Resilience, saying no and enterprise
                                    Serajul 
                                      Islam Chowdhury
                                    There 
                                      is no denying that things in Bangladesh 
                                      today are not as they ought to be, let alone 
                                      what they promised to be. What is particularly 
                                      frightening is the prevailing sense of insecurity 
                                      of life and livelihood. The two, of course, 
                                      go together. Factors responsible for this 
                                      sad state of things are many; but two failures 
                                      stand out, one of leadership, and the other 
                                      in respect of achieving unity. The nationalist 
                                      leadership which was in command during the 
                                      war of liberation had vague dreams but no 
                                      vision of what the state and society would 
                                      be like after independence. The leadership 
                                      was belonged to the upper echelons of society 
                                      both in statues and outlook. It neither 
                                      wanted, nor had the capacity, to promote 
                                      the interests of the less privileged sections 
                                      if the community, which constituted the 
                                      vast majority of the people.
                                     Nationalists 
                                      speak of the nation, ignoring the fact that 
                                      the nation is divided by class interests 
                                      and that without social transformation -- 
                                      revolution, if you like -- national unity 
                                      remains nothing but a rhetorical sound. 
                                      What had happened in other countries, happened 
                                      in ours as well. That those who have been 
                                      running the state, politically, are committed 
                                      only to self-aggrandisement is borne out 
                                      among other things, by the ease with which 
                                      they change their party affiliations. They 
                                      are not liberated, and are very much prisoners 
                                      of their own greed. And it is their competition 
                                      to grab public wealth and opportunities 
                                      that has, more than anything else, divided 
                                      the people who were united in 1971 against 
                                      a common enemy. The selfish and irresponsible 
                                      leadership has been duly, busily and faithfully 
                                      replicated in all walks of life, and what 
                                      we are faced with at the moment is stark 
                                      absence of role models. It will not be illogical 
                                      to be pessimistic.
Nationalists 
                                      speak of the nation, ignoring the fact that 
                                      the nation is divided by class interests 
                                      and that without social transformation -- 
                                      revolution, if you like -- national unity 
                                      remains nothing but a rhetorical sound. 
                                      What had happened in other countries, happened 
                                      in ours as well. That those who have been 
                                      running the state, politically, are committed 
                                      only to self-aggrandisement is borne out 
                                      among other things, by the ease with which 
                                      they change their party affiliations. They 
                                      are not liberated, and are very much prisoners 
                                      of their own greed. And it is their competition 
                                      to grab public wealth and opportunities 
                                      that has, more than anything else, divided 
                                      the people who were united in 1971 against 
                                      a common enemy. The selfish and irresponsible 
                                      leadership has been duly, busily and faithfully 
                                      replicated in all walks of life, and what 
                                      we are faced with at the moment is stark 
                                      absence of role models. It will not be illogical 
                                      to be pessimistic.
                                    But 
                                      surely there are positive qualities in us 
                                      to rely upon, if not to be proud of. At 
                                      least there are three resilience, resistance 
                                      and enterprise. And indeed these are no 
                                      mean virtues.
                                    People 
                                      in Bangladesh have known disasters, one 
                                      after another, sometimes in quick succession. 
                                      Some of these have come from hostility of 
                                      nature, and some are man-made. Cyclones, 
                                      tidal bares, floods, droughts and pestilences 
                                      have tried to beat us down, causing misery, 
                                      death and devastation. Man-made disasters 
                                      like famine, violence, riot and war have 
                                      not been less frequent. After they have 
                                      been more harmful than the natural ones. 
                                      But people have not surrendered. Every disaster 
                                      was a new test of endurance, but even the 
                                      worst sufferers have not given in. Quietly 
                                      but resiliently they have tried to stand 
                                      up, building their nests, burying the dead, 
                                      adjusting themselves to new circumstances.
                                    For 
                                      long we have been a marginalised people. 
                                      Foreigners have invaded the country and 
                                      set up their kingdom. Local rulers -- chieftains, 
                                      landlords, moneylenders -- have not been 
                                      any the less exploitative. But people have 
                                      said no to them, even if silently. The rulers 
                                      have ruled through coercion, but have seldom, 
                                      if at all, won the heart of the people. 
                                      People have defended the independence and 
                                      integrity of their culture, which explains 
                                      why Bengali language and literature have 
                                      flourished, despite invasions and encroachments.
