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1964 East Pakistan riots

The 1964 East Pakistan riots refer to the massacre and ethnic cleansing of Bengali Hindus from East Pakistan in the wake of an alleged theft of what was believed to be the Prophet's hair from the Hazratbal shrine in Jammu and Kashmir in India. The salient feature of the pogroms was its urban nature and selective targeting of Bengali Hindu owned industries and merchant establishments in the capital city of Dhaka. This resulted in unending waves of Bengali Hindu refugees in neighbouring West Bengal. The refugee rehabilitation became a national problem in India, and hundreds of refugees were resettled in Dandakaranya region of Odisha & Madhya Pradesh (now in Chhattisgarh).

1964 East Pakistan Ethnic Cleansing
Rioters attacking the Dhakeshwari Temple in Dhaka
LocationEast Pakistan
Date2 January 1964 – 28 March 1964
TargetBengali Hindus, Garos
Attack type
Massacre, Forced conversion, Plunder, Arson, Abduction and Rape
PerpetratorsEast Pakistan Police, Ansars, Army, East-Pakistan Rifles, Local Muslims
Motive1963 Hazratbal incident

Background Edit

On 27 December 1963, the hair of Muhammad went missing from the Hazratbal Shrine in Srinagar in Kashmir. There were mass protests in Jammu and Kashmir over the disappearance of the relic. In East Pakistan, Abdul Hai, a member of the Advisory Committee of the Islamic Board declared jihad against Hindus and other non-Muslims of East Pakistan.[1] While returning to Islamabad, the President of Pakistan Muhammad Ayub Khan made a statement at the Dhaka airport that he won't be responsible for any reaction in Pakistan in response to the Hazratbal incident.[2] The Pakistan Convention Muslim League declared 'Kashmir Day' on 3 January 1964.[3] On 4 January 1964, the relic was discovered and the miscreants were arrested.[4] However, the next day Pakistan Radio described the discovered relic as fake.[4]

Killings Edit

Khulna Edit

Abdus Sabur Khan, the Communications Minister of Pakistan, had forcibly occupied 30 bighas of land from one Rupchand Biswas, a Hindu landowner from Matikhali in 1960 and erected a three-storeyed building in it. Rupchand Biswas instituted a case against Khan which the latter lost. The court decreed Abdus Sabur Khan to pay 135,000 rupees. He approached Biswas for an out of the court settlement which he refused.[5] In the meanwhile, Majid Mian, the nominee of Abdus Sabur Khan lost in the district council elections.[6] After the loss, Khan and his party members including the Chairman of Chamkuri Union Board held the Hindus responsible for the defeat and began to threaten them with dire consequences. During this time the Hazratbal incident took place. Khan used the opportunity to teach the Hindus a lesson.

On 2 January 1964, the Hindus were not allowed to wear shoes, use umbrellas or ride a rickshaw as a mark of mourning for the loss of relic.[citation needed] In the afternoon, processions in Khulna mourning the loss of relic, went around the town shouting "Kill the Hindus".[7] At around 4 pm, attacks on Hindus started.[8] After 4 hours of mayhem, curfew was imposed in Khulna at 8 pm.[8] 3 January was declared as "Kashmir Day" by the Pakistan Convention Muslim League. A general strike was declared in Khulna. Abdus Sabur Khan addressed a huge gathering at Daulatpur industrial area in the outskirts of Khulna. Thousands of Muslims, mostly Biharis, armed with deadly weapons assembled at Daulatpur to listen to Khan. Khan delivered a rabidly anti-Hindu and anti-India speech, where he described the Hazratbal incident as a Hindu conspiracy. Immediately after the meeting, a 20,000 strong Muslim crowd spread out in the neighbouring localities of Senhati, Maheshwarpasha, Pabla, Chandani Mal and Daulatpur and began to loot Hindu properties and set them on fire. Many Hindus were killed or brutally assaulted. A section of the mob marched towards Khulna, disrupting rail and road traffic reaching the town at sunset. For the next four days an orgy of loot, arson, murder, rape and abduction continued in Khulna. The violence against the Hindus were led by the Muslim workers of Khulna Shipyard, Dada Co., Ispahani Co., and Kata Co. Soleman, the Chairman of Loppur Union supplied the attackers with firearms. About 200–300 Bengali Hindus were massacred at the Khulna Launch Ghat by Muslim marauders.[9] All the villages along the road from Khulna to Chalna were destroyed.[10] On 4 January, the violence spread to Mongla.[7] An estimated 300 Hindus were either killed or injured at Mongla port.[10]

