Registered user login:

What people ask me about Bangladesh

Tahmima Anam

Published 27 March 2008

Is my country about to be overrun by radical Islamists? Will everyone drown in the rising sea? I'm suddenly taking on the role of ambassador

On 13 March, I was lucky enough to win the Commonwealth Writers' Prize, Best First Book for the Europe and South Asia region, for my novel A Golden Age.

It was a real honour, although the most immediate benefit was that I got to read the acceptance speech I'd written on an index card, rather than looking at it and cringing at its pathetic thank yous for days afterwards. It also meant that the sari I wore and tramped through the rain in to get to New Cross did not end up being another sad example of dress-code miscalculation, but rather a dignified outfit with which to accept an award. Finally, and most importantly, I wasn't consumed with self-pity when introduced to the wonderful Indra Sinha, who won in the Best Book category.

If you want to know what authorial presence looks like, you need look no further than the creator of the Booker-shortlisted Animal's People. He has an oceanic wave of grey hair, and when he walked into the auditorium in a shimmering red kurta, a hush filled the room. He also gave a rousing speech about the Bhopal disaster, urging the audience to imagine the plight of its victims, and issued a damning critique of the Indian government's unwillingness to help them.

Sinha's speech made me think about the difference between coming from a place like Bangladesh and a place like India. When Sinha critiques India, he critiques a state that is riding high on its new status as a super-nation, a nation to be feared and respected, a nation that might take over the world and have us learning Hindi and taking gap years in Hyderabad instead of Paris. When I speak in public about Bangladesh, I find myself reflexively taking on the role of ambassador. Perhaps this is because people are always asking me whether my country is about to be run over by radical Islamists, or if women are forced to wear the veil, or if everyone will drown in the rising sea. I feel rather protective of Bangladesh, and try to refocus the conversation on all that is going right - the resilience of our people, our thriving women's movement, our heroes such as the Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, or Irene Khan, secretary general of Amnesty International.

Gains and losses

Of course, the picture is much more complicated. This week, Bangladesh celebrates its 37th anniversary. We have much to be proud of, but also much to mourn. It has been over a year since the military-backed caretaker government has taken power - enough time to take stock of what we have gained and lost.

On the one hand, emergency rule stopped the juggernaut of corruption and abuse of power that was the former regime. For this, we cannot but be thankful. However, we also cannot get away from the fact that the people who are in power today were not put there by the citizens of Bangladesh. They have promised to hold elections by the end of the year, but there is very little holding them to this promise.

Even if elections are held, we have given the army a kind of knowledge that can never be revoked - the certainty that it can step forward and take control when it deems us incapable of doing our jobs as citizens. From now on, I fear, our grip on democracy will always be tenuous.

One of the gravest mistakes of this government was the arrest of citizens without due process under the Emergency Powers Act. Many Bangladeshis (myself included) cheered when the corrupt officials of the last regime were hauled into prison under this act. However, along with those few high-profile cases were thousands of other citizens who now languish in prison without any hope of release.

Last week, one of those prisoners - a journalist named Arif who was jailed for publishing a cartoon making oblique reference to the Prophet Muhammad - was finally released. His arrest points dangerously to the caretaker government's unwillingness to offend the Islamic right. But Arif's release - through the campaigns waged by his lawyers, human rights activists and organisations, journalists and bloggers within and outside of Bangladesh - proves that our beleaguered and labyrinthine justice system can, occasionally, fulfil its mandate. On the anniversary of the birth of Bangladesh, I cling to these small signs of hope.

Post this article to

4 comments from readers

lodhim
28 March 2008 at 16:26

Please, by all means, speak for your self, but don't try to be an ambassador and speak on our behalf. No one is asking you to do so. Thanks.

kalamahsan
30 March 2008 at 16:15

Dear Tahmina,

Congratulations on winning the prizes and its a matter of pride for Bangladesh. You should know that Islmiast are increasingly becoming popular amongst the public because of their honesty, committment to the country and its interest and hard working. You must be worried because you have closed your eyes from so called mordenists-secularist who are the most corrupted people in the country. Islamists have proven to be the last shelter for the public, not you, neither your foreign friends.

Dr. M.A. Khalid
01 April 2008 at 03:07

Tahmina,

First of all, thank you for the wonderful book you wrote.

I along with my family was in Bangladesh during the war, which was the only time I resided there, since my father was in the Pakistani foreign services and we left our country when I was less than a month old.

My family escaped Pakistan in June, 1971, and my father went into hiding and joined the resistance movement. When I was reading your book, I literally wept, since many of the events you mentioned actually happened to my family, although I was 9 years old, I vividly remember those few months of my life. Reading your book, made all the emotional trauma that I was hiding, just pour out. My third generation American daughter also cried as she read the book, and I think for the first time, she is truly proud to call herself a "BengaliAmerican." Thank you, and please keep writing.

nawawimohamad
01 April 2008 at 06:06

The problem with Bangladesh is their leaders are persistently corrupt just like Pakistan. The only difference is that Pakistan experienced less natural calamities unlike Bangladesh which faces annual multiple natural calamities. What the Bangladeshis have built at the beginning of this year will definitely be destroyed by year end. This vicious cylce occurs in every aspects of their lives and can never come to an end unless of course they find other alternatives to the present situation. But unfortunately the Bangladeshis are stubborn, foolish and short-sighted and can never unite. They are easily swayed by rethoric and emotions are are easily taken for a ride by their leaders. Come on Bangladesh, wake up!

Post your comment

Please note: you will need to login or register before your comment is displayed on the website

We want to encourage people to comment on our content and to exchange views with other readers and hope this will be done on a courteous basis. However, if you encounter posts which are offensive please let us know by emailing comments@newstatesman.co.uk and we will take swift action where necessary.

Read More

Vote!

Was Cliff Richard robbed?

Designed by Wilson Fletcher