                                      People in this land of ours are religious, 
                                      but in a rather secular sense. Politics, 
                                      they have always felt, should be kept apart 
                                      from religion; and to religion itself they 
                                      have turned for shelter and justice, which 
                                      they have found difficult to be assured 
                                      of in the material would they live in. But 
                                      there is in us as a people a deep distrust 
                                      in society and even fate itself fatalism 
                                      in this country is not at all based on faith 
                                      in fate; in the contrary, it signifies disbelief 
                                      in fate itself. We are, indeed, a faithless 
                                      folk, the rulers have ruled not through 
                                      leave, which is capable of producing hatred 
                                      also, but through sheer difference of the 
                                      public. This indifference is very near cynicism, 
                                      if not apathy. Rulers have come and gone 
                                      but society has gone on as before. Men and 
                                      women have feet lonely. They have spoken 
                                      in the first person singular number, without, 
                                      of course, being predatory.
                                    The 
                                      rejection of the rulers has therefore been 
                                      natural. In 1946 the people voted for Pakistan, 
                                      which was, in fact, saying no to British 
                                      rule as also to those connected with it 
                                      -- the landlords, bureaucrats and the moneylenders. 
                                      And only a year after Pakistan was established 
                                      East Bengal stood up against Pakistani on 
                                      the language question. In the 1954 election 
                                      people rejected the Muslim League under 
                                      whose leadership the state of Pakistan was 
                                      brought into being. Then there was movement 
                                      against military rule in 1962, mass uprising 
                                      in 1969, and finally the war of liberation 
                                      in 1971. The autocratic regime of Hussain 
                                      Mohammad Ershad was overthrown by a mass 
                                      movement. People have said no to the proposal 
                                      of exporting the very scarce and necessary 
                                      resource of gas to India. A citizens' movement 
                                      had forced the government design of destroying 
                                      the open space called Osmany Uddyan, situated 
                                      at the very heart of the overcrowded city 
                                      of Dhaka. Girl students of Jahangirnagar 
                                      University have driven out a group of rapists 
                                      from the university residential halls -- 
                                      when police went on rampage at midnight 
                                      in a girls' residential hall at Dhaka University, 
                                      the students came out forcing the government 
                                      eventually, to bring about a change in the 
                                      university administration and sent up a 
                                      judicial enquiry commission to investigate 
                                      into the matter. When heinous assailants 
                                      made a murderous attempt on the life of 
                                      the writer Humayun Azad the protest was 
                                      as spontaneous as it was widespread. The 
                                      way garment workers in Narayanganj came 
                                      out in the streets demanding punishment 
                                      of those accused of killing some of their 
                                      fellow workers was, in a sense, reminiscent 
                                      of the workers' mobilisation in New York 
                                      on May 1 more than a hundred years ago.
                                    Bangladeshi 
                                      folks are supposed to be lazy. That this 
                                      is a lie is proved everyday by the way people 
                                      work for themselves, often on their own, 
                                      here at home and also abroad. Opportunities 
                                      are limited, the fields are narrow; but 
                                      men and women in the country have never 
                                      been shirkers, they have to work, and are 
                                      disappointed to find themselves unemployed 
                                      or rendered jobless. Jute cultivation in 
                                      Bengal owes not so much to favourable land 
                                      and climate as to the sheer labour of the 
                                      producers. 
                                    Thrown 
                                      out of employment, the industrial worker 
                                      weeps, not only because he is being driven 
                                      into a life of uncertainty but also because 
                                      he had developed a fondness for his work 
                                      and his fellow workers. Bangladeshi workers 
                                      have earned reputation abroad for their 
                                      dutifulness and diligence. Women are working 
                                      today in garments factories and building 
                                      sets; this work is noticeable, but they 
                                      never been reluctant to work at home. 
                                    The 
                                      middle class is doing very well abroad in 
                                      both professional and academic fields. People 
                                      have the enterprise, what they lack is capital 
                                      and atmosphere. Craftsmen and technicians 
                                      are doing excellent work not only in keeping 
                                      production going, but also in inventing 
                                      new techniques.
                                    These 
                                      are indeed positive qualities in us. They 
                                      are there -- often actively, sometimes potentially. 