Abdus Sabur Khan addressed three more meetings at Rampal. Leaflets were distributed, warning of terrible riots in Pakistan and annihilation of the Hindus. The Hindus were warned to leave Pakistan immediately.[11] At Loppur Bazar, he addressed another gathering, where he said that he would make shoes out of Hindu skin, torn from their back. Once the violence escalated, Khan became occupied with the marriage of his niece. The marriage was attended by Abdul Monem Khan (the Governor of East Pakistan) and Kazi Abdul Kader (member of the National Assembly and East Pakistani Minister of Food and Agriculture).[12] Arabinda Bhattacharyya, a reputed pleader of Khulna, repeatedly rang Khan for taking necessary action, but every time he excused himself by citing his unavailability due his niece's marriage.[13]

Dhaka Edit

On 13 January, a meeting was held at the Dhaka stadium regarding the Hazratbal incident.[14] On 14 and 15 January, Hindu passengers in the mail trains arriving at Dhaka from Chittagong and Sirajganj was asked to get down at Tongi and Tejgaon. Those who refused to get down were slaughtered.[15][16] On 15 January, a Muslim mob arrived at 20 Nawabpur Road, entered the house and struck off the head of the priest and desecrated the images of Radha Krishna. Four male members of the house were killed.[17] The Das Studio on Nawabpur Road was looted and burnt to ashes.[18] On the night of 15 January, the Hindu houses of Nagarkhanpur were attacked and looted.[19] On 15 January, the Ramakrishna Mission at Tikatuli was burnt. Three buildings, seven huts, one temple, one charitable hospital, one library and one students' hostel were completely destroyed.[20] Two Hindus were stabbed to death.[21] After the Hazratbal incident, the Hindu students hostel of East Pakistan University of Engineering and Technology were pelted with stones every night.[22] The Muslim students owing allegiance to the Jamaat-e-Islami began to call the Hindu students Indian spies.[22]

On 16 January, Krishna De of Central Bank, Pran Kumar De of United Industrial Bank and another Hindu employee of Baroda Bank were fleeing in a car after hiding in the bank premises for two days. Their car was stopped and they were killed.[17] The F.M.E School, public library, Vivekananda Physical Club and the Hiralal Lohia Charitable Hospital at Hiralal Sewagram were burnt.[23] Truckloads of dead bodies were brought to the hospitals from where they were sent to the burial grounds. Hundreds of Hindus were buried with military escorts. Even the identified bodies were not returned to their relatives.[24] In Rayerbazar, the Kumbhakars were attacked by the Bihari Muslims from Mohammadpur and the Noakhali Muslims from the Hazaribagh tanneries.[25] Each and every house were set on fire. 96 Bengali Hindus were killed in the massacre.[25] Many women were raped and many young girls were abducted.[25] The locality was ethnically cleansed of Bengali Hindus and renamed to Zafrabad.[26] Bani Bhaban, a Hindu boy's hostel at Ishwar Das Lane was broken into and completely looted. The boys escaped and took shelter in a relief camp.[21] Nari Shiksha Mandir was attacked, where Abani Guha Roy, the head clerk was killed and Jagajiban Bose, a senior teacher was stabbed.[21] In localities like Tikatuli and Wari, the walls were painted with slogans like Kill Hindus, Hindu Marwari Maro etc.[27] On 18 January, the 24-hour curfew was imposed, with troops patrolling the streets. The curfew was later extended till 8 am on 19 January.[28]

Hundreds of villages all around Dhaka city were burnt to ashes.[17] On 18 January, The Daily Ittefaq reported that 95% of the ruined houses belong to the Hindus in old Dhaka and about 100,000 Hindus were rendered homeless in Dhaka city.[29] On 23 January, The Hindu quoting the Pakistan authorities reported that around 1,000 persons were killed in communal violence in Dhaka for the last one week.[30] However, an American Peace Corps nurse stated that on 21 January there were 600 dead in Dhaka Medical College and Hospital alone.[30]

Narayanganj Edit

Karim, the General Manager of the Adamjee Group declared a holiday in the Adamjee Jute Mills on 13 and 14 January and spread a rumour that his brother had been killed in Kolkata.[23] On the night of 13 January, the workers of the Adamjee Jute Mills attacked the Hindu quarters, mostly inhabited by the workers of Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills No. 2 and set the Hindu houses on fire. Satyen Roy, the Manager of Dhakeshwari Cotton Mill No. 2 called Sunil Bose, the managing director at 3 am and reported that the mill was on fire and asked for police and military.[31] Early in the morning at about 5 AM, 20,000 workers of Adamjee Jute Mills broke into the compound of Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills No. 2 and resorted to indiscriminate looting, arson and murder. More than 700 Hindus, men, women and children were massacred. Several women were abducted.[32] At about 7 AM about 2,000 to 3,000 Hindu men, women and children rushed to the compound of Lakshminarayan Cotton Mills for safety. The mill was stopped and the workers rushed outside and closed the gates. Thousands of Hindus had assembled outside the gates, seeking shelter and the gates had to be opened to let them in. By 9 AM around 10,000 Hindus had taken shelter in the compound. Soon after a 2,000 strong Muslim mob armed with lathis and iron rods broke in and launched a severe assault on the hapless people in which three persons died and about a dozen were injured.[31] The house of Kshetranath Ghosh was attacked and looted. His family took shelter inside the mills.[19] The police arrived at 4 PM and provided a protection of 20 policemen. Within half an hour there was another attack in the outer compound in which one worker was killed.[31] By the evening about 25,000 Hindus taken shelter in the compound of Lakshminarayan Cotton Mills.[19] The Hindus who took refuge in the mill premises were without food for four days till 20 January.[23] Professor Richard Novak of Notre Dame College went to Narayanganj to take photographs of mass violence. He was stabbed to death at Lakhadgola, near the Adarsha Cotton Mills.[33]

On 14 January, Gosthabihari Saha, a well known businessman of Narayanganj was killed and his printing press Satyasadhana was looted and set on fire.[17] In the village of Panchasar, the miscreants killed Renubala Pain along with her two children and Shobharani Basu along with her two daughters.[17] In the village of Narasinghi, 350 Hindu houses were burnt down. One Bimala Sundari Pal was ruthlessly killed.[34] Sixteen members of the family of Barada Prasad Ray, the Union Board President of Maiman village were killed.[24] All the houses in the Hindu village of Murapara and burnt. Seventeen women were burnt to death.[34] In the village of Bhulta about 250 Hindus were mercilessly killed and seventeen burnt alive.[35]

On 17 February 623 Hindus were killed in Golakandail Union Council in Rupganj in Narayanganj sub-division. Some Muslim hooligans attacked Haran Ghosh's house at Ghoshpara, Narsingdi and set fire. There after they looted and set fire all the houses at Ghoshpara, Mudakpara(Kuripara), Baulpara, Paittalpara. Hooligans could not cross C & B road to enter other densely populated Hindu areas surrounding Narsingdi bazar as Muslims, mainly from Tekpara, resisted hooligans. People from disturbed villages took shelter at Narsingdi College building and some privately arranged houses under the care of some influential Muslims. In the Narayanganj sub-division alone about 3,500 Hindus were killed, 300 Hindu women were abducted, 31,000 Hindu dwellings were destroyed as a result of which 80,000 Hindus from 151 villages were rendered homeless.[20]

Rajshahi Edit

All the Hindu villagers in the village of Mainam near Nagaon in Rajshahi district, except two little girls were massacred.[22] Anti-Hindu violence took place in Durusha, where the Santhals were targeted. In Darsa village under Paba police station 5,000 people were killed. Thousands non-Muslims are taken shelter in a school but brutally it was burnt. And they have buried by digging like pond with banana trees. The riot occurred while DC of Rajshahi was PN Aziz and all Hindus are killed with burnt.[36]

