1857 · Revolt
1952 · Language
1971 · Liberation
2024 · Justice

Discover Bengal · Unfolded

7 March 1971 — March 7 Speech

A mass political address that reframed the struggle.

On 7 March 1971, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman delivered a landmark speech that politically unified resistance, coordinated civil non-cooperation, and prepared mass society for a decisive confrontation.[1][2]Evidence: Medium

Est. 1947 · BengalA Bilingual Archive

Overview

A mass political address that reframed the struggle.

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

Timeline Context

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Key Figures

Sheikh Mujibur Rahman

LeaderPerson

Student Organizer and National Leader

His public life linked the first wounds of partition to the final struggle for independence.

From the immediate post-partition years onward, he emerged as a student and political organizer in East Bengal, supporting language rights, provincial autonomy, and later the mass movement that led to Bangladesh's independence.

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

His political trajectory connected the post-1947 crisis of representation and language to the later demand for self-determination and statehood.

language-rightsautonomynationalism
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FAQ

FAQ

What happened in 7 March 1971?

March 7 Speech marked a significant chapter in Bengal's historical trajectory.

Quotes

The speech functioned as an operational political framework between electoral mandate and armed conflict.

Historical reflection

Why This Event Matters Today

The speech functioned as an operational political framework between electoral mandate and armed conflict.[1][2]Evidence: Medium