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Being Hindu in Bangladesh



Book Review

Title: Being Hindu in Bangladesh

Authors: Deep Halder & Avishek Biswas

Publisher: HarperCollins India, 2023

Pages: 178


Sheikh Hasina has abandoned her country after having been its longest-serving Prime Minister. She was the country’s PM for more than 20 years. In fact, she was the world’s longest-serving female Head of Government in history. Yet she had to save herself by running away from her own country. She has sought temporary asylum in India.

Sheikh Hasina tried to foster secularism in her country. It couldn’t ever have been an easy task given the presence of Islamic militancy all around. Secularism longed to get rooted in that soil right from the time of her father Sheikh Mujibur Rahman who declared that: “This is not the land of Muslims. This is not the land of Hindus. This is everybody’s land.”

Mujibur Rahman wanted Bangladesh to be everybody’s land. He even went to the extent of forgiving his enemies and allowing them to return from Pakistan to live in their motherland. “They started trickling back,” says this book written by Deep Halder and Avishek Biswas whose roots too lie in Bangladesh. ‘They’ refers to those who had supported West Pakistan during the Liberation War of 1971. “Some of them even got back into the Awami League (Mujibur Rahman’s party). Bangabandhu (Mujibur Rahman) may have hoped a new land would leave behind old hate. (But) he was assassinated.” 

Indira Gandhi being honoured with the highest posthumous award by Bangladesh

It is difficult to teach good lessons to certain people who are very religious. Those religious men drove Mujibur Rahman out and eventually killed a lot of people instead of learning to leave behind old hate. Sheikh Hasina and Sheikh Rehana were the only survivors of the brutal assassination of Mujibur Rahman’s family on 15 Aug 1975. They were in Germany at that time. The two surviving sisters sought shelter in Delhi after that tragedy. Indira Gandhi, who was Prime Minister then, not only provided them a good house to live in but also arranged a job for Hasina’s husband.

Religion didn’t come in the way of Indira Gandhi’s love for these asylum-seekers. Later, when Hasina became the PM of Bangladesh, she extended similar love to the Hindus there. The example of Purnima Rani Shil stands out particularly.

Purnima was 12 years old when she was attacked by “thirty to forty men on 8 October 2001…. ‘They tore my clothes and tied my face with a gamcha [towel]. I knew their voices; I could see their face in the light of their torch. They took me to a nearby field and raped me one after another until I lost consciousness.’”

Her family fled to Dhaka where Purnima met Hasina, then Opposition leader. Hasina took Purnima under her care and educated her. Eventually Purnima became an engineer though finding a job wasn’t easy because her past always went ahead of her. The authors met her personally while they were in Bangladesh for collecting material for this book.  

It is not easy to be a Hindu in Bangladesh. That is the fundamental assertion of this book. There are 1.30 crore Hindus there. Even when Hasina was PM, they didn’t feel secure enough. What about now that the country has fallen into the hands of religious extremists?

This book is not about Sheikh Hasina. I chose to focus on her because of her present circumstances. The miseries faced by the Hindus in that country are delineated in fair detail in the book. It should also be mentioned that Hasina had become quite autocratic towards the end. Maybe, she was helpless in a country of militants and fanatics.

Towards the end the book quotes journalist Subir Bhaumik. “Just before Hasina assumed power for a second time in 2009, the world had begun to talk of Bangladesh as ‘another Afghanistan’. Not only were some Islamist radicals raising slogans as (sic) ‘Bangla hobe Taliban’ (Bangladesh will be Taliban), but the systematic Pakistani-style sponsorship of terrorism by Khaleda Zia’s BNP and Jamaat-e-Islami government was threatening to take Bangladesh down the Pakistani path.” Now, three years after Bhaumik wrote that, it looks like Bangladesh is all set to become another Pakistan which is certainly not good for India. Already, soon after the departure of Hasina, attacks on Hindus have been reported. 


