Zobeda Khanom Chowdhury: Difference between revisions
TrangaBellam (talk | contribs) This is profile of a different woman; at the end, Zobeda Khanum is name-dropped. Tags: Reverted Visual edit |
TrangaBellam (talk | contribs) Not HISTRS Tags: Reverted Visual edit |
||
Line 35: | Line 35: | ||
== Political activism == |
== Political activism == |
||
She was the leader of Sylhet Womans Association. |
|||
She was the leader of Sylhet Womans Association.<ref>{{cite book|language=bn|year=1987|page=187|title=সর্বত্যাগী দেশ-কর্মী শ্রীনিকুঞ্জ বিহারী গোস্বামী ও শ্রীসুহাসিনী দাস|author=Pal Chowdhury, Krishna Kumar|publisher=Sekhar Sobhan Publishers}}</ref> |
|||
Demanding to make Bengali the state language, the women of Sylhet district met the Minister of Communications at the beginning of the language movement in 1948 and later handed over a memorandum to the then Prime Minister of East Bengal. Here she played a leading role. After sending this memorandum, they came under pressure in various ways. At that time, the Eastern Herald, a pro-[[Urdu]] newspaper in Sylhet, in its editorial, made indecent remarks about the leader Zobeda Khanom and the memorandum. Syeda Najibunnesa Khatun, another great language activist, protested against this indecent statement. She said in a protest note published in the March 12 issue of the weekly Nau-Belal: "Those that despite being Bengali-speakers of East Pakistan oppose their mother tongue are treacherous children... In what way are the non-Urdu-speaking Muslims of Sylhet inferior in observing the rules of Islam than those [[Urdu-speaking people|proficient in Urdu]]? On the contrary, the conscious people have expressed the view that culture and heritage deserve a prominent place among the Muslims of Sylhet in the whole of East Pakistan."{{Citation needed|date=January 2022}} |
Demanding to make Bengali the state language, the women of Sylhet district met the Minister of Communications at the beginning of the language movement in 1948 and later handed over a memorandum to the then Prime Minister of East Bengal. Here she played a leading role. After sending this memorandum, they came under pressure in various ways. At that time, the Eastern Herald, a pro-[[Urdu]] newspaper in Sylhet, in its editorial, made indecent remarks about the leader Zobeda Khanom and the memorandum. Syeda Najibunnesa Khatun, another great language activist, protested against this indecent statement. She said in a protest note published in the March 12 issue of the weekly Nau-Belal: "Those that despite being Bengali-speakers of East Pakistan oppose their mother tongue are treacherous children... In what way are the non-Urdu-speaking Muslims of Sylhet inferior in observing the rules of Islam than those [[Urdu-speaking people|proficient in Urdu]]? On the contrary, the conscious people have expressed the view that culture and heritage deserve a prominent place among the Muslims of Sylhet in the whole of East Pakistan."{{Citation needed|date=January 2022}} |
Revision as of 21:01, 18 January 2022
An editor has nominated this article for deletion. You are welcome to participate in the deletion discussion, which will decide whether or not to retain it. |
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Zobeda Khanom Chowdhury | |
---|---|
জোবেদা খানম চৌধুরী | |
Born | 1901 |
Died | 1986 |
Occupation | Politician |
Known for | Bengali language movement |
Spouse | Dewan Abdur Rahim Chowdhury |
Children | 9 |
Zobeda Khanom Chowdhury (Template:Lang-bn; 1901–1986) was a leading woman of the Bengali language movement and one of the pioneering women in Bangladeshi politics.[1]
Early life and education
Zobeda Khanom was born in 1901, to a Bengali Muslim family in Jorhat, Assam. Her father was Khan Bahadur Sharafat Ali and her mother was Nurjahan Begum. The family were originally from Sylhet in Bengal, but Ali had moved to Assam for employment. Her education began in Dibrugarh, also in Assam, where her father was working at the time. She then enrolled at the Eden Mohila College in Dacca, where she became the college's first female Muslim student.[2]
In 1928, the Sylhet Muslim Students Conference was held, which was attended by the likes of Qazi Nazrul Islam, AK Fazlul Huq, and Muhammad Shahidullah.[2] She first became the president of the Sylhet District Women's Congress and later left the party and became the president of the Sylhet District Women's Muslim League in 1943.[3]
In 1919, her father arranged for her to marry Dewan Abdur Rahim Chowdhury, who was a member of the Assam Legislative Council. They had five sons and four daughters.[2]
Political activism
She was the leader of Sylhet Womans Association.
Demanding to make Bengali the state language, the women of Sylhet district met the Minister of Communications at the beginning of the language movement in 1948 and later handed over a memorandum to the then Prime Minister of East Bengal. Here she played a leading role. After sending this memorandum, they came under pressure in various ways. At that time, the Eastern Herald, a pro-Urdu newspaper in Sylhet, in its editorial, made indecent remarks about the leader Zobeda Khanom and the memorandum. Syeda Najibunnesa Khatun, another great language activist, protested against this indecent statement. She said in a protest note published in the March 12 issue of the weekly Nau-Belal: "Those that despite being Bengali-speakers of East Pakistan oppose their mother tongue are treacherous children... In what way are the non-Urdu-speaking Muslims of Sylhet inferior in observing the rules of Islam than those proficient in Urdu? On the contrary, the conscious people have expressed the view that culture and heritage deserve a prominent place among the Muslims of Sylhet in the whole of East Pakistan."[citation needed]
Tamaddun Majlish founder Abul Kashem also sent a letter to Zobeda Khanom, expressing the Majlish's gratitude to her activism in Sylhet and giving her a sense of hope in response to the indecent media backlash.
The Bengalis were outraged when Urdu was declared the state language of Pakistan at the Ramna Race Course Ground in Dhaka by Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan, and at the convocation ceremony of Dhaka University on March 24.[4] In this time, Zobeda Khanom sent a letter to Jinnah requesting Bengali to be given status. Her son, Ahmad Kabir Chowdhury, also took part in the language movement. He was killed during a police firing at a student protest on 21 February (now recognised as International Mother Language Day). Zobeda Khanom was one of the members of the Sylhet Regional All-Parties State Language Council.[5]
Death
Zobeda Khanom died in Bangladesh in 1986.[2]
See also
References
- ^ Siddiq, Abu Bakr (1 December 2015). "সিলেট সরকারি মহিলা কলেজ —– ৭৫ বছরের আলোকবর্তিকা". Dainik Jalalabad (in Bengali).
- ^ a b c d Mahbub, M.R.; Nasir Uddin, Salek (27 February 2019). "জোবেদা খানম চৌধুরী" [Zobeda Khanom Chowdhury] (in Bengali).
- ^ ভাষা আন্দোলনে সিলেটের নারী সমাজের ভূমিকা. Archived from the original on 27 March 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
- ^ "শ্রদ্ধাঞ্জলি: ভাষা আন্দোলনের বিস্মৃত সাহসী নারীরা" [Tribute: The forgotten brave women of the language movement]. WomansNews24 (in Bengali). 21 February 2021.
- ^ মায়ের ভাষার সংগ্রাম ও ভাষা সৈনিক. Dainik Azadi (in Bengali). Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 22 February 2015.