What's new

Happy Pahela Boishakh 1420 (Bengali New Year) to all

what calender do bangladeshis follow...hijri or the new year starting April 14 ?



We follow the saka calendar. It's 1420 bongabdo/sakabdo here.

Although I don't know why Bangladesh celebrate poila boisakh a day early and why they call it pahela boisakh.

@LaBong do you guys follow Vikram Samvat.

no...afaik benaglis, tamils, assamese and tulu dont follow the vikram samvat.....

our calenders are based on solar years while the rest of indian hindus follow the lunar calender......

and even in that..i noticed that while bengalis are having 1470 saka era..we are having 1935 saka era....
 
Last edited by a moderator:
what calender do bangladeshis follow...hijri or the new year starting April 14 ?







no...afaik benaglis, tamils, assamese and tulu dont follow the vikram samvat.....

our calenders are based on solar years while the rest of indian hindus follow the lunar calender......

and even in that..i noticed that while bengalis are having 1470 saka era..we are having 1935 saka era....



We follow International caleder.
But for tradition we follow Bangla caleder.
For religious purposes we follow hijri.
 
Who started Bengali calender 1420 years back. 2013 is the year 1935 on Saka Samvat.

The timeline falls within the reign of Shashanka, king of Gaur. But no one knows for sure.

We follow a revised version by Bangla Academy which corresponds with the Gregorian Calendar and has a leap year and everything!We revised it in 1966 and adopted it in 1987.

Well it seems we have leap years as well, 10 in every 39 years. But we don't follow Gregorian system. Also in our system Chaitra,the last month in calendar year is 31 days in leap years but in BD system Falgun is 31 days since it coincide with February.
 
In old times some of the months in Bangla Calender had even 33 days and some had 28 days. As @RiasatKhan has pointed out, it was Bangla Academy headed by probably Dr. Md. Shahidullah who revised the Bangla Calender to what it is now today. West Bengal also revised similarly. But, because of Puja and other religious issues west Bengal calender could not be made 100% compatible with that of BD.

The Hindus of BD always follow west Bengal calender when it is Puja Parbon, marriages and some other ceremonies related to Hinduism. But, normally our Hindus follow BD calender.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
In old times some of the months in Bangla Calender had even 33 days and some had 28 days. As @RiasatKhan has pointed out, it was Bangla Academy headed by probably Dr. Md. Shahidullah who revised the Bangla Calender to what it is now today. West Bengal also revised similarly. But, because of Puja and other religious issues west Bengal calender could not be made 100% compatible with that of BD.

The Hindus of BD always follow west Bengal calender when it is Puja Parbon, marriages and some other ceremonies related to Hinduism. But, normally our Hindus follow BD calender.

West Bengal however follows the perfect one we don't, ours is controlled by Gregorian calendar, Pohela Boishakh means 14th April :D. A complete stupid decision by Ershad administration.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
West Bengal however follows the perfect one we don't, ours is controlled by Gregorian calendar, Pohela Boishakh means 14th April :D. A complete stupid decision by Ershad administration.

Which date other than 14 April would have been better for Pohela Baishakh?
 
Well nothing wrong if you follow Gregorian since I guess govt of bd does all official work as per Bangla calendar.

The official calendar of India, which is also Saka calendar, is also restructured with fixed no of days per month and I guess west Bengal govt follows the same. You can't have govt work done with variable no of days per month.
 
Georgian calender is compatible throughout the world. So, representatives from the GoB and the GoWB should sit together to make the calender compatible with each other. It must be same. I am not aware of Indian calender, but if it is same as WB, then GoI representatives should also join the meetings.
 
Exactly Bangla calendar date like West Bengal follows.

You are asking BD people to follow west Bengal calender blindly, but you did not cite any reasons why should we do that. Please read the partial editorial of the New Age to understand the depth of the matter.

Today’s Bangla and Indian calendar

According to Sudhir Kumar Chattopadhay [the weekly Desh, Calcutta, November 16, 1996], the solar and luni-solar calendars in India are more than 1,600 years old). These calendars were sidereal and had 1st Baishakh (April 14) as the first day of the year. But these calendars had different lengths of months in them. Even a same calendar had different lengths of months at different places.

After independence, the Indian government in November 1952 appointed Dr Meghnad Saha to head a committee to find a uniform calendar for the whole of the country. The Saha Commitee recommended that a tropical calendar in place of the traditional sidereal calendar be introduced; the starting month of the year be Chaitra, instead of Baishakh; the starting day of Chaitra be delayed for 6/7 days (tropical year); and Shakabda be named the national calendar.

In East Pakistan, a committee headed by Dr M Shahidullah met in February 1966, to reform the dates of the Bangla calendar. The Shahidullah committee recommended that Bangla be the national calendar since adopted by the Mughals; years be counted since its origin with Hijri, present year 1373 Bangla, the months Baishakh to Vadra be of 31 days, others of 30 days; and one extra day for Chaitra in leap years.

The Saha Committee recommendations, though officially accepted by the government of India, did not get popularity as it went against their tradition. Following this, the Indian government, under a committee set up in 1986, reviewed the status of the Saha Committee report and recommended its necessary modifications to attain the objectives of a national calendar [ibid]. According to Chattopaddhay, there exists a strong opinion in India among astrologers and panchang pundits to fix the starting date of the national calendar on April 14, the date when sun reaches the first point of sidereal Aries.

In Bangladesh, the government upheld (1996) the lengths of months recommended by the Shahidullah committee but fixed the starting day of the Bangla year on April 14. It has also decided on an extra day in Phalgun, if it falls on a Christian leap year.

M Inamul Haque is chairman of the Institute of Water and Environment. minamul@gmail.com.
 
Exactly Bangla calendar date like West Bengal follows.

They have to follow the lunar calendar as they use it to fix various dates for religious reasons.We do not need that.Bangla calendar ultimately is of not much use to us other than preserving our tradition.So our revised version is easier to follow and the government dates everything on Bangla date it is better if it corresponds to Gregorian calendar.
 
Bangla calendars, Panjika and Nono Basho are different in Muslim dominated free BD and Hindu dominated Indian P/bangla. Variance in the language is also widening every day.
 

539768_638046786212816_1448985923_n.jpg


12473_638228159528012_458955396_n.jpg


156559_638260479524780_190058454_n.jpg


We bully, Hefajot aka jamat :lol:
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom