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[🇧🇩] National Poet Kazi Nazrul Islam

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[🇧🇩] National Poet Kazi Nazrul Islam
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Short Summary: Discussion on the contribution of Kazi Nazrul Islam to Bengal Literature.

Saif

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Nation to celebrate 126th birth anniversary of Kazi Nazrul Islam with three-day programme
UNB
Published :
May 23, 2025 00:05
Updated :
May 23, 2025 00:05

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The Ministry of Cultural Affairs, in association with Bangladesh Shilpakala Academy (BSA) and district administrations, has taken up a series of programmes to mark the 126th birth anniversary of the National Poet Kazi Nazrul Islam, set to be celebrated nationwide including in Dhaka and Cumilla.

The national-level celebration will begin on May 25 with a three-day programme in Cumilla, jointly organised by the Ministry of Cultural Affairs, Bangladesh Shilpakala Academy, and the Cumilla district administration.

This year's theme is "Legacy of Kazi Nazrul in the 2024 People's Uprising" - focusing on the poet's revolutionary role and enduring influence in the struggle for justice.

The inaugural ceremony will take place at the Cumilla District Shilpakala Academy on May 25 at 3 pm. Mostofa Sarwar Farooki, Adviser to the Ministry of Cultural Affairs, will attend the event as chief guest, while the ministry's Secretary Md Mofidul Rahman will preside.

Special guests include Md Latiful Islam Shibli, Executive Director of the Kazi Nazrul Islam Institute, and Khilkhil Kazi, poet's granddaughter and Chairperson of the Institute's Trustee Board.

Eminent educationist Professor Salimullah Khan will deliver a commemorative speech, and Cumilla Deputy Commissioner Md Amirul Kaisar will deliver the welcome address.

The event will also feature the distribution of the Nazrul Award 2023 and 2024 to selected recipients, who will share their reflections during the ceremony.

Following the discussion, Bangladesh Shilpakala Academy will present a special cultural segment titled "Chetona O Jagorone Nazrul" (Nazrul in Spirit and Awakening).

Additionally, on May 26 at 6:30 pm, the Music, Dance, and Recitation Department of Bangladesh Shilpakala Academy will host another edition the event at the National Theatre Hall in Dhaka. Mohammad Warees Hossain, Secretary and Acting Director General of the Academy, will preside, while Mehzabeen Rahman, Director of the department, will deliver the welcome speech.

Meanwhile, cultural organisation Chhayanaut will host its annual Nazrul Utshab (Nazrul Festival) on May 25 and 26 (Sunday and Monday) at the Chhayanaut Auditorium in Dhanmondi. The programme will begin at 7 pm on both days.

The two-day festival will feature solo and group renditions of Nazrul songs, dance, and recitation. Alongside Chhayanaut's own performers, invited artists and groups will also participate, and the festival is open to all.

Both days of the festival will be streamed live on Chhayanaut's official Facebook page (facebook.com/chhayanautbd) and YouTube channel (youtube.com/@chhayanautbd).​
 

The rebel poet who foretold planetary crisis

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VISUAL: ALIZA RAHMAN

Born in 1899, national poet Kazi Nazrul Islam, also known as the rebel poet, brought a bold new voice to Bangla literature and national life. His poetry fiercely challenged injustice and inspired youth towards positive change. Early in his career, Nazrul addressed themes of human-caused planetary crisis, making him a pioneer in environmental reflection in the Bangla language. As a visionary, he foresaw both life's vitality and the world's potential destruction.

After military service, Nazrul returned to Kolkata, writing poetry and stories, and joined a circle of progressive writers and activists. His friendship with Muzaffar Ahmad marked a key turning point in his life and work. They launched the evening daily Nabajug on July 12, 1920, with support from political leader AK Fazlul Huq, as a form of both resistance to colonial rule and political activism.

Nabajug was crucial to Nazrul's early career, providing him with a platform to write on politics and literature. Printed on a single sheet and sold for one paisa, it quickly gained a wide readership despite the founders' limited journalistic experience. Nazrul's talent for succinctly summarising complex news impressed his colleagues and contributed to the paper's success. It was in Nabajug that Nazrul published Roz-Kiyamat (translated as Doomsday by Arka Dev), an article symbolising the planetary crisis.