Sylhet Edit

In Sylhet, the Hindus were forced to close their shops during Ramadan and kirtan was prohibited for 24 hours.[10] In the 35 odd tea gardens of Sylhet, the Hindu workers were pressed to convert to Islam. They were asked to take beef in lieu of mutton. On the day of Eid ul-Fitr, Basudev Sharma, who was considered a guru by thousands of Hindu workers, was forced to take beef.[24]

Mymensingh Edit

Lands belonging to Garo and Hajong people were grabbed in Nalitabari, Kalmakanda, Durgapur, Haluaghat and Sreebardi areas of the then Mymensingh district.[37]

Repressive measures Edit

On 12 January 1964, the East Pakistan government promulgated the East Pakistan Disturbed Persons (Rehabilitation) Ordinance (I of 1964), that prohibited the sale of immovable property by any Hindu. When the exodus started, the Hindus had no other option that to leave their properties and flee to India. Their assets were subsequently misappropriated by vested quarters of the Muslim leadership. The ordinance was challenged at the Dhaka High Court by Chittaranjan Sutar, where the government of East Pakistan lost the case.[38]

Manoranjan Dhar, an advocate of Dhaka High Court, former Finance Minister of East Pakistan and General Secretary of Pakistan National Congress was arrested from his residence in Mymensingh. Pulin De, a professor, former member of East Pakistan legislative assembly and Secretary of Pakistan Socialist Party was arrested from Dhalghat in Chittagong.

Press censorship Edit

The press reports were heavily censored in Pakistan. Photography was prohibited.[39] The Pakistan government imposed censorship on The Daily Ittefaq and Pakistan Observer for their unbiased reporting. In protest five dailies of East Pakistan stopped publication.[17] When Reuters reported that over 1,000 people had been killed in Dhaka alone, Pakistan government lodged an immediate protest.[15]

Exodus Edit

 
Hindu refugees from East Pakistan on their way to Kolkata.
 
Hindu Refugees reaching Kolkata after 1964 Khulna riots

Thousands of Hindus arrived in India as refugees. Everyday about 5,000 to 6,000 Hindus queued up in front of the Indian embassy in Dhaka to emigrate to India. But only 300 to 400 used to get the permit.[40] As a result of this migration, Khulna, the only Hindu-majority district in East Pakistan became a Muslim-majority district.[9] Large scale influx of Hindu refugees occurred in Jalpaiguri as a result of the oppression on the Indian chitmahals within East Pakistan by the East Pakistan Rifles.[10] On 2 March, The Globe and Mail reported that thousands of Hindus eager to emigrate to India are stranded in Dhaka.[41] According to Indian authorities, an estimated 135,000 Bengali Hindu refugees had arrived in West Bengal.[42] During this time, many of the remaining Hindu residents of Panamnagar left for India.[43]

Eviction of tribals Edit

 
Garo refugees from East Pakistan in Garo Hills, Assam, India.

More than 75,000 refugees, of which about 35,000 were Christians, from East Pakistan arrived into Assam within one and half months since the genocide began. The refugees, mostly Garos, Hajongs and Dalus from Mymensingh took refuge in Garo Hills in Assam, now in Meghalaya.[44] The Observer reported that 12 provisional camps have been set up at Tura in the Garo Hills for the 50,000 refugees.[44] Lakshmi Menon, the Deputy Foreign Minister of India stated at the Lok Sabha that a column of 1,000 refugees from Mymensingh had been fired at by the East Pakistan Rifles, while they were crossing over to India.[45] By 28 March, around 78,000 tribal refugees had migrated from Mymensingh District in East Pakistan to present day Meghalaya in India.[42]

The forced migration of the tribal people, especially Christian tribal created a lot of stir in the international community.[42] Realizing the consequences, the Pakistan government made an effort to woo the tribal people back home. The district administration of Mymensingh appealed to the refugees to return. The Archbishop of Dhaka met President Ayub Khan and wrote a letter appealing to the tribal refugees to come back home.[42] The Indian authorities announced the appeal of the Pakistan government and the Archbishop of Dhaka to the refugees in the camps and offered them free transportation to the border. The tribal refugees rejected the appeal and declined to go back to Pakistan.[42]

