I landed in Dhaka after the 1965 war as an undergraduate student. For the next few turbulent years up till 1970, Salimullah Muslim Hall close to the well known Plassey Barracks was my abode. This hostel, known for its architectural elegance, was built in the earlier part of the century and named after Nawab Sir Saleemullah, who hosted the historic Muslim League delegation in 1906. The 1965 war with India had equally charged our Bengali compatriots, who demonstrated exemplary spirit but that soon tapered off. People felt left out and defenceless, though the Indian forces did not launch a full-scale attack on the eastern front. In a quick succession of events, Sheikh Mujibur Rehman launched his historic six points underlining complete regional autonomy for East Pakistan. In a year or two, he was charged under the Agartala conspiracy case, which created a further wedge between the two wings.
During all these years, Dhaka University pulsated with a flurry of activities. As a West Pakistani student, I could hang out with the young disciples of Maulana Maududi and Maulana Bhashani at the same time. My quest to understand different cross currents quite often swung me across the spectrum.
The Bengali intelligentsia, since the 1950s, was clear in its mind that Pakistan was one polity, but with two separate economies, distinct dispensations were needed for them to survive and forge ahead. While immersed in the Bengali ethos, I realised that despite some convergences in our everyday lives, we were far apart both culturally and linguistically. The way we lived, our eating habits, our sources of joy and sorrow were different. Our sense of history and vision for the future also set us apart. There had been no meaningful effort to take these factors into account. As a country, we needed exceptional dispensation while harmonising deep-seated diversity with occasional flashes of unity. This dilemma did exist in many other parts of the world too and led to many other countries evolving a national construct where conflicting claims could be safely managed.
Pakistan, as a new Islamic Republic, inherited a centrist mode of governance despite a compact amongst the constituent units, which were pluralistic and stood out for diversity. Geographical incongruity, because of the huge Indian land mass, with an avowed adverse posture against Pakistan, was a ground reality. This should have been persuasive enough for the decision-making elite to work out a system, which could have enabled the constituents of Pakistan's federation to flourish along their distinct courses. Soon after independence, many other identities surfaced which were not acceptable to the centric leadership dominated by the Punjabi and Urdu-speaking elite of that time.
In a pluralistic society, language happens to be the most potent marker of group identity, which if duly recognised, gives access to opportunities and a space to blossom. The demand to accept Bengali as an official language was not only rubbished by the West Pakistani leadership, questions were also raised on the floor of the house of the Constituent Assembly regarding the patriotism of those pressing for this demand.
My stay in the hostel with Bengali students had been enriching. I dined and dressed like them, and spoke Bengali with ease and facility, which gave me a better understanding of the Bengali mind. As I reflect back, I feel that Bengal had never been a part of the mainstream subcontinent or the Indian land mass. Its rich, alluvial and deltaic character always marked this area with a sense of exclusiveness. Had there been no colonial sharing under the British, it may well have been yet another Muslim country on the fringes of Southeast Asia. This distinctiveness also ran through its political streams. The Pakistan movement did push this exclusivism into the background for a while but an average literate Muslim Bengali in that part was clear in his mind that his religion separated him from Hindu Bengalis, hence the quest for Pakistan, while his language and culture distinguished him from fellow West Pakistanis, all the more reason for complete regional autonomy.
The economic paradigm that we had been following largely focused on investment, capacity-building and incurring of huge expenditures in the western wing. The investment multiplier, which remained confined to the western wing, deepened the wedge between the two wings further. Empirical evidence of the growing economic disparity between the two parts can be found from the study of the five-year plans of the 1950s and 1960s.
What happened in 1971, among other reasons, was on account of the festering economic inequity, aggravated by cultural and linguistic cleavages, and lack of participation in key decision-making by Bengalis. Development economists, like Andre Gunder Frank and Samir Amin, had done a lot of work on uneven development and cultural cleavages by that time, but only a sensible leadership could have picked up these cues to avert disaster.
The creation of Pakistan, while riding on a religious crest wave, was indeed a defiance of geography; dismemberment of the country, on the other hand, was the revenge of this very geography for missing out on the building blocks so vitally needed in the process of nation-building.
On my last visit to Bangladesh a few years ago, I drove through the familiar roads of Dhaka along with an old Bengali friend, who had been a freedom fighter in the 1971 war. We drove to Shaheed Minar and sauntered there for a while. The place was buzzing with the presence of young university students. My host pointed towards the nearby classrooms. I was told that it was here in February 1952 that peaceful protestors of the language movement were fired upon on the orders of a maverick police officer from West Pakistan. The name of the officer was Masud Mahmood. He was the same maverick, who at one time was the eyes and ears of the late Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and then turned as an approver in the murder case against the former prime minister, resulting in his execution. Apart from monumental blunders, petty but violent acts like these at an individual level were also responsible for the agony and misery this country went through.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 16th, 2013.
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COMMENTS (20)
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cool analysis useful in understanding the cause of separation of East Pakistan.However a question remains to be answered as to what kept the people of East Pakistan passionately patriotic till 1965 in spite of so many factors which have been stated as the cause of disgruntlement. How come a separation movement emerged in just six years and succeeded? Not even in six years..it was only in March 1971 when Yaha Khan postponed the Assembly that people of East Pakistan turned furious having lost the trust over the rulers totally.This loss of trust was no different than in the case of Kalabagh Dam. The people of East Pakistan loved Pakistan more than us and never wanted separation ..It was imposed upon them just the way Muslim League was pushed to opt for Pakistan..
