0-906698-14-3}}</ref>
[[Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis|Lord Cornwallis]] introduced the [[Permanent Settlement]] Act of Bengal in 1793 and it altered the social, political and economic landscape of the Sylhet region; socioeconomic ramification for former landlords was severe as the land changed hands. On juxtapose, colonial administration opened new windows of opportunities for young men, who sought employment merchant ship companies. Young men from Sylhet boarded ships primarily at [[Kolkata]], [[Mumbai]] and Singapore. Many [[Sylheti people]] believed that seafaring was a historical and cultural inheritance due to a large proportion of Sylheti Muslims being descended from foreign traders, [[lascar]]s and businessman from the Middle East and Central Asia who migrated to the [[Sylhet region]] before and after the [[Conquest of Sylhet]].<ref name=lascars>{{cite thesis |title=Lascars, c.1850 – 1950: The Lives and Identities of Indian Seafarers in Imperial Britain and India |last=Fidler |first=Ceri-Anne |publisher=[[Cardiff University]] |year=2011 |page=123}}</ref> Kasa Miah, who was a Sylheti migrant, claimed this was a very encouraging factor for Sylhetis to travel to [[Calcutta]] aiming to eventually reach the United States and United Kingdom.<ref>{{cite book |title=Sons of the Empire: Oral History from the Bangladeshi Seamen who Served on British Ships During the 1939–45 War |last=Choudhury |first=Yousuf |year=1995}}</ref>


====Barak Valley====
====Barak Valley====
The Sylheti community in the [[Barak Valley]], contiguous to Sylhet, is one of the eminent diasporic communities where they have been able to recreate the Sylhet environ.<ref name="barak-diaspora">"The Sylheti community in Barak Valley thus presents a dispora to be located in a region marked by the geographical and cultural continuity from Sylhet. The official language of the region being Bengali, the community found mechanisms to reconstruct the environs of its lost ‘desh’ within a new state." {{harvcol|Deb|Bhan|2016|p=2}}</ref> The [[Barak Valley]] consists of three districts in the Indian state of [[Assam]], which are home to a Bengali-speaking majority population as opposed to Assamese.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.business-standard.com/article/pti-stories/govt-withdraws-assamese-as-official-language-from-barak-valley-114090901180_1.html|title=Govt withdraws Assamese as official language from Barak valley|agency=Press Trust of India|date=9 September 2014|work=Business Standard India|access-date=16 December 2019}}</ref> Geographically the region is surrounded by hills from all three sides except its western plain boundary with Bangladesh. Though never a part of Sylhet the Barak Valley hosts the presence of the same Sylheti dialect. [[Niharranjan Ray]], author of ''Bangalir Itihash'', claims that "South Assam / Northeastern Bengal or Barak Valley is the extension of the Greater Surma/Meghna Valley of [[Bengal]] in every aspect from culture to geography".<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IciEHAAACAAJ&q=Bangalir+Itihas|title=Bangalir itihas|last=Ray|first=Niharranjan|date=1 January 1980|publisher=Paschimbanga Samiti|language=bn}}</ref>
The Sylheti community in the [[Barak Valley]], contiguous to Sylhet, is one of the eminent diasporic communities where they have been able to recreate the Sylhet environ.<ref name="barak-diaspora">"The Sylheti community in Barak Valley thus presents a dispora to be located in a region marked by the geographical and cultural continuity from Sylhet. The official language of the region being Bengali, the community found mechanisms to reconstruct the environs of its lost ‘desh’ within a new state." {{harvcol|Deb|Bhan|2016|p=2}}</ref> The [[Barak Valley]] consists of three districts in the Indian state of [[Assam]], which are home to a Bengali-speaking majority population as opposed to Assamese.<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.business-standard.com/article/pti-stories/govt-withdraws-assamese-as-official-language-from-barak-valley-114090901180_1.html |title=Govt withdraws Assamese as official language from Barak valley |work=[[Business Standard]] |agency=[[Press Trust of India]] |date=9 September 2014 |access-date=16 December 2019}}</ref> Geographically the region is surrounded by hills from all three sides except its western plain boundary with Bangladesh. Though never a part of Sylhet the Barak Valley hosts the presence of the same Sylheti dialect. [[Niharranjan Ray]], author of ''Bangalir Itihash'', claims that "South Assam / Northeastern Bengal or Barak Valley is the extension of the Greater Surma/Meghna Valley of [[Bengal]] in every aspect from culture to geography".<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IciEHAAACAAJ&q=Bangalir+Itihas|title=Bangalir itihas|last=Ray|first=Niharranjan|date=1 January 1980|publisher=Paschimbanga Samiti|language=bn}}</ref>