                                      Qualities like these are even more valuable 
                                      than our natural and mineral resources. 
                                      What is sad, and certainly disappointing, 
                                      is that these we have not been able to develop 
                                      fully and bring about a radical change in 
                                      our life. 
                                    For 
                                      achieving that objective. What is needed 
                                      is leadership, at all levels, but particularly, 
                                      and most importantly, at the political level. 
                                      The goal has to be something greater than 
                                      more good governance, it has to be transformation 
                                      in society and in the character of the state 
                                      itself, so that all our creative energies 
                                      can be released, and our sense of belonging, 
                                      which is another name for patriotism, gains 
                                      in both depth and intensity, that transformation 
                                      is, after all, what we have been struggling 
                                      for decades. Pakistan has failed us, but 
                                      we cannot allow Bangladesh to fail, simply 
                                      because this is where we all belong. The 
                                      struggle to build up a democratic society 
                                      and state must continue.
                                      .........................................................................................
                                      The author is former head, English 
                                      Dept., Columnist and social thinker.
                                    
                                    Of 
                                      bell bottoms and lungis
                                    Peasant participation in 
                                      the war 
                                    Afsan Chowdhury
                                    What were peasants doing 
                                      in a war that built an urban priorities 
                                      dominated state? It's even more puzzling 
                                      because by all accounts the majority of 
                                      the irregulars Mukti Bahini in popular imagination 
                                      were peasants, the villagers armed with 
                                      rage and decrepit rifles, bearded and barely 
                                      literate and essentially unused to urban 
                                      language, clothes and culture. Neither official 
                                      history nor academic work has dealt with 
                                      this strange journey from the plough fields 
                                      to the battlefield. 
                                     I 
                                      have used the term bell-bottoms -- trousers 
                                      flared at the bottom of the wearing leg- 
                                      not in any pejorative sense but as a term 
                                      which encapsulates a dominant cultural construction. 
                                      Because it does portray a particular class 
                                      of warriors who after the war benefited 
                                      and took control of the main city and by 
                                      extension the State. The sartorial is also 
                                      a description of social inclusiveness and 
                                      exclusion. This also doesn't apply to the 
                                      90 percent of the freedom fighters who seem 
                                      to be literally left without narratives 
                                      of their history. Significantly, our intellectuals 
                                      have not looked into the issue that deals 
                                      with peasant involvement in the war. There 
                                      is no ambiguity about it during the war. 
                                      The construction of the leadership during 
                                      the war was largely of the same nature that 
                                      exists in any post-colonial situations where 
                                      one group of political elites fill the space 
                                      vacated by another. There were of course 
                                      some progress especially in the alliance 
                                      of the formal state representations -- executive 
                                      and military -- under political leadership, 
                                      but peasant representation was largely absent.
I 
                                      have used the term bell-bottoms -- trousers 
                                      flared at the bottom of the wearing leg- 
                                      not in any pejorative sense but as a term 
                                      which encapsulates a dominant cultural construction. 
                                      Because it does portray a particular class 
                                      of warriors who after the war benefited 
                                      and took control of the main city and by 
                                      extension the State. The sartorial is also 
                                      a description of social inclusiveness and 
                                      exclusion. This also doesn't apply to the 
                                      90 percent of the freedom fighters who seem 
                                      to be literally left without narratives 
                                      of their history. Significantly, our intellectuals 
                                      have not looked into the issue that deals 
                                      with peasant involvement in the war. There 
                                      is no ambiguity about it during the war. 
                                      The construction of the leadership during 
                                      the war was largely of the same nature that 
                                      exists in any post-colonial situations where 
                                      one group of political elites fill the space 
                                      vacated by another. There were of course 
                                      some progress especially in the alliance 
                                      of the formal state representations -- executive 
                                      and military -- under political leadership, 
                                      but peasant representation was largely absent. 
                                      
                                    In this case structural 
                                      representation could have become a major 
                                      issue in the discourse but its absence has 
                                      not been a matter of intellectual concern. 
                                      
                                    The use of the term 'jonojuddha" 
                                      -- people's war -- rather frequently nowadays 
                                      is even more puzzling unless one can say 
                                      that this is again an appropriation process, 
                                      an attempt of representation in history 
                                      that has become necessary by using such 
                                      terms. Have they not bothered to explain 
                                      because they can't explain why lungi clad 
                                      peasants participated in a war which was 
                                      led by bell-bottom wearing urban freedom 
                                      fighters? Metaphorically speaking of course. 