"As a country, we needed exceptional dispensation while harmonising deep-seated diversity with occasional flashes of unity." This is what we needed then and this is what Pakistan needs today. Brilliant piece.
"As I reflect back, I feel that Bengal had never been a part of the mainstream subcontinent or the Indian land mass. Its rich, alluvial and deltaic character always marked this area with a sense of exclusiveness".
For a good write-up as this, that statement seems like a major slip up. You obviously haven't been to Indian Bengal. Bengal (East or West) was one of the fountainheads of modern Indian nationalist movement. The xenophobia of partition and "islamization" that followed could suppress their cultural roots for a few decades, but nothing more. Even after decades since partition Indian Bengal has more in common with Bangladesh than any other place you have mentioned. They were lucky to become independent in 1971 and I wish them all the very best!
The difference is, the Pakistani Punjabi's and the others always thought of Bengali's as 2nd class citizens. This same mentality towards Indians have been a big downfall for Pakistan who still can't fathom the fact that Indians can achieve what they have achieved.
Indians, on the other hand, have a lot of respect for Bengali's and their culture - their music, their literature, their scientific achievement, and their contribution toward freedom fight. Bollywood would have never attained such a great height had Bengali's not been there - from acting to directing to music to singing - Bengali's have given a lot.
Bangladesh should have been independent on 14th.August 1947. The Bengali's have allways been a seperate nation, with a totally different culture, different language, different script, different values, different history, different geography, different neighbourhood. The most unforturtunate happenings in 1971, was because people who were in charge before and during 1947 were ignorant of these simple facts, they refused to believe that the Bengali's were a seperate nation, this is due to their total ignorance, their apathy, their narrow minded, myopic view of history, of the Bengali nation. They, as now, people who are in charge, people who make decisions, people who are at the helm of affairs live in self denial, these people include, polititions, armed forces personnel, bearucrats, "establishment" people, law enforcement agencies, i.e. those in decision making position. The reason why East Pakistan was suppose to be a integral part of Pakistan was because they both shared a common religion. This was a total and complete lie. This lie was forcefully perpetuated. When push came to shove the truth was exposed. The lie was exposed, the lie was undone. As and when Pakistan learns that religion does hold people together, no matter how much one pushes, Pakistan will learn more about its own self as a nation. This is one lesson for Pakistani's to learn and not forget.
Pathetic - just observe how little this nation cares about having lost half of its people and land ............. they don't even remember it - they don't want to remember it ............. they want to pick and choose what they want to remember .......... still not wanting to review history truthfully ............ indeed there is little taste for truth here ........... sad, sad
Having been a part of Dhaka's academic community, how come author makes no mention of the massacre of the entire faculty of Dhaka University?
I am not sure what the author is implying in his article but this independent report by BBC written in 2007 sums up the "Dhaka" issue very well: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/6940148.stm Note one of the conclusions:
With hindsight the founding members of Pakistan got it completely wrong. India and Bangladesh are progressing very well and they are miles ahead of us. We are moving but we are moving south back to stone age. We have no future.
To quote the author "This dilemma did exist in many other parts of the world too and led to many other countries evolving a national construct where conflicting claims could be safely managed." - look no further than to your east !!! Enough said
@Author:
Excellent unbiased objective write without indulging into rhetoric. This is the way any historical account must be written. Thank you for that. Mistakes and blunders, of course, were made on all and every level, but you cannot discount the impact of shrewdly employed intense Indian propaganda as well as the role of their Hindu stooges there occupying influential positions.
"As I reflect back, I feel that Bengal had never been a part of the mainstream subcontinent or the Indian land mass. Its rich, alluvial and deltaic character always marked this area with a sense of exclusiveness. Had there been no colonial sharing under the British, it may well have been yet another Muslim country on the fringes of Southeast Asia."
Extending this distorted sense of history KP, FATA and Baluchistan would have been yet other (Muslim) countries in the central Asia.........
Not an honest piece. Glossed over and avoided any mention of the brutalities and injustices inflicted on the Bengalis, that the author should very well be aware of.
Ir Pakistan has done mistakes in the past and continues to do the same there is no Peace either in west pakistan Bangalis were in majority at that time the lake of correct leadership has given us taugh times Malaysia is very good exemple to site practicaly same case but they proseper altoghether even today end of 2013 there is still lake of leadership in Ir Pakistan pbs are not yet solved
Interestingly, no column nothing about the stranded Pakistanis, if caught in a similar situation, I would definitely choose wisely, because the federation doesn't seem to care about its people
Urdu is a unifying language for a group of people belonging to different ethnic groups. It was not a primary language to any of the 5 provinces...kind of a neutral language. Anyway (because of the immense physical seperation-1000 miles) in this case Quaid-e-Azam Jinnah should have decided to form 2 separate Muslim countries, right away in 1947-sort of idhar hum, udhar tum.
1971 was just 24 years after independence. 1971 is 42 years back from today. In other words, Bangladesh has been on its own for a much longer period than it has been a part of Pakistan.
So, you can say that it was a successful event.
Bangladesh and India have marched ahead, Pakistan is going backwards. Let us hope Pakistan will also join the race one of these days.