PS. This post is part of the Bookish League blog hop hosted by Bohemian Biblioppost::

Related post:  Being Muslim in India 

https://matheikal.blogspot.com/2024/08/being-muslim-in-india.html

Comments

  1. Man is intent on self destruction using religion!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. People don't understand religion, they think it's a weapon!

      Delete
  2. Down with all religions; some are extreme, some moderate, but all have one purpose, use people to promote their exclusivity for selfish ends in the name of a 'God'. And it has become a number one tool in the hands of politicicans, whether they're secularists or otherwise.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If politicians kept themselves away from it, religion wouldn't be so evil.

      Delete
  3. Hari Om
    No doubt you'll have seen the news from England (being reported rather emphatically as 'Britain' because the media hopes the world won't notice no such riots have occurred in Scotland or Wales...if they want to count the single incident in NI, then they should be saying 'UK'). Everything looks bleak as hatred rises and burns the heart of humanity, reminding us we're no better than all other animals. Indeed, worse... YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sad. I'm worried particularly because my niece just reached London as a nurse.

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  4. Religion cause usually a lot of problem..

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. True. If politicians stay away from it, probably it will do better.

      Delete
  5. That is a timely book review given Bangladesh's problematic situation. Divide and rule has never served the common man. This fanning of hatred is bound to affect India.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I reviewed another book yesterday: Being Muslim in Hindu India!

      Delete
  6. It's a sad state of affairs. Even as globalisation and technology are bringing the world closer together, we are being driven further apart thanks to religion.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Irresponsible and visionless leaders are the real problem.

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  7. It seems like the book was written for the upcoming (current) scenario in Bangladesh. It's really sad. Everything that's happening all around the world. One by one.

    Not sure about the book, but this review is a well written piece.

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    Replies
    1. This cancer called religion is causing a lot of havoc all over including our own country. I wish someone found a cure.

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  8. Leave behind old hate - I wish more people would understand that hatred can only breed hatred. We have all become scared of our own shadows and see enemies everywhere. We seemed to be caught in an endless cycle of hate and violence.

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  9. It is sad to see Bangladesh go down this road. I had followed their self help groups' growth trajectory under Mohd Yunus and had believed they were on a better path. But I think it isn't simply economic progress that stirs a nation's consciousness to adhere to peace and tolerance. Indeed a relevant book for our times.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. One person alone cannot redeem a nation especially if the religious leaders are in disagreement. Yunus has too big a responsibility.

      Delete
  10. You have raised critical points about the interplay between politics and religion, and it’s a stark reminder of how deep-rooted prejudices and extremism can impact minority communities. It’s striking how Sheikh Hasina’s efforts towards secularism, despite her own eventual escape, highlight the ongoing challenges in fostering true religious harmony in the region.

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  11. Such a sad state of affairs that every religion/community feels unsafe somewhere in the world. If that 'somewhere' happens to be your own homelands, that's even sadder.

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    Replies
    1. I often wonder what religion means to people who are aroused to violence by it.

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  12. A sobering look at the challenges faced by Hindus in Bangladesh. The reflection on Sheikh Hasina's struggles and the broader context of religious extremism underscores the persistent tension and danger in the region. The review aptly highlights the book’s exploration of secularism's fraught journey and the impact of historical and contemporary politics on minority communities.

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  13. I am an Indian and Hindu, But I have my paternal distant relatives my father's cousin brothers and their families although I dont have any idea right now If that distant Uncle of mine is there or not in this world all I rememeber I met met him just once when I was some 5-6 years and he was in India and came to meet my grandfather. I really hope and pray they are safe there. This book titled striked a painful chord in my heart. Will read it

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  14. What makes Being Hindu in Bangladesh a compelling read is the passion with which it is written. A the perfect blend of academic rigor with journalistic flair.

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  15. Bangladesh had so much potential. As always, the fanatics take over defining how a religion needs to be followed. And the moderates have to pay the price for it.

    ReplyDelete

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