                                      
                                    Participation, 
                                      choice and social coercion
                                      There were two major sources of social participation 
                                      in Bangladesh during this phase. One, during 
                                      the elections of 1970 where majority of 
                                      the people voted Awami League (AL) to the 
                                      status of the majority party. Later, AL's 
                                      victory threatened the state power sharing 
                                      mechanism, as a result the Pakistani- Islamabad 
                                      elite decided to go for military action 
                                      in Dhaka to prevent transfer of this shift 
                                      to a new elite. The urban mass upsurge was 
                                      also trickling into the rural areas. This 
                                      was the first contact between the two.
                                    The 
                                      March connection: From the city to villages 
                                      
                                      This process of connectivity between the 
                                      urban and the rural intensified after March 
                                      25/26 when terrified Dhaka citizens sought 
                                      refuge in the rural areas and later people 
                                      began to organize resistance to the Pakistan 
                                      army based on non-Dhaka resources to Pakistan 
                                      who found that the mopping up operations 
                                      had to be taken all over including rural 
                                      Bangladesh. 
                                    "We knew that at a 
                                      point there would be some violence against 
                                      the people but we definitely didn't expect 
                                      what we saw on and after March 26." 
                                      Zillur Rahman (AL Leader to the BBC radio 
                                      series titled "Bangladesh 1971". 
                                      2002-2003.)
                                    In a way the Pakistan army 
                                      achieved its goal because the sheer terror 
                                      that was generated on that night convinced 
                                      the bloodthirstiness of the intent of the 
                                      Pakistan army. Even till today, March 25 
                                      is the worst night of all though in terms 
                                      of scale and suffering a single morning 
                                      in many places shed more blood. It was meant 
                                      to cow down the misunderstood intent of 
                                      the Bengali people. The nervous Pakistan 
                                      army thought Dhaka was what mattered and 
                                      the people could be shocked into surrender. 
                                      Instead, it triggered resistance. And unleashed 
                                      a host of forces which ultimately overwhelmed 
                                      Pakistan and its army.
                                    Peasant response to the 
                                      crisis by providing to political and military 
                                      leadership who had gone to the villages, 
                                      was crucial in setting up the platform of 
                                      resistance. This ultimately defined the 
                                      nature of subsequent war and commitment 
                                      of India's support which made the critical 
                                      difference. Historians seem to have largely 
                                      ignored the significance of this interaction 
                                      that the sanctuary-seeking people had with 
                                      the villagers that led to the construction 
                                      of convergences and created the nationalist 
                                      defense. 
                                    The hospitality and open 
                                      house policy of the peasants and the entry 
                                      of large populations into the rural areas 
                                      were not without expenses and other social 
                                      costs to the peasantry. This is an ignored 
                                      part of the war-contribution. While dominant 
                                      narratives either fail to recognise this 
                                      in war value terms, the historians perceive 
                                      this as expected behaviour reducing it to 
                                      rural hospitality terms. They are unable 
                                      to link it to the huge logistical support 
                                      provided by the rural people to the military 
                                      representatives of the nationalist movement. 
                                      The rural population acted as the funding 
                                      source and supplier of the first phase which 
                                      made the later phases possible. This is 
                                      all the more significant in the context 
                                      of India's refusal to support the war in 
                                      the late March to early April.
                                    In the later stages, as 
                                      the war became more organised, the price 
                                      for participation became very high and a 
                                      part of the peasantry also joined the war 
                                      and after the war was over returned to the 
                                      villages from where they came. They came 
                                      from famished lands and returned to scorched 
                                      fields. Today, they can't explain why they 
                                      participated and the sense of regret is 
                                      high. "We gave our sons but other than 
                                      independence, what did we get?" asks 
                                      Dariya Begum from Kushtia ("Tahader 
                                      Juddho", a video on women and war 2001). 
                                      
                                    Although the state could 
                                      not have been born without them, it did 
                                      not share the spoils of victory with them, 
                                      not even gallantry awards. 