A movement emerged in the 1960s in this Sylheti-majority area of India. Referred to as the [[Bengali Language Movement (Barak Valley)|Bengali Language Movement of the Barak Valley]], Sylhetis protested against the decision of the [[Government of Assam]] to make Assamese the only sole official language of the state knowing full well that 80% of the Barak Valley people are Bengalis. The main incident took place on 19 May 1961 at [[Silchar railway station]] in which 11 Sylheti-Bengalis were killed by the Assamese police. [[Sachindra Chandra Pal]] and [[Kamala Bhattacharya]] were two notable Sylheti students murdered by the [[Assam Rifles]] during the movement.
A movement emerged in the 1960s in this Sylheti-majority area of India. Referred to as the [[Bengali Language Movement (Barak Valley)|Bengali Language Movement of the Barak Valley]], Sylhetis protested against the decision of the [[Government of Assam]] to make Assamese the only sole official language of the state knowing full well that 80% of the Barak Valley people are Bengalis. The main incident took place on 19 May 1961 at [[Silchar railway station]] in which 11 Sylheti-Bengalis were killed by the Assamese police. [[Sachindra Chandra Pal]] and [[Kamala Bhattacharya]] were two notable Sylheti students murdered by the [[Assam Rifles]] during the movement.
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[[File:Saheb Qiblah.gif|thumb|The most influential modern Islamic scholar from Sylhet was [[Abdul Latif Chowdhury Fultali|Abdul Latif Chowdhury]], founder of the ''[[Salik|Maslak]]-e-Fultali''.<ref name=BDUK/>]]
[[File:Saheb Qiblah.gif|thumb|The most influential modern Islamic scholar from Sylhet was [[Abdul Latif Chowdhury Fultali|Abdul Latif Chowdhury]], founder of the ''[[Salik|Maslak]]-e-Fultali''.<ref name=BDUK/>]]


[[Sunni Islam]] is the largest denomination with majority following the [[Hanafi]] school of law.<ref name=ourbang>{{cite web |url=http://www.ourbangla.com/islam/bd/bd1.asp |title=Islam in Bangladesh |website=OurBangla |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070219125652/http://www.ourbangla.com/islam/bd/bd1.asp |archive-date=19 February 2007 |access-date=3 August 2016}}</ref> There are significant numbers of people who follow [[Sufism|Sufi]] ideals,<ref name=BDUK>{{cite web |url=http://www.surrey.ac.uk/Arts/CRONEM/SOASBangladeshi%20diaspora%20PaperDRAFT-7June2005.pdf |title=Bangladeshi Diaspora in the UK : Some observations on socio-culturaldynamics, religious trends and transnational politics |author=Dr David Garbin |date=17 June 2005 |publisher=University of Surrey |access-date=3 June 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100923014220/http://www.surrey.ac.uk/Arts/CRONEM/SOASBangladeshi%20diaspora%20PaperDRAFT-7June2005.pdf |archive-date=23 September 2010}}</ref> although the revivalist [[Deobandi]] movement is also popular with many being a part of the [[Tablighi Jamaat]]. There is a very small minority of [[Shia Muslims]] who gather every year during [[Ashura]] for the [[Mourning of Muharram]] processions. Places of procession include the [[Prithimpassa Family|Prithimpasha Nawab Bari]] in [[Kulaura]], home to a Shia family, as well as [[Balaganj]], [[Osmani Nagar Upazila|Osmani Nagar]] and [[Kamalganj Upazila|Rajtila]].
[[Sunni Islam]] is the largest denomination with majority following the [[Hanafi]] school of law.<ref name=ourbang>{{cite web |url=http://www.ourbangla.com/islam/bd/bd1.asp |title=Islam in Bangladesh |website=OurBangla |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070219125652/http://www.ourbangla.com/islam/bd/bd1.asp |archive-date=19 February 2007 |access-date=3 August 2016}}</ref> There are significant numbers of people who follow [[Sufism|Sufi]] ideals,<ref name=BDUK>{{cite web |url=http://www.surrey.ac.uk/Arts/CRONEM/SOASBangladeshi%20diaspora%20PaperDRAFT-7June2005.pdf |title=Bangladeshi Diaspora in the UK : Some observations on socio-culturaldynamics, religious trends and transnational politics |author=Dr David Garbin |date=17 June 2005 |publisher=[[University of Surrey]] |access-date=3 June 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100923014220/http://www.surrey.ac.uk/Arts/CRONEM/SOASBangladeshi%20diaspora%20PaperDRAFT-7June2005.pdf |archive-date=23 September 2010}}</ref> although the revivalist [[Deobandi]] movement is also popular with many being a part of the [[Tablighi Jamaat]]. There is a very small minority of [[Shia Muslims]] who gather every year during [[Ashura]] for the [[Mourning of Muharram]] processions. Places of procession include the [[Prithimpassa Family|Prithimpasha Nawab Bari]] in [[Kulaura]], home to a Shia family, as well as [[Balaganj]], [[Osmani Nagar Upazila|Osmani Nagar]] and [[Kamalganj Upazila|Rajtila]].


