Thursday, September 1, 2011

Bangladesh Anti-Hindu Pogrom: 1992













Glani (The Disgrace) published by the Bangladesh Hindu Buddhist Christian Unity Council documented the atrocities














Throughout the nation an anti-Hindu pogrom was unleashed for no reason at all. Scores of Hindu temples, ashrams, libraries, homes, shops and businesses were destroyed, desecrated, torched, and/or confiscated. A large number of girls and mothers were violated in Bhola Island in southern coastal area.


During this pogrom many cremation areas used by Hindus and Buddhists were destroyed preventing Hindus and Buddhists perform last rites.






Destruction of Jumala Prasad Smasan (cremation area) of Sylhet




















The Thakurpara Smasan (cremation area) in eastern Comilla City and the adjoining memorial area was desecrated and partially destroyed.





Here is the memorial area after rebuilding (new-looking structures.) The memorial of the father of the idea of a linguistic Bangla nation parliamentarian Dhirendra Nath Datta was also destroyed.












Memorial to half a dozen aged, pacifist Hindu Gandhians killed by the Army of Islamic Republic of Pakistan and her Islamist allies at Gandhi Ashram, Noakhali District, was damaged.

Bangladesh Anti-Hindu Pogrom: 1990






Remains of a family home in southeastern Bangladesh











From December of 1990 through January of 1991 there was a large-scale anti-Hindu pogrom in Bangladesh. These are just a few examples.




(Several videos were made during the pogrom and books published documenting the anti-Hindu pogrom.)








(1905 picture of Dhakeswari Mandir -- temple of Goddess of Dhaka






14th Century Dhakeswari Mandir temple was completely gutted, nut-mandir, puja pandal marquee, six Shiva temples were destroyed and/or torched and the old deity of the Goddess was desecrated, never to be found.










Aboy Ashram (of non-violence) in Comilla in eastern Bangladesh, before torching



















































Deity of Mother Godess Durga Destroyed (pre-pogrom weeks, during a relatively tolerant time)



















Remains of Aunt Mashi's home

Massacre of Dirt Poor Hindu Birajbala Debnath Family of 8 in Bangladesh

Massacre of Dirt Poor Hindu oppressed-caste Birajbala Debnath Family of 8 in Muslim-majority -- nation of indigenous Hindus before conversion -- Bangladesh for not giving up their tiny homestead of many generations, free of charge, to a Muslim would-be occupier, and go to unknown (Hindu) India.






Source: Bengali Newspaper of Dhaka, Bangladesh






















Debnath Family Memorial















On September 24, 1989 all the Bangladeshi papers printed a story which highlighted the plight of minority Hindu community in that Muslim majority land. The story is about a dirt-poor Hindu Mrs. Birajbala Debnath and her family of Nadirabad village of the Hsrishpur union, sort of parish, of Nasirnagar upazila or police station of Brahmanbaria district of eastern Bangladesh. Local Muslim thugs wanted to evict Mrs. Debnath’s family for India, so that they can take over her small ancestral homestead free of charge. No one pays for Hindu properties as Bangladesh still maintains a law called Enemy (renamed Vested) Property Act through which Hindu properties can be taken over free of charge, without notice by declaring them enemies of state. But Mrs. Debnath had no place to go. She held on to the family’s tiny ancestral land of many, many generations. The Bengali daily Sangbad of Dhaka wrote the following story as narrated by a Muslim boatman, Mr. Abdus Shahid:


Swargiya (In the Heavens) Shujan Chandra Debnath, Age 23 Months;
Abduction September 6, 1989; Recovery September 14, 1989




















I had my boat docked at the Nadirabad village. It was in the middle of the night, around 1 am. All of a sudden I saw a group of 15 to 20 men force Birajbala and her five children (into my boat). They were scared to death. They could not even cry. Some had their clothes on, others didn’t. Kidnappers asked me to row the boat. I got scared too. The boat arrived at the destination Dhopajhuri Bill (riverbank). They had already brought drums (empty oil barrels), salt and lime. Killers unloaded them. All of a sudden I saw they were about to cut Mrs. Birajbala into pieces. Birajbala cried at the pitch of her voice. She was begging again and again by clutching the legs of the killers. Killers then cut her into pieces, and stuffed her into a drum. After that they cut into pieces the eldest daughter (Niyati, 17). From distance I watched the younger children (daughter Pranati, 13, and boys Shubhas 13, Shuman 7, and Shujohn 3 years old) were begging for their lives again and again; I can’t express that in words. Oh Allah! Why did you bring me here? I was feeling dizzy. The killers buried both the drums on the river bed and asked me to row the boat.
The drums were discovered accidentally few weeks later when the water level had risen in the river as a school headmaster’s boat collided with the drums which floated up from the riverbed. Mrs. Debnath may not have known that her husband was murdered two years before for the same reason and his body was dumped in a nearby village well that she never knew. The family was abducted on September 6, 1989, and tragically each individual was slaughtered, then cut to pieces, starting with the mother followed by the children older in age, so that they could fit into drums while the younger ones had to watch his horrendous savagery.












































Body of Mr. Sasanka Debnath, Mrs. Birajbala’s husband, was never recovered. He was kidnapped earlier, and murdered for not migrating to India. This was the first warning to the poor Hindu families of the area.