National Poet Nazrul's 48th death anniversary being observed today
UNB
Publish: 27 Aug 2024, 12:05 PM
Dhaka,
Aug 27 (UNB)-The 48th death anniversary of National Poet Kazi Nazrul Islam,
widely revered for his limitless contributions to Bangla literature, is being
observed in a befitting manner across the country today.
Also celebrated as the
'Rebel Poet', Kazi Nazrul Islam is considered a pioneer in Bangla literature.
Marking his 48th death
anniversary, several organisations and institutions are holding multiple
programmes throughout the day commemorating the life and works of the great
poet.
Dhaka University
teachers, students, officials and employees visited the poet's grave, offered
wreaths and recite Fateha.
A delegation of the BNP
led by Senior Secretary General Ruhul Kabir Rizvi also paid tribute to the
Rebel Poet at his grave.
Marking the anniversary,
people from all walks of life paid tribute to the poet with flowers. Tributes
were paid to the poet by placing wreaths at his grave adjacent to Dhaka
University Central Mosque in the morning. Members of the poet's family also
came to the poet's grave to pay homage.
National Museum, Nazrul
Research Centre, Bangla Department of Dhaka University, Nazrul Academy,
Bangladesh Samajtantrik Dal (BSD), Samajtantrik Chhatra Front, Sursaptak,
Ministry of Cultural Affairs, Bangla Academy, Dhaka University Teachers'
Association and Bashori- a Nazrul Research Centre and many other organizations
paid homage to the poet by placing wreaths at his grave in the morning.
Several television
channels, including Bangladesh Television (BTV), radio stations, including
Bangladesh Betar, and online platforms are broadcasting special programmes
commemorating the life and works of the National Poet.
Kazi Nazrul Islam,
widely revered for his revolutionary and spectacular literary works in
then-undivided India, was born in the Churulia village of Bardhaman in West
Bengal, India, in 1899.
Nazrul had a brief
21-year-long literary career, during which he produced 2,600 songs, 600 poems,
three books, and 43 essays, according to the Kabi Nazrul Institute.
In his early childhood,
he had to work as a caretaker and as a muazzin in a mosque to support his
family when his father passed away. He was forced to leave school at the age of
nine in order to work for a professional "Leto" music group in
Churulia, West Bengal.
While working with the
group, he became familiar with Bangla and Sanskrit literature. A year later, he
went back to school and enrolled at Matharun English School, but due to
financial hardship, he dropped out once more in Class six.
After some time, police
officer Kazi Rafizullah took him under his wing and enrolled him in Class seven
at Darirampur School in Trishal, Mymensingh.
Within a few years of
beginning military service in the British Army in 1917, Nazrul embarked on his
literary career. He wrote the classic "Bidrohi" (The Rebel) in 1921
and founded "Dhumketu" (The Comet), a monthly journal, in 1922.
Due to his nationalist
stance in the Indian Independence Movement, Nazrul found himself in the
clutches of colonial British authorities. He wrote "Rajbandir
Jabanbandi" (Deposition of a Political Prisoner) while he was
incarcerated.
His works later inspired
the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, and his poems inspired many to revolt
against the oppression of Pakistan.
Freedom, humanity, love,
and revolution are recurring themes throughout Nazrul's remarkable literary
creations. He was against radicalism and the constraints of caste, gender, and
religious prejudice.
Nazrul also published
short stories, novels, and essays, although his songs and poems have received
the most praise. He is renowned for his liberal use of Arabic and Farsi terms
in his writings and for popularizing Bangla ghazals.
He invented his own
musical genre known as "Nazrul Geeti," which consists of almost 4,000
songs he penned and composed music for, many of which were released on vinyl
and HMV records.
In 1942, when Nazrul was
43 years old and suffering from an unidentified illness, he started to lose his
voice and memory. His condition was later discovered to be "Pick's
disease," a rare and fatal neurodegenerative disease, by a medical team in
Vienna.
At the invitation of the
Bangladeshi government and then President and Father of the Nation Bangabandhu
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Nazrul's family migrated to Bangladesh and settled in
Dhaka in 1972. The government of Bangladesh conferred upon him the status of
"National Poet" in the same year.
He was awarded the
honorary DLitt by Dhaka University in 1974 and he received the Ekushey Padak in
1976, for his legendary contribution to Bangla literature and culture,
On August 27, 1976, the
Rebel Poet breathed his last in Dhaka and was buried next to the mosque on
Dhaka University campus, fulfilling a wish he had made in one of his poems.
End/UNB/AHT/SU