Bilal9
ELITE MEMBER
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2014
- Messages
- 26,569
- Reaction score
- 9
- Country
- Location
I never said they weren't bangladeshi. I said they are not Bengalee. Saying they are not Bengalee does not mean someone is not Bangladeshi. They have Bangladeshi nationality, and that's where it ends. They have had to hide their heritage since 1971 out of FEAR.
Unfortunately, you don't know any of them, so you wouldn't know. If DM facility was available, I would gladly introduce you to them on social media and the efforts they are engaging in to raise awareness of their people and dhakaiya urdu. Bangla being Lingua Franca is debatable as it would be rare for anyone of them to speak even conversational level Bangla (pre 1971). Prime Minister Nizamuddin had to have his speeches translated into Bangla which is common knowledge.
Bangla language movement has come full circle and now multiple movement for recognition of indigenous languages of BD are taking off vying for recognition. Not state recognition, but recognition that they are not a lower, corrupted form of Bangla. We are not Bengalee. The bangla language movement was nothing more than a ethnic fascist language supremacist movement led by useful idiots to give some form of rationalisation for breaking Pakistan. @IndianLite
Whether you know Hindustani is irrelevant.
Bengali-speaking Bangladeshis are probably the most liberal and least fascist (even in terms of language) in the subcontinent.
Whatever axe you have to grind, grind away.
Every Bangladeshi says something is white, then you come here and say it is black. I don't think I have heard any Bengali speaker in Bangladesh look down on someone just because they spoke a different language. @saif and @VikingRaider bhais what do you think?
In fact I see many Bangla speakers take an interest to speak other languages and preserve indigenous languages. Textbooks for Chakma, Marma and Tripura people printed in their indigenous languages were given in tribal areas.
Indigenous students of Bangladesh get books in mother tongue
Sometimes even the Bangladesh government makes some tiny symbolic gesture, yet appreciated, in favor of the country's indigenous people. This year’s
erosbonazzi.altervista.org
You are entitled to your opinion. However you may be painting with too broad a brush painting all Bengali-speakers as ethno-fascist villains.
I recently watched a few documentaries on Sheikh Mujib. My intention is not to upset any of our Bangladeshi brothers and sisters but rather to share different perspctives on the circumstances that led to his tragic assassination. These documentaries offer insights from two distinct, non-Bangladeshi viewpoints, shedding light on the complex events surrounding this historical incident.
The dead are all six feet under, and what is done is done.
Sheikh's death gave his daughter an opportunity to suck the country dry - to the tune of Billions of dollars.
It is a sad commentary that she won't meet the same fate as her father.
Bangladesh is much more of a rule-of-law place now and she is protected by Indians.
I was told by family that after the Sheikh family deaths, no one in Bangladesh shed a tear or came out on the streets.
The Sheikh was ultimately responsible for his and his family's fate, he allowed his sycophants and family members run amuck.
He brought this on - himself. It's all history now.
Last edited: