Historical Memory Journey

Kamal Hossain

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1947

Partition and Eastern Bengal

In 1947, British India was divided into India and Pakistan, and Bengal itself was split into West Bengal and East Bengal. This chapter traces how rushed borders, communal politics, and mass displacement reshaped the region and set the stage for later struggles over language, autonomy, and identity.

1954

United Front Election Victory in East Bengal

In the 1954 East Bengal provincial election, the United Front won an overwhelming victory over the ruling Muslim League. The result reflected accumulated public anger over representation, language rights, and economic inequality, and signaled a major shift toward regional democratic assertion in East Bengal.

1966

Six-Point Programme Announced

In 1966, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman publicly advanced the Six-Point Programme as a constitutional framework for provincial autonomy in Pakistan. The programme reorganized East Pakistan's political demands around representation, fiscal control, and federal restructuring, quickly becoming a defining platform of Bengali nationalist politics.

1969

Mass Uprising

The 1969 Mass Uprising in East Pakistan brought together students, workers, opposition parties, and ordinary citizens against prolonged military-backed authoritarianism. It accelerated the collapse of the Ayub regime, widened the demand for democratic rights and regional autonomy, and prepared the political ground for the decisive elections of 1970 and the liberation struggle that followed.

1970

Bhola Cyclone and the 1970 Election

In late 1970, East Pakistan was shaken first by the catastrophic Bhola cyclone of 12 November and then by Pakistan's first general election under universal adult franchise on 7 December. The cyclone exposed the scale of administrative neglect and regional inequality, while the election gave Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's Awami League an overwhelming democratic mandate. Together, the disaster and the denied transfer of power turned long-standing demands for autonomy into an immediate constitutional crisis on the eve of the Liberation War.

1971

Liberation War

The 1971 Liberation War was the final resistance of the people of East Pakistan against long-standing political, economic, and cultural discrimination. After the denial of the people's mandate in the 1970 election and the military crackdown of 25 March, this struggle transformed into an armed war of liberation that led to the birth of independent Bangladesh.

1972

State Formation and the 1972 Constitution

In 1972, Bangladesh moved from wartime victory to the difficult work of state formation. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman returned in January to lead the new government, the Constituent Assembly began work in April, and the Constitution of the People's Republic of Bangladesh was adopted on 4 November before taking effect on 16 December. The year linked liberation to institution-building through parliamentary government, fundamental rights, and the four state principles of nationalism, socialism, democracy, and secularism.

1975

BAKSAL: Formation and Collapse

In 1975, Bangladesh entered a decisive turning point: the transition toward BAKSAL, escalating political centralization, the assassination of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on 15 August, and the jail killings of 3 November. These events reshaped the state, party politics, and military-civil relations for decades.

2006-2008

Caretaker Crisis and Emergency Rule

Between late 2006 and 2008, Bangladesh passed through a severe caretaker-system crisis marked by disputed electoral arrangements, escalating street conflict, the 11 January emergency, and prolonged non-elected rule before returning to electoral politics.

2007-2008

Emergency-era Caretaker Rule

After the 11 January 2007 emergency, Bangladesh entered a prolonged caretaker-governed period backed by security institutions. Anti-corruption drives, political detentions, and administrative restructuring took place under a non-elected framework before the December 2008 election restored elected government. The period remains one of the most contested transitions in contemporary Bangladeshi politics.

2013

Shahbag Movement

In early 2013, mass gatherings at Shahbag in Dhaka called for stronger accountability for war crimes linked to 1971. Students, bloggers, cultural activists, and citizens transformed the square into a sustained protest space, turning memory politics and justice debates into a central national question.