Abul Asad | |
---|---|
Native name | আবুল আসাদ |
Born | Rajshahi, Bengal Presidency, British India | 5 August 1942
Occupation | Journalist, author, editor of the Daily Sangram, cultural organiser |
Language | Bengali |
Citizenship | Bangladeshi |
Alma mater | University of Rajshahi |
Period | 1970 – Present |
Subject | History |
Notable works | Saimum Series |
Abul Asad (born 1942) is a Bangladeshi writer and journalist. [1] He is the editor of one of the oldest national dailies in Bangladesh The Daily Sangram . [2] He is admired by Islam loving youth of Bangladesh for his thriller series, Saimum Series . He is also known as an Islamic thinker and intellectual in Bangladesh.
Asad's cultural activities are largely guided by patriotism and devotion to Islamic ideology. He is one of the renowned cultural activists, who devoted their intellectual capabilities to nurture cultural and ideological heritage in Bangladesh. He is involved with many socio-cultural and professional organisations. He is the President of Bangla Sahittya Parishad (BSP), Chairman of Bangladesh Islamic Centre (BIC). [3] He was a director of Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha (BSS) and a member of Bangladesh Press Council.
Asad earned a good name in the field of journalism. His regular sub-editorial 'Durbin' has been receiving widespread appreciation.
Although a successful journalist, Abul Asad is much more known and admired for his thriller series 'Saimum'. Books of this series added a new dimension to Bengali literature. It combines heritage, passion and ideology, and inspires the reader to devote his/her life, deeds and love to Islam. He started this famous series in 1972 and has published 62 novels so far. [4] [5]
Asad was born on 5 August 1942 at Narashinghpur village in Rajshahi, Bangladesh. He started writing articles and stories while he was a student of Class XI. He gradually became involved in journalism. He continued his studies alongside his activities as a journalist. Abul Asad completed his MA in economics from Rajshahi University. His father, A.K Shamsamul Haque was an Islamic scholar from a madrasah at Benaras in India. His mother's name is Mojida Begum.[ citation needed ]
Asad started his career as a writer and journalist during his student life. He worked as a Rajshahi-based journalist in several dailies and weekly publications. While a student, he wrote columns on politics and culture which were popular, and these set him in his career as a journalist. He began his career in journalism from 17 January 1970 as an assistant editor of The Daily Sangram. In 1981, he took over responsibility as the editor of The Daily Sangram . He is also a columnist and essayist.
Asad has published several books such as “Kaalo Pochish Er Aage O Pore” and “Eksho Bochor Er Raajniti” on regional history and politics. “Amra Shei Sei Jaati” a three-part series of story-based events in a historical context, and an essay based compilation “Ekush Shotoker Agenda”. His most popular literary work up to date has been the “Saimum Series”. This series showcases literary fiction combining suspense, thrill, Islamic knowledge and morality within historical contexts and settings. Till now, 62 books have been published in this popular series. [4] Presently, Abul Asad continues to write novels along with being the editor of the Daily Sangram. [6]
Asad was arrested on 19 September 2011, Monday, by the Bangladeshi paramilitia force Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) from his residence in connection with his role as editor of The Daily Sangram , which is largely critical of government policies. [7] [8] [9] Police accused him for his alleged connection with street clashes between law enforcers and Jamaat-e-Islami men in Dhaka and elsewhere, and for vandalising vehicles, arson and obstructing the police officers while they are on duty, and he faced charges of 'patronising the violence'. [10] He was granted bail after a police remand and released on 23 September 2011. [11] Former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, the leading opposition party, firmly condemned his arrest and called for the withdrawal of the “trumped-up” charges brought against him. [12]
In April 2013, Bangladesh Police arrested Mahmudur Rahman, the editor of Amar Desh newspaper, and shut down its printing facilities. Amar Desh journalists attempted to keep printing their newspaper through the printing facilities of the Daily Sangram, and police arrested 19 employees of Sangram printing press. [13] The Committee to Protect Journalists, a New York-based non-profit, condemned this police harassment of the Daily Sangram staff and its editor, Abul Asad. [14]
On 13 December 2019, a group of pro-government activists under the banner of Muktijoddha Monch (Freedom Fighters Platform) gathered and seized the office of Daily Sangram. They burnt several copies of the newspaper, vandalised dozens of computers and other office equipments and furnitures and dragged the editor to the street and tried to force him to apologise in front of the TV cameras on the street for describing an executed Jamaat Leader convicted for war crimes as a 'martyr'. [15]
After the pro-government group assaulted and harassed him, police took over and took him to the police station. He is in prison since then, facing the charge of high treason, under the draconian Digital Security Act 2018. [16] Asad faces 14 years of imprisonment under the act, if the authorities deem his views defamatory or subversive, or 10 years of imprisonment for spreading propaganda on Bangladesh's Liberation War of 1971. [17]
Abul Hasnat Muhammad Qamaruzzaman was a Bangladeshi politician, government minister and one of the founding leader of Bangladesh. He was the Home Minister to Mujibnagar Government, Qamaruzzaman was murdered along with Syed Nazrul Islam, Muhammad Mansur Ali and Tajuddin Ahmed in the jail killings in Dhaka Central Jail on 3 November 1975 by a group of army officers on the instruction of President Mostaq.
Abul Kalam Shamsuddin was a journalist, politician and littérateur. He was born at Trishal of Mymensingh.
Muhammad Kamaruzzaman was a Bangladeshi politician and journalist who served as the senior assistant secretary general of Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami and was convicted of war crimes during the 1971 Liberation war of Bangladesh. He was executed by hanging at Dhaka Central Jail at 22:01 on 11 April 2015.
The Daily Sangram, also known as Dainik Sangram, is a Bengali daily newspaper supportive of the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami and published from Dhaka, Bangladesh. The name of the editor is Abul Asad, who is also the writer of the popular fiction series, the Saimum Series. The Daily Sangram publishes both Bangladesh and international news, as well as local and regional perspectives. It also provides entertainment, business, science, technology, sports, movies, travel, jobs, education, health, environment, human-rights news and more.
There have been numerous works of art created as a result of the Bangladesh Liberation War. In 1971, a concert was organized by members of the British rock band, The Beatles, in support of Bangladesh. The songs recorded for and broadcast on Swadhin Bangla Betar Kendra are still considered to be the best of Bangladeshi protest songs.
The 7th March Speech of Bangabandhu, or the 7/3 Speech, was a public speech given by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founding leader of Bangladesh on 7 March 1971 at the Ramna Race Course in Dhaka to a gathering of over one million (1,000,000) people. It was delivered during a period of escalating tensions between East Pakistan and the powerful political and military establishment of West Pakistan. In the speech, Bangabandhu informally declared the independence of Bangladesh, proclaiming: "The struggle this time, is a struggle for our liberty. The struggle this time, is a struggle for our independence." He announced a civil disobedience movement in the province, calling for "every house to turn into a fortress".
Faḍl al-Ḥaqq ibn Wājid ad-Dīn al-Amīnī, or simply Fazlul Hoque Amini was an Islamic scholar and politician from Bangladesh. He served as an MP in the Parliament of Bangladesh from 2002 to 2007. He was an expert in the fields of Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh), hadith and tasawwuf. He also held a number of positions on the boards of qaumi madrasahs. He was also the principal of Jamia Qurania Arabia Lalbagh in Lalbagh, Dhaka, one of the largest Deobandi Islamic schools of Bangladesh.
Amar Desh is a defunct daily newspaper in Bangladesh, published from Dhaka in the Bengali language since 2004. Amar Desh provides news about Bangladesh from local and regional perspectives and covers international news. Amar Desh is considered a popular opposition newspaper in Bangladesh and takes an editorial stance, that favours the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP). The newspaper was closed down by the Awami League led Government of Bangladesh.
Saimum Series is a novel series of Bangladesh written by Abul Asad. Abul Asad published his first book in the Saimum Series in 1976 with Operation Tel Aviv.
Mahmudur Rahman is one of the owners and editor of one of Bangladesh's Bengali daily newspapers, Amar Desh. He is also an author, engineer and businessman.
Nurul Islam Babul was a Bangladeshi business magnate. He was the founder and chairman of the business conglomerate Jamuna Group.
Sharmin Akter Nipa is a Bangladeshi film actress and model. She is one of the highest-paid actresses of Bangladesh.
Muhiuddin Khan was an Islamic scholar from Bangladesh and editor of Monthly Madina. Khan was also a Quranic commentator, journalist, poet, writer and translator. He translated for the first time tafseer Maariful Quran into Bengali.
Natore-2 is a constituency represented in the Jatiya Sangsad of Bangladesh since 2014 by Md. Shafiqul Islam Shimul of the Awami League.
Md. Abul Kalam Azad is a Bangladesh Awami League politician and a former Jatiya Sangsad member representing the Gaibandha-4 constituency.
Abul Kalam Azad is a Bangladeshi journalist who is the incumbent Managing Director and Chief Editor of Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha (BSS), state-run national news agency of Bangladesh. Prior to his appointment at BSS, Azad worked as the Press Secretary to the Prime Minister of Bangladesh.
Principal Abul Kalam Mazumder is a Bangladeshi national politician, one of the organizers of the Bangladesh Liberation War, a social worker and a member of the Jatiya Sangsad.
Abul Hasan Jashori was a Bangladeshi Islamic scholar, politician, author, teacher and freedom fighter. He was the founding principal and Shaykh al-Hadith of the Jamia Ezazia Darul Uloom Jessore institution.
On February 19, 2013, Shah Ahmad Shafi, leader of Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh, published an open letter to the public and the government on the front page of Amar Desh. In the letter, he condemned the ongoing Shahbag protests, claiming they were tied to anti-Islamic activities. He accused the Ahmadiyya community and an anti-Islamic online group of involvement, naming individuals such as Shahriar Kabir, Muntassir Mamoon, Zafar Iqbal, Gholam Rabbani, and Ajoy Roy as responsible. Shafi called on the government to take action against these activities and urged the public to speak out against them. This letter marked Hefazat-e-Islam's entry into the political landscape, initiating the Islamist response to the Shahbag protests and leading to the development of its 13-point demand.