[[Hinduism]] is the second largest religion amongst Sylhetis. Other minority religions include Christianity and there was a presence of [[Sikhism]] after [[Guru Nanak]]'s visit to Sylhet in 1508 to spread the religion and build a ''[[gurdwara]]'' there. This Gurdwara was visited twice by [[Tegh Bahadur]] and many [[hukamnama]]s were issued to this temple in Sylhet by [[Guru Gobind Singh]]. In 1897, the gurdwara collapsed after the [[1897 Assam earthquake|earthquake]].
[[Hinduism]] is the second largest religion among Sylhetis. Other minority religions include Christianity and there was a presence of [[Sikhism]] after [[Guru Nanak]]'s visit to Sylhet in 1508 to spread the religion and build a ''[[gurdwara]]'' there. This Gurdwara was visited twice by [[Tegh Bahadur]] and many [[hukamnama]]s were issued to this temple in Sylhet by [[Guru Gobind Singh]]. In 1897, the gurdwara collapsed after the [[1897 Assam earthquake|earthquake]].


==Notables==
==Notables==
Line 73: Line 76:
Popular modern writers and poets from the region include [[Abdur Rouf Choudhury]], [[Dilwar Khan]] and [[Chowdhury Gulam Akbar]]. [[Muhammad Mojlum Khan]] is a non-fiction writer best known for writing the English [[biographical dictionary]], [[The Muslim 100]]. Prominent [[Bengali language]] non-fiction writers include [[Syed Murtaza Ali]], [[Syed Mujtaba Ali]], [[Dewan Mohammad Azraf]], Abed Chaudhury, [[Achyut Charan Choudhury]], [[Arun Kumar Chanda]], [[Asaddor Ali]], [[Ashraf Hussain]] and [[Dwijen Sharma]].
Popular modern writers and poets from the region include [[Abdur Rouf Choudhury]], [[Dilwar Khan]] and [[Chowdhury Gulam Akbar]]. [[Muhammad Mojlum Khan]] is a non-fiction writer best known for writing the English [[biographical dictionary]], [[The Muslim 100]]. Prominent [[Bengali language]] non-fiction writers include [[Syed Murtaza Ali]], [[Syed Mujtaba Ali]], [[Dewan Mohammad Azraf]], Abed Chaudhury, [[Achyut Charan Choudhury]], [[Arun Kumar Chanda]], [[Asaddor Ali]], [[Ashraf Hussain]] and [[Dwijen Sharma]].


Reputed artists and media personalities from the region include [[Salman Shah (actor)|Salman Shah]] who is considered one of the greatest actors in [[Cinema of Bangladesh|Bangladeshi film industry]], [[Runa Laila]] who is a prominent singer with international acclaim, [[Hason Raja]] and [[Shah Abdul Karim]] who are the pioneers of [[folk music]] in Bangladesh.
[[Cricket]] and [[association football|football]] are the most popular sports amongst Sylhetis. Many Sylheti cricketers have played for the [[Bangladesh national cricket team]] such as [[Alok Kapali]], [[Enamul Haque Jr]], [[Nazmul Hossain]], [[Rajin Saleh]] and [[Tapash Baisya]]. [[Beanibazar SC]] is the only Sylheti club which as qualified for the [[Bangladesh League]] and [[Alfaz Ahmed]] was a Sylheti who played for the [[Bangladesh national football team]]. [[Hamza Choudhury]] is the first [[Bangladeshi]] to play in the [[Premier League]] and is predicted to be the first [[British Asian]] to play for the [[England national football team]].<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.skysports.com/football/news/11712/11796199/hamza-choudhury-can-be-first-british-south-asian-to-play-for-england-says-michael-chopra |last=Trehan |first=Dev |publisher=[[Sky Sports]] |date=2 September 2019 |title=Hamza Choudhury can be first British South Asian to play for England, says Michael Chopra}}</ref> [[Bulbul Hussain]] was the first breakthrough Sylheti professional [[wheelchair rugby]] player. [[Rani Hamid]] is one of the most successful chess players in the world, winning championships in Asia and Europe multiple times. [[Ramnath Biswas]] was a revolutionary soldier who embarked on three world tours on a bicycle in the 19th century.