                                    Dhaka, 
                                      the peasant and the student 
                                      To link Dhaka with the construction of popular 
                                      imaginations, nature of the state and role 
                                      of locations in determining that link is 
                                      important. East Pakistan was a primate city 
                                      province that became a primate city-state. 
                                      Dhaka was the center and symbol of victory 
                                      and defeat during and after 71. 
                                    Dhaka was in the domain 
                                      of Sector 2 under Maj. Khaled Musharraf 
                                      and Maj.Haider and naturally drew the largest 
                                      number of young recruits from Dhaka into 
                                      its HQ at Agartala. Since Dhaka was the 
                                      center of attention in international attention, 
                                      guerilla activities in Dhaka was obviously 
                                      carried out by boys belonging to the city 
                                      itself. A significant event in Chilmari 
                                      could hardly compete with a bomb blast in 
                                      Dhaka in impact, so media attention and 
                                      military concern was highest here. Just 
                                      as the Pak army attacked Dhaka, the Mukti 
                                      Bahini also did their best to show to the 
                                      world that it was not in the Pak army's 
                                      total control. The battle for Dhaka thus 
                                      constructed its symbolic value, the conquest 
                                      of Dhaka became synonymous with Bangladesh. 
                                      And the construction of Bangladesh became 
                                      inextricably linked to Dhaka. It's not a 
                                      coincidence that most of the powerful elite 
                                      that ultimately has ruled Bangladesh/Dhaka, 
                                      also came from the sector that was responsible 
                                      for guerilla activities in Dhaka wars and 
                                      largely run by Dhaka boys. The Dhaka of 
                                      1970 determined the Dhaka of 1971 and the 
                                      Dhaka of today. 
                                    It was not intended to be 
                                      so but eventually reflected the various 
                                      state construction processes. The peasants 
                                      first sustained the population movement 
                                      to rural areas. Next it made possible the 
                                      most significant initial resistance that 
                                      displayed to the world in general and India 
                                      in particular, that this was a popular uprising 
                                      able to support a guerilla war leading to 
                                      a December intervention. 
                                      
                                      Peasants as outsider after the war 
                                      
                                      Subsequently, when the guerilla war began 
                                      the peasantry played several roles including 
                                      that of major suppliers of shelter, resources, 
                                      information and porters. Of course they 
                                      played the role of soldiers too. "The 
                                      enemy was in a school building top floor. 
                                      A group of policemen supported by over a 
                                      hundred razakars were there. The thana chief 
                                      from Tangail had declared never to give 
                                      up alive. We had taken casualties but they 
                                      were protected by sandbags. A young boy 
                                      who had been trained in India was hit and 
                                      killed. As we hadn't eaten the entire day, 
                                      we asked the local boys to get some food. 
                                      They ran desperately to get bread, eggs 
                                      etc. As this young boy- around 12 years 
                                      old- was running in the open field, his 
                                      arms full of food, he was shot dead. He 
                                      died with all the food strewn around him. 
                                      I started to fire at the protecting bags 
                                      and slowly they gave away. Then we picked 
                                      them off one by one. When they saw their 
                                      leaders gone, they started to flee. By then 
                                      the villagers had gathered. The razakars 
                                      and others jumped into the river but the 
                                      villagers caught them and killed about 200 
                                      of them" describes Md. Sultan, Air 
                                      Force NCO who escaped from Pak jail to return 
                                      home and fight in Barisal. (Bangladesh 1971, 
                                      BBC series 2002-3) 
                                    Maj. 
                                      Quamrul (retd) has written a book on the 
                                      warriors of 1971 --'Jonjuddher Gonojoddha' 
                                      -- which is a limited but a laudable effort. 
                                      It may be in fact a good description of 
                                      how the peasantry got involved in a war 
                                      that wasn't essentially theirs. Not that 
                                      anybody lacked patriotism or enthusiasm 
                                      but the post 1971 situation should not be 
                                      seen as an accident. All kinds of laments 
                                      and explanations notwithstanding, it was 
                                      a war led by bell bottom wearers. Peasants 
                                      in lungi who got involved were inevitably 
                                      going to be denied their right given the 
                                      nature of the state. Bangladesh had to reward 
                                      the urban elites who had taken its charge 
                                      and there was no representation of the rural 
                                      poor in the history writing or making history.
                                      ...................................................................................................
                                      The author, an eminent columnist has done 
                                      extensive research on 1971.