Relief and rehabilitation in India Edit

In India, the refugees were provided relief in temporary relief camps in Assam, West Bengal and Tripura. Later they were provided rehabilitation in different parts of India. 6,000 Chakmas were provided shelter at a relief camp in Silchar.[16] 12 provisional camps were set up at Tura in Garo Hills to provide relief to around 50,000 Garos and other tribals from East Pakistan.[46]

Relief measures in Pakistan Edit

In the afternoon of 15 January 1964, around 300 Bengali Hindus of neighbouring area, including women and children took refuge in the house of Swadesh Nag at Hemendra Das Road in Sutrapur, Dhaka. Nag arranged for a meal of rice and lentils for the refugees. Next day, the Government of East Pakistan began shifting the Hindu minorities from the disturbed areas of Dhaka in government trucks into the compound of Dhaka Court. Soon, the court premises were packed to capacity. On 17 January, the government shift many refugees to Jagannath College, where a relief camp had been opened. At the Jagannath College, there were around 7,000 to 10,000 refugees. However, there were no arrangement for latrines. As a result, the condition of the camp soon became unhygienic.[47] The Bengali Hindus of Tantibazar and Shankharibazar fed the refugees at the camp for two days with khichuri.[47] All together 25 relief camps were opened in Dhaka,[48] out of which only one was run by the Government and the rest by private Hindu organizations. A relief camp was opened at Jagannath Hall of Dhaka University where 800 people including three legislators of the East Pakistan assembly took shelter.[49] According to local newspapers there were around 50,000 to 80,000 Hindus in the 20 relief camps by last week of January.[50] By 28 March the situation had calmed.

The violence against the minority Bengali Hindus in East Pakistan put a section of the educated Muslims to shame.[50] During this time, some Muslim leaders of East Pakistan like Ataur Rahaman Khan, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Mamud Ali, Zalur Hossain and Tofazzal Hossain visited the refugee camps.[47]

Depiction in culture Edit

Amitav Ghosh's 1988 English novel The Shadow Lines has the riots as the underlying theme. Across Borders by Shuvashree Ghosh also has the riots as the underlying theme. Chhimchhangar Duta Par, a 1965 Assamese novel by Umakanta Sharma has the persecution and subsequent exodus of Garos from East Pakistan during the riots as the central theme.[citation needed] Chitra Nadir Pare, a 1999 Bengali film by Bangladeshi filmmaker Tanvir Mokammel, has the riots in the backdrop.[51]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 89. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  2. ^ Baidya, Kalidas (2005). Bangalir Muktiyuddhe Antaraler Sheikh Mujib. Kolkata: Shankar Karmakar. p. 84.
  3. ^ Trivedi, Rabindranath (23 July 2007). . Asian Tribune. World Institute for Asian Studies. 12 (492). Archived from the original on 31 March 2020. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  4. ^ a b Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 48. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  5. ^ Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  6. ^ Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  7. ^ a b Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  8. ^ a b Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  9. ^ a b Ghosh Dastidar, Sachi (2008). Empire's Last Casualty: Indian Subcontinent's vanishing Hindu and other Minorities. Kolkata: Firma KLM. p. 170. ISBN 978-81-7102-151-2.
  10. ^ a b c d Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 95. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  11. ^ Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 54. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  12. ^ "none". The Morning News. 6 January 1964.
  13. ^ Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 57. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  14. ^ Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 66. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  15. ^ a b Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 102. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  16. ^ a b Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 101. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  18. ^ Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 105. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  19. ^ a b c Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 61. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  20. ^ a b Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 96. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  21. ^ a b c Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  22. ^ a b c Roy, Tathagata (2002). My People, Uprooted: A Saga of the Hindus of Eastern Bengal. Kolkata: Ratna Prakashan. pp. 220–221. ISBN 81-85709-67-X.
  23. ^ a b c Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  24. ^ a b c Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 103. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  25. ^ a b c Das, Swapan Kumar (30 October 2010). . Kaler Kantho (in Bengali). Dhaka. Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  26. ^ Ahmed, Mahiuddin (16 November 2012). প্রতিমা ভাঙেনি, ভেঙেছে আস্থা ও বিশ্বাস. Prothom Alo (in Bengali). Dhaka. Archived from the original on 29 August 2013. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  27. ^ Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  28. ^ "Dacca: Troops Bring Peace". The Straits Times. Singapore. 19 January 1964. Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  29. ^ "none". The Daily Ittefaq. Dhaka. 18 January 1964.
  30. ^ a b "1,000 Killed in Riots". The Hindu. Madras. 23 January 1964. from the original on 29 January 2014. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  31. ^ a b c Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 60. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  32. ^ Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 64. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  33. ^ Novak, Michael (December 2008 – January 2009). . The American Spectator. Archived from the original on 10 December 2011. Retrieved 2 May 2011.
  34. ^ a b Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 99. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  35. ^ Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 100. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  36. ^ . Church of Bangladesh. Archived from the original on 19 July 2013. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  37. ^ "Bangladesh: Indigenous Leaders Demand Land Commission For Restoration of Their Dispossessed Lands in Greater Mymensigh Area". Commercial Pressures on Land. International Land Coalition. Archived from the original on 1 September 2013. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  38. ^ Ray, Debojyoti (2005). Keno Udbastu Hote Holo (in Bengali) (Revised 2nd ed.). Kolkata: Vivekananda Sahitya Kendra. p. 60. from the original on 7 February 2023. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
  39. ^ Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 91. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  40. ^ Baidya, Kalidas (2005). Bangalir Muktiyuddhe Antaraler Sheikh Mujib. Kolkata: Shankar Karmakar. p. 91.
  41. ^ "none". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. 2 March 1964.
  42. ^ a b c d e Brady, Thomas F. (5 April 1964). "Moslem-Hindu Violence Flares Again". The New York Times. New York. from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  43. ^ Ahmed, Iftekhar (2006). "A Participatory Approach to Conservation: Working With Community To Save The Cultural Heritage of Panamnagar" (PDF). BRAC University Journal. Dhaka. 3 (2): 26. (PDF) from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  44. ^ a b Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 108. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  45. ^ Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 114. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  46. ^ Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 109. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  47. ^ a b c Mukhopadhyay, Kali Prasad (2007). Partition, Bengal and After: The Great Tragedy of India. New Delhi: Reference Press. p. 47. ISBN 978-81-8405-034-9.
  48. ^ Bhattacharyya, S.K. (1987). Genocide in East Pakistan/Bangladesh. Houston: A. Ghosh. p. 106. ISBN 0-9611614-3-4.
  49. ^ Halder, Dhirendra Nath. "Jagannath Hall – Background". Jagannath Hall Alumni Association UK. from the original on 3 January 2014. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  50. ^ a b Nevard, Jacques (24 January 1964). "Riots Arouse Moslem Shame". The New York Times. New York. from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  51. ^ Mukherjee, Srideep (June 2022). "Mangled Homes, Tangled Homeland: Religion and Gender in Tanvir Mokammel's Chitra Nadir Pare". BioScope. 13 (1): 117–135. doi:10.1177/09749276221100280. S2CID 249631876.