[[Cricket]] and [[association football|football]] are the most popular sports among Sylhetis. Many Sylheti cricketers have played for the [[Bangladesh national cricket team]] such as [[Alok Kapali]], [[Enamul Haque Jr]], [[Nazmul Hossain]], [[Rajin Saleh]] and [[Tapash Baisya]]. [[Beanibazar SC]] is the only Sylheti club which as qualified for the [[Bangladesh League]] and [[Alfaz Ahmed]] was a Sylheti who played for the [[Bangladesh national football team]]. [[Hamza Choudhury]] is the first [[Bangladeshi]] to play in the [[Premier League]] and is predicted to be the first [[British Asian]] to play for the [[England national football team]].<ref>{{cite news |last=Trehan |first=Dev |date=2 September 2019 |title=Hamza Choudhury can be first British South Asian to play for England, says Michael Chopra |url=https://www.skysports.com/football/news/11712/11796199/hamza-choudhury-can-be-first-british-south-asian-to-play-for-england-says-michael-chopra |publisher=[[Sky Sports]] |access-date=3 May 2024}}</ref> [[Bulbul Hussain]] was the first breakthrough Sylheti professional [[wheelchair rugby]] player. [[Rani Hamid]] is one of the most successful chess players in the world, winning championships in Asia and Europe multiple times. [[Ramnath Biswas]] was a revolutionary soldier who embarked on three world tours on a bicycle in the 19th century.


<gallery widths="155px" heights="200px">
<gallery widths="155px" heights="200px">
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File:Gurusaday Dutt photo.png|[[Gurusaday Dutt]] was the founder of the [[Bratachari movement]] which advocated for spiritual and social development
File:Gurusaday Dutt photo.png|[[Gurusaday Dutt]] was the founder of the [[Bratachari movement]] which advocated for spiritual and social development
File:Nurul Islam Nahid in New Delhi on September 09, 2011.jpg|[[Nurul Islam Nahid]] was the former [[Ministry of Education (Bangladesh)|Education Minister]] of Bangladesh, responsible for secondary, vocational and tertiary education in Bangladesh.
File:Nurul Islam Nahid in New Delhi on September 09, 2011.jpg|[[Nurul Islam Nahid]] was the former [[Ministry of Education (Bangladesh)|Education Minister]] of Bangladesh, responsible for secondary, vocational and tertiary education in Bangladesh.
File:Achyut Charan Choudhury.jpg|[[Achyut Charan Choudhury]] is most well-known for his monumental work on the history of the Sylhet
File:Achyut Charan Choudhury.jpg|[[Achyut Charan Choudhury]] is most well known for his monumental work on the history of the Sylhet
File:Rowshan Ara Bachchu 02.jpg|[[Rawshan Ara Bachchu]] is a Sylheti activist best known for her role in the [[Bengali language movement]] of 1952
</gallery>
</gallery>


