সোমবার, ২১ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১১

International Mother Language Day











Bangla is the official language of Bangladesh. It is also spoken in West Bengal. Bangalees protected Bangla from the clutches of Pakistani oppressors in 1952 by preventing Urdu from being the state language of East Pakistan where a vast majority of people spoke in Bangla. Bangalees had to sacrifice lives for their mother tongue on 21st February, 1952. 21st February being declared  International  Mother Language Day by UNESCO,  Bangla reached the peak of maturity.   
Evolution
Bangla's direct ancestor is a form of  Magadhi Prakrit or Middle Indo-Aryan which descended from Sanskrit or Old Indo-Aryan. Bangla evolved mainly  from Sanskrit. Also Hindi, Urdu, Farsi, English--all contributed lots of words and terms to form this language. 
The Origin of Bangla Alphabet
Bangla alphabet originated from Brahmi alphabet of the Asokan inscriptions. The Bangla script in its present printed form took shape in 1778 when printing types were first cast by Charles Wilkins. There still remained a few archaic forms and these were finally replaced in the middle of the nineteenth century.  
The Oldest Records
For old Bangla the only record is Charjapad discovered from a palace in Nepal by Haraprasad Shastri. It is a collection of the oldest verses thought to be the oldest records of Bangla literature. The language of Charjapad  is basically vernacular, but at the same time it is also something of a literary language.
Two Styles
Bangla at the present day has two literary styles. One is called "Sadhu Bhasha" and the other "Chalit Bhasa". The former is the traditional literary style based on Middle Bangla of the sixteenth century. The later is practically a creation of the present century, and is based on the cultivated form of the dialect and day-to-day talks. The difference between the two literary styles is not very sharp. The vocabulary is practically the same. The difference lies mainly in the forms of the pronoun and the verb. The Sadhu Bhasa has the old and heavier forms while the Chalit Bhasa uses the modern and lighter forms. The former shows a partiality for lexical words and for compound words of the Sanskrit type, and the latter prefers colloquial words, phrases and idioms. The Chalit Bhasa was first seriously taken up by Pramatha Chawdhury at the instance of Rabindranath Tagore during the early years of the first World War. Soon after Tagore practically discarded Sadhu Bhasa, and Chalit Bhasa is now generally favored by writers who have no particular fascination for the traditional literary style. 
International Mother Language Day 
The UNESCO has declared 21st February as The International Mother Language Day to be observed globally in recognition of the sacrifices of the Bangla language martyrs who laid their lives for establishing the rightful place of Bangla. The proclamation came in the form of a resolution unanimously adopted at the plenary of the UNESCO at its headquarters in Paris in November 1999. In its resolution the UNESCO said-' 21st February be proclaimed International Mother Language Day throughout the world to commemorate the martyrs who sacrificed their lives on this very day in 1952’.
It is a great tribute and glowing homage paid by the international community to the language martyrs of Bangladesh. The genesis of the historic Language Movement which ensued since September 1947 with the students in the vanguard backed by intellectuals, cultural activists and patriotic elements was the first spurt of Bangalee nationalistic upsurge culminating in the sanguinary events of February 21, 1952 and finally leading to the war of Liberation in 1971. 
The UNESCO in its resolution said-the recognition was given bearing in mind that all moves to promote the dissemination of mother tongues will serve not only to encourage linguistic diversity and multilingual education but also to develop fuller awareness about linguistic and cultural traditions throughout the world and to inspire solidarity based on understanding, tolerance and dialogue.
Henceforth UN member countries around the world will observe 21st February as the International Mother Language Day. The historic 21st February has, thus, assumed new dimension. The sacrifices of Rafiq, Salam, Jabbar, Barkat and other martyrs as well as of those tortured and repressed by the then authoritarian government of Pakistan for championing the cause of their mother tongue have received now a glorious and new recognition by the November 1999 resolution of the UNESCO.
Countries who gave support to the proposal of Bangladesh Govt. for declaring the 21st February as The International Mother Language Day are Banin, Bhahama, Balaroush, Comoros, Chili, Dominic Republic, Egypt, Gambia, Honduras, Italy, Iran, Micronesia, Oman, The Philippines, Papua Newgini, Pakistan, Paraguay, Russian Federation, Sir Lanka, Saudi Arabia, Surinam, Slovakia, Vanuatu, Indonesia, India, Ivoricost , Lithuania, Malaysia 
The following persons worked hard for bringing this international recognition to Bangla.
Rafiqul Islam, Abdus Salam, Albart Vinzon, Carman Cirstobal, Zason Morin, Susan Hozinos, Dr. Calvin Chow, Nasrin Islam, Rinata Martins Karuna Zoshi
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শুক্রবার, ২১ জানুয়ারী, ২০১১

