Battle of Plassey, 1757
1757 · Plassey
Language Movement, 1952
1952 · Language
Liberation War, 1971
1971 · Liberation
Partition of Bengal and Swadeshi movement, 1905
1905 · Partition

Discover Bengal · Unfolded

March-April 1971 — Declaration and Proclamation of Independence

The move from resistance to statehood was not only military. It was also constitutional and declaratory.

Between late March and April 1971, Bangladesh's independence struggle moved from mass resistance to an explicit claim of statehood. The declaration of independence issued in Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's name after the 25 March crackdown, followed by the formal Proclamation of Independence adopted by the provisional leadership, gave the war a constitutional language, a legal rationale, and an organizing political center.[1][2]Evidence: Medium

Est. 1947 · BengalA Bilingual Archive

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Overview

The constitutional break that turned resistance into a sovereignty claim.

Importance: MajorPakistan Period and National AwakeningMovement: Language, autonomy, and liberationPlace: Bengal Region

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Quick Answer

Between late March and April 1971, Bangladesh's independence struggle moved from mass resistance to an explicit claim of statehood. The declaration of independence issued in Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's name after the 25 March crackdown, followed by the formal Proclamation of Independence adopted by the provisional leadership, gave the war a constitutional language, a legal rationale, and an organizing political center.[1][2]Evidence: Medium

Cause -> Event -> Effect

How this chapter moves history forward

Causes / Event / Effects

Causes

No explicit causes have been added yet.

Event

March-April 1971 - Declaration and Proclamation of Independence

The constitutional break that turned resistance into a sovereignty claim.

Effects

No explicit consequences have been added yet.

Historical Relationships

Timeline

Key Figures

Sheikh Mujibur Rahman

LeaderPerson

Student Organizer and National Leader

The Six Points, the 1970 mandate, and the 7 March speech made him the central political voice of Bangladesh's independence struggle.

He led the Awami League through the Six-Point autonomy movement, the 1970 electoral mandate, and the March 1971 mass mobilization that transformed East Pakistan's constitutional crisis into Bangladesh's independence struggle.

East Bengal and East Pakistan, 1948-1971; from early language politics to the autonomy and independence struggle.

His leadership turned language rights, electoral representation, and autonomy demands into a mass claim for Bengali self-determination and statehood.

language-rightsautonomynationalism
Details

Syed Nazrul Islam

LeaderPerson

Acting President of the Provisional Government

In uncertainty, he became the constitutional voice of continuity.

As acting president of the Provisional Government of Bangladesh, he preserved constitutional continuity while Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was imprisoned in Pakistan and kept wartime political authority intact.

Mujibnagar Government, 1971; amid wartime uncertainty and absent central leadership.

His acting presidency helped present the Liberation War as the struggle of a legitimate national government, not a fragmented rebellion.

constitutional-legitimacyleadership1971
Details

Tajuddin Ahmad

CoordinatorPerson

Prime Minister of the Provisional Government

He held the architecture of the war together when collapse was a real possibility.

He coordinated wartime governance, diplomatic outreach, and strategic planning of the exile government, turning dispersed resistance into an organized state-led struggle.

Mujibnagar Government, 1971; linked to Indian and broader international diplomatic channels.

He integrated political legitimacy, military coordination, and external support into a coherent wartime state framework.

statecraftwartime-governancediplomacy
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FAQ

FAQ

Why is the declaration and proclamation chapter important?

It shows how Bangladesh's independence struggle moved from resistance to an explicit claim of sovereign statehood.

Quotes

The independence war was fought with arms, but it was also framed through constitutional language and founding documents.

Historical reflection

Claim-level citations

Between late March and April 1971, Bangladesh's independence struggle moved from mass resistance to an explicit claim of statehood. The declaration of independence issued in Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's name after the 25 March crackdown, followed by the formal Proclamation of Independence adopted by the provisional leadership, gave the war a constitutional language and political center.

[1][2]Evidence: Medium

This chapter explains how Bangladesh's war of independence was framed not only as armed resistance but as a legally and politically articulated sovereign project linked to Mujibnagar and later constitutional memory.

[1][2]Evidence: Medium

The declaration and proclamation remained central to later understandings of Bangladesh's founding legality and to state memory around 26 March and provisional wartime authority.

[1][2]Evidence: Medium

Public memory preserves both an emergency declaration and a formal proclamation, remembering them together as the point where a denied electoral mandate became an asserted national SovereigntySupreme political authority over a territory and its governance..

[1][2]Evidence: Medium

Why This Event Matters Today

This chapter matters because it explains how Bangladesh's war of independence was framed not only as armed resistance but as a legally and politically articulated sovereign project. It connects the 25 March rupture to Mujibnagar, wartime diplomacy, and the later constitutional memory of the Bangladeshi state.[1][2]Evidence: Medium

Long-Term Legacy

The declaration and proclamation remained central to later understandings of Bangladesh's founding legality. They helped anchor state memory around 26 March, provisional wartime authority, and the constitutional continuity claimed between the liberation struggle and the post-1971 republic.[1][2]Evidence: Medium

Identity and Memory Notes

Public memory preserves both a moment of emergency declaration and a later act of formal proclamation. Together they are remembered as the point where a denied electoral mandate became an asserted national SovereigntySupreme political authority over a territory and its governance., even though different sites, voices, and wartime transmissions remain part of how that memory is narrated.[1][2]Evidence: Medium