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== General and cited references==
== General and cited references==
{{refbegin}}
{{refbegin}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Bhattacharjee |first1=Nabanipa |editor1-last=Fazal |editor1-first=Tanweer |year=2013 |chapter='We are with culture but without geography': locating Sylheti identity in contemporary India |title=Minority Nationalisms in South Asia |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6bGMAQAAQBAJ&pg=PA53 |publisher=Routledge |pages=53–54 |isbn=978-1-317-96647-0}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Bhattacharjee |first1=Nabanipa |editor1-last=Fazal |editor1-first=Tanweer |year=2013 |chapter='We are with culture but without geography': locating Sylheti identity in contemporary India |title=Minority Nationalisms in South Asia |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6bGMAQAAQBAJ&pg=PA53 |publisher=Routledge |pages=53–67 |isbn=978-1-317-96647-0}}
* {{cite report |last1=Deb |first1=Pallab |last2=Bhan |first2=Samiksha |year=2016 |title=Little Sylhet: A Report on The East Bengali Community in Barak Valley, Southern Assam |url=http://cdedse.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/9A-Report-on-The-East-Bengali-Community-in-Barak-Valley-Southern-Assam.pdf |publisher=Center for Development Economics |page= |docket= |access-date=2023-07-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220518164619/http://cdedse.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/9A-Report-on-The-East-Bengali-Community-in-Barak-Valley-Southern-Assam.pdf |archive-date=2022-05-18}}
* {{cite report |last1=Deb |first1=Pallab |last2=Bhan |first2=Samiksha |year=2016 |title=Little Sylhet: A Report on The East Bengali Community in Barak Valley, Southern Assam |url=http://cdedse.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/9A-Report-on-The-East-Bengali-Community-in-Barak-Valley-Southern-Assam.pdf |publisher=Center for Development Economics |page= |docket= |access-date=7 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220518164619/http://cdedse.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/9A-Report-on-The-East-Bengali-Community-in-Barak-Valley-Southern-Assam.pdf |archive-date=18 May 2022}}
* {{Cite journal |last1=Mahanta |first1=Sakuntala |last2=Gope |first2=Amalesh |year=2018 |title=Tonal polarity in Sylheti in the context of noun faithfulness |journal=Language Sciences |volume=69 |pages=80–97 |doi=10.1016/j.langsci.2018.06.010 |s2cid=149759441 }}
* {{Cite journal |last1=Mahanta |first1=Sakuntala |last2=Gope |first2=Amalesh |year=2018 |title=Tonal polarity in Sylheti in the context of noun faithfulness |journal=Language Sciences |volume=69 |pages=80–97 |doi=10.1016/j.langsci.2018.06.010 |s2cid=149759441 }}
* {{cite book |last=Rasinger |first=Sebastian M. |year=2007 |title=Bengali-English in East London: A Study in Urban Multilingualism |publisher=Peter Lang |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4ieH2nBSbjkC |isbn=978-3-03-911036-0 }}
* {{cite news|url=https://www.thedailystar.net/supplements/amar-ekushey-2018/amago-bhasha-1537534|title=Amago Bhasha: In celebration of our ethnic and linguistic diversity|website=[[Dhaka Tribune]]|first=Sameer Ud Dowla|last=Khan|date=21 February 2018|access-date=9 November 2024}}
{{refend}}
{{refend}}



Latest revision as of 23:39, 12 November 2024

Sylhetis
Map of Sylheti speaking areas of South Asia
Total population
c. 10.3 million[1][2]
Regions with significant populations
Bangladesh (Sylhet Division)
India (Barak Valley, Hojai, North Tripura, Unakoti, Shillong)
Middle East (GCC countries)
Western world (United Kingdom, United States, Canada)
Languages
Sylheti (L1)
Bengali (L2)
Religion
Predominantly:
Islam
Significant minority:
Related ethnic groups

The Sylheti (English: /sɪˈlɛti/) or Sylhetis are an Indo-Aryan ethnocultural group,[3] that are associated with the Sylhet region (Sylhet Division of Bangladesh and the Karimganj district of south Assam, India). There are strong diasporic communities in Barak Valley of Assam, India,[4][1][5][6][7] North Tripura,[1] Shillong, Meghalaya,[8] and Hojai, Central Assam.[9] Outside South Asia, there are significant numbers in the United Kingdom,[10] the United States,[11][12] and Canada.[13]

They speak Sylheti, an eastern Indo-Aryan language that is considered "a distinct language by many and a dialect of Bengali by some others".[14] Sylheti identity is associated primarily with its regional culture and language, alongside a broader cultural and ethnic Bengali identity.[15][9]

History

[edit]

Culture

[edit]

Sylheti culture, while considered a subculture of Bengali culture,[16][17] is distinguished by unique linguistic, historical, and regional characteristics.[18] The Sylheti language, which some consider as a dialect of Bengali,[19] while many linguists consider it as a distinct language,[20] is central to Sylheti identity.[21][22] Its unique phonetic qualities and vocabulary often make it unintelligible to standard Bengali speakers, which contributes to a sense of separateness among Sylhetis.[23][24] In addition, Sylhetis have a strong regional identity that was strengthened by the historical shifts of the Sylhet region between Assam and Bengal during British rule.[25][18] These transitions were pivotal in developing a distinct Sylheti identity, due to the region’s geographical isolation and its historical and cultural ties with Bengal.[26][27] Many Sylhetis today continue to identify with both the broader Bengali and their distinct Sylheti ethnocultural identities.[28][29][30]

Sylheti folklore is unique to the region, it is influenced by Hindu, Sufi, Turco-Persian and native ideas. Chandra Kumar De of Mymensingh is known to be the first researcher of Sylheti folklore.[31] Archives of old works are kept in Kendriya Muslim Sahitya Sangsad in Sylhet (also known as the Sylhet Central Muslim Literary Society) – the oldest literary organisation in Bengal and one of the oldest in the subcontinent.

Literature

[edit]

Sylheti Nagri

[edit]
Front page of a Sylheti Nagari book titled Halat-un-Nabi, written in the mid-19th century by Sadeq Ali

A distinct linguistic register emerged in the Sylhet region through the development of the Sylheti Nagri script. Though having similar features to the more prevalent Dobhashi literary dialect of Middle Bengali, the Sylheti Nagri script fostered a unique literary culture of the Sylhet region.[32] Its distinction is marked with its simpler script which is related to the Kaithi script, and its phonology being deeply influenced by the Sylheti vernacular.[33] Its most renowned writer was Sadeq Ali whose Halatunnabi was famed as household item among rural Muslim communities.[34][35] Manuscripts have been found of works such as Rag Namah by Fazil Nasim Muhammad, Shonabhaner Puthi by Abdul Karim, and the earliest known work Talib Huson (1549) by Gholam Huson.[36] Late Nagri writers include Muhammad Haidar Chaudhuri who wrote Ahwal-i-Zamana in 1907 and Muhammad Abdul Latif who wrote Pohela Kitab o Doikhurar Rag in 1930.[37] From around the middle of 20th century, Sylheti Nagri had faced near-extinction as most Sylheti Nagri printing presses fell out of use or were destroyed during the Bangladeshi Liberation War in 1971.[38] Recently there have been efforts in reviving the script, including from the British Bangladeshi diaspora, as the script is viewed as a unique cultural marker that distinguishes Sylheti from Bengali identity.[39]

Bengali

[edit]

It has been argued that the first Bengali translation of the Mahabharata was written by Sri Sanjay of Sylhet in the 17th century.[40][41] The 18th-century Hattanather Panchali (Hattanath chronicles) written by Ganesh Ram Shiromani was a Bengali ballad of 36,000 lines which detail the early history of Sylhet though its authenticity is questionable.[34] When Sylhet was under the rule of the Twipra Kingdom, medieval Sylheti writers using the Bengali script included the likes of Dwija Pashupati, the author of Chandravali – considered one of the earliest Sylheti works.[42] Nasiruddin Haydar of Sylhet town wrote the Tawarikh-e-Jalali, the first Bengali biography of Shah Jalal. Gobind Gosai of Masulia wrote Nirbban Shongit, Gopinath Dutta wrote Dronporbbo, Dotto Bongshaboli and Nariporbbo and Nur Ali Khan of Syedpur wrote Marifoti Geet. Songwriters and poets such as Radharaman Dutta, Hason Raja and Shah Abdul Karim, significantly contributed to Bengali literature and their works remain popular across Bengal in present-times.[43] Numerous Bengali writers emerged in Ita, such as Kobi Muzaffar Khan, Gauri Shankar Bhatta and Golok Chand Ghosh. Muslim literature was based upon historical affairs and biographies of prominent Islamic figures.

In 2021, Shuvagoto Chowdhury was awarded the Bangla Academy Literary Award.[44]

Other languages

[edit]
Sanskrit writer Advaita Acharya is venerated across Bangladesh and West Bengal.

Sylhetis have contributed to Sanskrit literature throughout history. In the 15th century, Jagadish Tarkalankar wrote several Sanskrit books, many of which were made up of numerous volumes. Tarlankar's Shabdashaktiprakashika was a famous textbook for Sanskrit learners. His contemporary, Advaita Acharya of Laur, wrote two medieval Sanskrit books, Yogabashishta-Bhaishta and Geeta Bhaishya.[45] In the 16th century, Murari Gupta wrote the first Sanskrit biography of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu and Raghunath Shiromani wrote 40 books in Sanskrit.[46][47] Some works written by Sylhetis have also been translated into other languages. For example, Ashraf Hussain's Manipurer Ladai was translated into English by Dinesh Chandra Sen and included in the Eastern Bengal Ballads.[48][41]