What truly set Nabajug apart, however, were Nazrul's innovative headlines. Drawing from his deep familiarity with Bangla literary traditions, he infused his headlines with references from the poetry of Chandidas and Vidyapati, and even quoted Rabindranath Tagore. In one notable instance, he borrowed and modified two verses of a Tagore song to title a report on Faisal, the emperor of Iraq.

Beyond his reporting on Iraq, Nazrul and his associates developed a distinctly internationalist outlook. Their writings reflected a deep interest in anti-colonial struggles worldwide and strong solidarity with the growing labour and communist movements.

In his article Roz-Kiyamat, Nazrul cited several esteemed scientists who had claimed that the day of the Earth's destruction was not as far off as many had long supposed. Drawing from their findings, he noted that over the past 50 years, the number of icebergs in the southern polar region had steadily increased. Captain Smitharth of Edmonton was the first to discover a 580-foot-high iceberg, followed by Captain Scott, who observed an ice shelf towering over 600 feet.

He wrote that a sailor from Egeneta had seen a mountain-like iceberg over a thousand feet high—a sight that shocked the entire world. It was later confirmed that this ice mountain was 1,612 feet thick—nearly a quarter to half a mile wide. Around the Antarctic Circle, the number of massive icebergs and ice shelves was steadily increasing. This, he argued, was causing the southern polar region to warm at an alarming rate. As a result, the northward-drifting icebergs were bringing extreme winters to South Africa and South America.

Nazrul Islam, though young as an editor, was wise in his thinking. By translating the findings of Professor Louis and other renowned scientists for the Bangalee audience, he warned that the second great flood—or the great extinction—was imminent on Earth. While the entire planet might not be destroyed, it was beyond doubt that a significant part of it would be devastated.

In his article, he wrote of an immense expanse of sky-reaching ice shelves in the South Pole—14 miles long and hundreds of miles thick. With the climate there growing steadily warmer, he posed a striking question: what would be the consequence of this? "Everyone knows that ice melts when heated," he warned. As temperatures rose, he reported thousands of kilotons of icebergs and shelves breaking apart and melting—streams and glaciers surging forward like sky-high, mobile Himalayas, destined to wash away everything in their path. One might think this came from a modern scientific or journalistic report, yet it was written in 1920 and published in the book Jugabani in 1922. The book was immediately banned.

He observed that humanity was increasingly dependent on coal mining and its widespread use for energy. "Do you know which era this coal dates back to?" he asked. "It comes from the carbonic acid-saturated ages, many hundreds of thousands of years ago, formed from the trees of that era. Even today, forest vegetation remains adept at absorbing carbonic acid. Yet every bit of coal, every matchstick burned, consumes the very oxygen essential to human survival." He cited a renowned English scientist who had recently warned that atmospheric oxygen was steadily decreasing, leading to pollution and a gradual return to the carbonic acid-filled conditions of prehistoric times.

Nazrul was acutely aware of the environmental hazards posed by coal. He warned that even if humanity stopped its reckless exploitation of this destructive fuel—noting that, even at the time he was writing, burning coal consumed over 1,600 million tons of oxygen annually—and turned to electricity as an alternative, new dangers would inevitably emerge. "Whichever path we choose, death awaits—crocodiles in the water, tigers on land!" he wrote, voicing his scepticism about electricity as a truly safer substitute. His words reflect a remarkably early awareness of the environmental trade-offs of industrial progress, articulated in the Bangla language over a century ago with striking foresight.

Globally, discussions of climate change began to surface in the 1960s, initially gaining traction in the Western world before spreading more broadly. In this context, Kazi Nazrul Islam stands out as a pioneer in alerting Bangalee readers to planetary crises long before the concept was widely recognised. Through his journalistic writings—often adopting a pessimistic tone that contrasts with his usual celebration of youth and life—Nazrul depicted the harsh realities of environmental degradation. Though writing nearly a century ago, his work captured the destructive nature of climate change, offering a prophetic glimpse into the global crisis that would unfold in the decades to come.

Priyam Paul is a journalist and translator.​
 

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