Injured Mashrafe Mortaza left out of Bangladesh World Cup squad


Former cricket captain Mashrafe Mortaza will not take part in next month's World Cup after the injured fast bowler was left out of Bangladesh's 15-man squad named on Wednesday.
Mortaza, 27, injured his knee during a domestic match last month and selectors felt he would not have regained full fitness in time for the Feb 19-April 2 tournament being co-hosted by India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.
"Mashrafe is our most experienced and best bowler. But very sad to say he is nowhere near to fitness at this moment," chief selector Rafiqul Alam told a crowded press conference.
"Medical report says from next week he will have shadow bowling with two or three steps and from February first week he will have unrestricted bowling.
"But still there is a question of his cricketing fitness which includes bowling fitness, rhythm, match practice and confidence.
"We took the opinion of our bowling coach Ian (Pont), head coach Jamie (Siddons) and realised it will be tough for him to become fit in such a short period."
Paceman Nazmul Hossain replaces Mortaza, who has taken 146 wickets in 118 ODIs, in the squad.
Experienced batsman Shahriar Nafees also returned after missing last month's one-day series against Zimbabwe.
Bangladesh who are in Group B with England, India, Ireland, Netherlands, South Africa and West Indies will begin their campaign against fellow co-hosts India in the tournament opener in Dhaka on February 19.
Squad: Shakib Al Hasan (captain), Tamim Iqbal, Imrul Kayes, Shahriar Nafees, Zunaed Siddique, Mohammad Ashraful, Roqibul Hassan, Mushfiqur Rahim, Mahmudullah, Naeem Islam, Abdur Razzak, Mohammad Sohrawardi, Shafiul Islam, Nazmul Hossain, Rubel Hossain.
DHAKA: Former captain Mashrafe Mortaza will not take part in next month's World Cup after the injured fast bowler was left out of Bangladesh's 15-man squad named on Wednesday.

Mortaza, 27, injured his knee during a domestic match last month and selectors felt he would not have regained full fitness in time for the Feb 19-April 2 tournament being being co-hosted by India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.

"Mashrafe is our most experienced and best bowler. But very sad to say he is nowhere near to fitness at this moment," chief selector Rafiqul Alam told a crowded press conference.

"Medical report says from next week he will have shadow bowling with two or three steps and from February first week he will have unrestricted bowling.

"But still there is a question of his cricketing fitness which includes bowling fitness, rhythm, match practice and confidence.

"We took the opinion of our bowling coach Ian (Pont), head coach Jamie (Siddons) and realised it will be tough for him to become fit in such a short period."

Paceman Nazmul Hossain replaces Mortaza, who has taken 146 wickets in 118 ODIs, in the squad. Experienced batsman Shahriar Nafees also returned after missing last month's one-day series against Zimbabwe.

Bangladesh who are in Group B with England, India, Ireland, Netherlands, South Africa and West Indies will begin their campaign against fellow co-hosts India in the tournament opener in Dhaka on Feb. 19.

Squad: Shakib Al Hasan (captain), Tamim Iqbal, Imrul Kayes, Shahriar Nafees, Zunaed Siddique, Mohammad Ashraful, Roqibul Hassan, Mushfiqur Rahim, Mahmudullah, Naeem Islam, Abdur Razzak, Mohammad Sohrawardi, Shafiul Islam, Nazmul Hossain, Rubel Hossain. 
Mortaza, 27, injured his knee during a domestic match last month and selectors felt he would not have regained full fitness in time for the Feb 19-April 2 tournament being co-hosted by India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.
"Mashrafe is our most experienced and best bowler. But very sad to say he is nowhere near to fitness at this moment," chief selector Rafiqul Alam told a crowded press conference.
"Medical report says from next week he will have shadow bowling with two or three steps and from February first week he will have unrestricted bowling.
"But still there is a question of his cricketing fitness which includes bowling fitness, rhythm, match practice and confidence.
"We took the opinion of our bowling coach Ian (Pont), head coach Jamie (Siddons) and realised it will be tough for him to become fit in such a short period."
Paceman Nazmul Hossain replaces Mortaza, who has taken 146 wickets in 118 ODIs, in the squad. Experienced batsman Shahriar Nafees also returned after missing last month's one-day series against Zimbabwe.
Bangladesh who are in Group B with England, India, Ireland, Netherlands, South Africa and West Indies will begin their campaign against fellow co-hosts India in the tournament opener in Dhaka on Feb. 19.
Squad: Shakib Al Hasan (captain), Tamim Iqbal, Imrul Kayes, Shahriar Nafees, Zunaed Siddique, Mohammad Ashraful, Roqibul Hassan, Mushfiqur Rahim, Mahmudullah, Naeem Islam, Abdur Razzak, Mohammad Sohrawardi, Shafiul Islam, Nazmul Hossain, Rubel Hossain. (Reporting by Azad Majumder; Editing by Pritha Sarkar; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

বৃহস্পতিবার, ২০ জানুয়ারী, ২০১১

15 years innocent Bangladeshi girl killed by B.S.F

Pls Command recent Topic : 

BSF Killed Felani
Felani, 15 years old Bangladeshi girl. Her father fixed her marry. So, she is returning to Bangladesh with her father from Nayadilli, India - work place of her father. On Friday, 7th January, 2011 at 6am she and her father was climbing the barbed wire boundary between Bangladesh and Indian border (exact location: International Border No. 947, between 3 and 4 s pillar of Anantapur, Fulbari) using a ladder. Her father, Nuru Mia crossed first. But at the time of Felani's clothes got entangled in the wire. She was frightened and started screaming. Hearing her scream, the BSF members started shooting at her, at 6.15 am. She was asking for water till her death, about 30 minutes after shooting but nobody there because of the afraid of BSF’s bullets.

BSF Killed Felani Tangled Barbed Wire The dead body of Felani was tangled in barbed wire around 4 hours. Then the coward Indian Security Force (BSF)'s jowans took away the body at 10:45 am. After 30 hours BSF handover the dead body to BGB (Border Guard Bangladesh).
                   Deadbody of Felani, Killed by Indian BSF 
According to International human rights group Human Rights Watch, in the year 2010 BSF killed 74 Bangladeshis, injured 72 and kidnapped 43 Bangladeshis.
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