Sylhet, in particular the Taraf, was also an esteemed centre for the study of Persian, an official language up until the British period, due to the high population of foreign missionaries from Central Asia and Persia following the Conquest of Sylhet. Ma'dan al-Fawaid was written in 1534 by Syed Shah Israil who is considered to be Sylhet's first author.[49] Other prominent writers include Muhammad Arshad, Syed Rayhan ad-Din and Syed Pir Badshah.[50][51] Reyazuddin of Taraf wrote a Persian book on "Dream Fruit".[52] Ala Bakhsh Mazumdar Hamed was known to have written Tuhfatul Muhsineen and Diwan-i-Hamed. Collectively, the works of these two people belonging to the Mazumdar family of Sylhet, are regarded among the most creative literary works in the Sylhet region. Majid Bakht Mazumdar wrote an English book on the family history.[53]

In the 19th century, Urdu had a somewhat aristocratic background in Sylhet and notable families that spoke it included the Nawabs of Longla and the Mazumdars of Sylhet. Moulvi Hamid Bakht Mazumdar, who was also fluent in Persian, wrote the Urdu prose Ain-i-Hind, a history of the Indian subcontinent.[34] Literature written in this period included Nazir Muhammad Abdullah Ashufta's Tanbeeh al-Ghafileen, written in 1894, and the poems of Moulvi Farzam Ali Bekhud of Baniachong. Hakim Ashraf Ali Mast and Fida Sylheti were prominent Urdu poets of Sylhet in the 19th century, the latter being a disciple of Agha Ahmad Ali.[54] In 1946, the Anjuman-i Taraqqi-i Urdu performed a mushaira in Sylhet attracting the likes of Hafeez Jalandhari, the lyricist of the National Anthem of Pakistan.[55]

Distribution

[edit]

Diaspora

[edit]
Sylheti food stall at the Queens Night Market in New York City

Lord Cornwallis introduced the Permanent Settlement Act of Bengal in 1793 and it altered the social, political and economic landscape of the Sylhet region; socioeconomic ramification for former landlords was severe as the land changed hands. On juxtapose, colonial administration opened new windows of opportunities for young men, who sought employment merchant ship companies. Young men from Sylhet boarded ships primarily at Kolkata, Mumbai and Singapore. Many Sylheti people believed that seafaring was a historical and cultural inheritance due to a large proportion of Sylheti Muslims being descended from foreign traders, lascars and businessman from the Middle East and Central Asia who migrated to the Sylhet region before and after the Conquest of Sylhet.[56] Kasa Miah, who was a Sylheti migrant, claimed this was a very encouraging factor for Sylhetis to travel to Calcutta aiming to eventually reach the United States and United Kingdom.[57]

Barak Valley

[edit]

The Sylheti community in the Barak Valley, contiguous to Sylhet, is one of the eminent diasporic communities where they have been able to recreate the Sylhet environ.[4] The Barak Valley consists of three districts in the Indian state of Assam, which are home to a Bengali-speaking majority population as opposed to Assamese.[58] Geographically the region is surrounded by hills from all three sides except its western plain boundary with Bangladesh. Though never a part of Sylhet the Barak Valley hosts the presence of the same Sylheti dialect. Niharranjan Ray, author of Bangalir Itihash, claims that "South Assam / Northeastern Bengal or Barak Valley is the extension of the Greater Surma/Meghna Valley of Bengal in every aspect from culture to geography".[59]

A movement emerged in the 1960s in this Sylheti-majority area of India. Referred to as the Bengali Language Movement of the Barak Valley, Sylhetis protested against the decision of the Government of Assam to make Assamese the only sole official language of the state knowing full well that 80% of the Barak Valley people are Bengalis. The main incident took place on 19 May 1961 at Silchar railway station in which 11 Sylheti-Bengalis were killed by the Assamese police. Sachindra Chandra Pal and Kamala Bhattacharya were two notable Sylheti students murdered by the Assam Rifles during the movement.

Outside South Asia

[edit]

Today, the Sylheti diaspora numbers around one million, mainly concentrated in the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Germany, Italy, France, Australia, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Finland and the Middle East and other European countries. However, a 2008 study showed that 95% of Sylheti diaspora live in the UK.[60] In the United States, most Sylhetis live in New York City, though sizeable populations also live in Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, Los Angeles, Miami, and Detroit.

