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Alphabet of Sun (রৌদ্রাক্ষর)
They are the alphabet of sun, the giver of light of our nation. They are
the alphabet of our language for which millions gave their lives. They
are carrying the evidence of our right to write, our epic story of rise
of our nation. They are the alphabet of our language Bangla. Our
children from this land of Bengal got their first lesson form their
mothers to write these alphabets.
In the year 1948, the Governor General of Pakistan Mohammed Ali
Jinnah came to Dhaka of the then East Pakistan, and decleared Urdu to be
the only official language for both West and East Pakistan. From that
very moment, people of Bangladesh (then East Pakistan), having Bangla as
the mother language started protesting against this.
On 21
February 1952, students called in for a provincial strike, but the
government invoked a limited curfew to prevent this and the protests
were tamed down so as to not break the curfew. All the people wanted
were the right to talk in their own language, the language of their
motherland. On the contrary, the Pakistani police fired on the students
despite these peaceful protests and Abdus Salam, Rafiq Uddin Ahmed, Abul
Barkat, Abdul Jabbar and many were killed.
Bangladesh got
independence in 16 December 1971, following a nine month long liberation
war where 3 million people were killed in the hand of Pakistani army,
one of the biggest genocides in the history that was ever recorded. And
November 1999, UNESCO’s declaration of 21st February as the
International Mother Language Day has brought fresh glory and prestige
to Bangladesh which is making significant strides towards peace,
progress and prosperity around the world.
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