Some argue that remittances sent from Sylheti diaspora around the world back to Bangladesh have negatively affected development in Bangladesh, where a lack of government initiatives has caused economic inertia.[61]

According to neo-classical theory, the poorest would move to the richest countries and those from densely populated areas would move to more sparsely populated regions. This has clearly not been the case. The brain drain was a movement from core to core, purely on economic maximisation, while it was young Sylheti pioneers with access to financial resources that migrated from a severely overpopulated Bangladesh to the overcrowded streets of Spitalfields, poorest from all parts of Bangladesh migrated to Sylhet for a better life, causing a severe overcrowding and scarcity of resources in Sylhet.[62]

Religion

[edit]
The most influential modern Islamic scholar from Sylhet was Abdul Latif Chowdhury, founder of the Maslak-e-Fultali.[63]

Sunni Islam is the largest denomination with majority following the Hanafi school of law.[64] There are significant numbers of people who follow Sufi ideals,[63] although the revivalist Deobandi movement is also popular with many being a part of the Tablighi Jamaat. There is a very small minority of Shia Muslims who gather every year during Ashura for the Mourning of Muharram processions. Places of procession include the Prithimpasha Nawab Bari in Kulaura, home to a Shia family, as well as Balaganj, Osmani Nagar and Rajtila.

Hinduism is the second largest religion among Sylhetis. Other minority religions include Christianity and there was a presence of Sikhism after Guru Nanak's visit to Sylhet in 1508 to spread the religion and build a gurdwara there. This Gurdwara was visited twice by Tegh Bahadur and many hukamnamas were issued to this temple in Sylhet by Guru Gobind Singh. In 1897, the gurdwara collapsed after the earthquake.

Notables

[edit]

Popular modern writers and poets from the region include Abdur Rouf Choudhury, Dilwar Khan and Chowdhury Gulam Akbar. Muhammad Mojlum Khan is a non-fiction writer best known for writing the English biographical dictionary, The Muslim 100. Prominent Bengali language non-fiction writers include Syed Murtaza Ali, Syed Mujtaba Ali, Dewan Mohammad Azraf, Abed Chaudhury, Achyut Charan Choudhury, Arun Kumar Chanda, Asaddor Ali, Ashraf Hussain and Dwijen Sharma.

Reputed artists and media personalities from the region include Salman Shah who is considered one of the greatest actors in Bangladeshi film industry, Runa Laila who is a prominent singer with international acclaim, Hason Raja and Shah Abdul Karim who are the pioneers of folk music in Bangladesh.

Cricket and football are the most popular sports among Sylhetis. Many Sylheti cricketers have played for the Bangladesh national cricket team such as Alok Kapali, Enamul Haque Jr, Nazmul Hossain, Rajin Saleh and Tapash Baisya. Beanibazar SC is the only Sylheti club which as qualified for the Bangladesh League and Alfaz Ahmed was a Sylheti who played for the Bangladesh national football team. Hamza Choudhury is the first Bangladeshi to play in the Premier League and is predicted to be the first British Asian to play for the England national football team.[65] Bulbul Hussain was the first breakthrough Sylheti professional wheelchair rugby player. Rani Hamid is one of the most successful chess players in the world, winning championships in Asia and Europe multiple times. Ramnath Biswas was a revolutionary soldier who embarked on three world tours on a bicycle in the 19th century.

See also

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Sylheti at Ethnologue (22nd ed., 2019) Closed access icon
  2. ^ "Ranked: The 100 Most Spoken Languages Around the World". Visual Capitalist. 15 February 2020. Retrieved 15 July 2020.
  3. ^ Shahela Hamid (2011). Language Use and Identity: The Sylheti Bangladeshis in Leeds. pp.Preface. Verlag Peter Lang. Retrieved on 4 December 2020.
  4. ^ a b "The Sylheti community in Barak Valley thus presents a dispora to be located in a region marked by the geographical and cultural continuity from Sylhet. The official language of the region being Bengali, the community found mechanisms to reconstruct the environs of its lost ‘desh’ within a new state." (Deb & Bhan 2016:2)
  5. ^ Bhattacharjee 2013, p. 59–67.
  6. ^ Wouters, Jelle J. P.; Subba, Tanka B. (30 September 2022). The Routledge Companion to Northeast India. Taylor & Francis. p. 61. ISBN 978-1-000-63699-4.
  7. ^ Glanville Price (2000). Encyclopedia of the Languages of Europe. pp. 91–92.
  8. ^ Bhattacharjee 2013, p. 62.
  9. ^ a b Simard, Candide; Dopierala, Sarah M; Thaut, E Marie (2020). "Introducing the Sylheti language and its speakers, and the SOAS Sylheti project" (PDF). Language Documentation and Description. 18: 5. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
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General and cited references

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