1964, east, pakistan, riots, refer, massacre, ethnic, cleansing, bengali, hindus, from, east, pakistan, wake, alleged, theft, what, believed, prophet, hair, from, hazratbal, shrine, jammu, kashmir, india, salient, feature, pogroms, urban, nature, selective, ta. The 1964 East Pakistan riots refer to the massacre and ethnic cleansing of Bengali Hindus from East Pakistan in the wake of an alleged theft of what was believed to be the Prophet s hair from the Hazratbal shrine in Jammu and Kashmir in India The salient feature of the pogroms was its urban nature and selective targeting of Bengali Hindu owned industries and merchant establishments in the capital city of Dhaka This resulted in unending waves of Bengali Hindu refugees in neighbouring West Bengal The refugee rehabilitation became a national problem in India and hundreds of refugees were resettled in Dandakaranya region of Odisha amp Madhya Pradesh now in Chhattisgarh 1964 East Pakistan Ethnic CleansingRioters attacking the Dhakeshwari Temple in DhakaLocationEast PakistanDate2 January 1964 28 March 1964TargetBengali Hindus GarosAttack typeMassacre Forced conversion Plunder Arson Abduction and RapePerpetratorsEast Pakistan Police Ansars Army East Pakistan Rifles Local MuslimsMotive1963 Hazratbal incident Contents 1 Background 2 Killings 2 1 Khulna 2 2 Dhaka 2 3 Narayanganj 2 4 Rajshahi 2 5 Sylhet 2 6 Mymensingh 3 Repressive measures 3 1 Press censorship 4 Exodus 4 1 Eviction of tribals 4 2 Relief and rehabilitation in India 5 Relief measures in Pakistan 6 Depiction in culture 7 See also 8 ReferencesBackground EditOn 27 December 1963 the hair of Muhammad went missing from the Hazratbal Shrine in Srinagar in Kashmir There were mass protests in Jammu and Kashmir over the disappearance of the relic In East Pakistan Abdul Hai a member of the Advisory Committee of the Islamic Board declared jihad against Hindus and other non Muslims of East Pakistan 1 While returning to Islamabad the President of Pakistan Muhammad Ayub Khan made a statement at the Dhaka airport that he won t be responsible for any reaction in Pakistan in response to the Hazratbal incident 2 The Pakistan Convention Muslim League declared Kashmir Day on 3 January 1964 3 On 4 January 1964 the relic was discovered and the miscreants were arrested 4 However the next day Pakistan Radio described the discovered relic as fake 4 Killings EditKhulna Edit Abdus Sabur Khan the Communications Minister of Pakistan had forcibly occupied 30 bighas of land from one Rupchand Biswas a Hindu landowner from Matikhali in 1960 and erected a three storeyed building in it Rupchand Biswas instituted a case against Khan which the latter lost The court decreed Abdus Sabur Khan to pay 135 000 rupees He approached Biswas for an out of the court settlement which he refused 5 In the meanwhile Majid Mian the nominee of Abdus Sabur Khan lost in the district council elections 6 After the loss Khan and his party members including the Chairman of Chamkuri Union Board held the Hindus responsible for the defeat and began to threaten them with dire consequences During this time the Hazratbal incident took place Khan used the opportunity to teach the Hindus a lesson On 2 January 1964 the Hindus were not allowed to wear shoes use umbrellas or ride a rickshaw as a mark of mourning for the loss of relic citation needed In the afternoon processions in Khulna mourning the loss of relic went around the town shouting Kill the Hindus 7 At around 4 pm attacks on Hindus started 8 After 4 hours of mayhem curfew was imposed in Khulna at 8 pm 8 3 January was declared as Kashmir Day by the Pakistan Convention Muslim League A general strike was declared in Khulna Abdus Sabur Khan addressed a huge gathering at Daulatpur industrial area in the outskirts of Khulna Thousands of Muslims mostly Biharis armed with deadly weapons assembled at Daulatpur to listen to Khan Khan delivered a rabidly anti Hindu and anti India speech where he described the Hazratbal incident as a Hindu conspiracy Immediately after the meeting a 20 000 strong Muslim crowd spread out in the neighbouring localities of Senhati Maheshwarpasha Pabla Chandani Mal and Daulatpur and began to loot Hindu properties and set them on fire Many Hindus were killed or brutally assaulted A section of the mob marched towards Khulna disrupting rail and road traffic reaching the town at sunset For the next four days an orgy of loot arson murder rape and abduction continued in Khulna The violence against the Hindus were led by the Muslim workers of Khulna Shipyard Dada Co Ispahani Co and Kata Co Soleman the Chairman of Loppur Union supplied the attackers with firearms About 200 300 Bengali Hindus were massacred at the Khulna Launch Ghat by Muslim marauders 9 All the villages along the road from Khulna to Chalna were destroyed 10 On 4 January the violence spread to Mongla 7 An estimated 300 Hindus were either killed or injured at Mongla port 10 Abdus Sabur Khan addressed three more meetings at Rampal Leaflets were distributed warning of terrible riots in Pakistan and annihilation of the Hindus The Hindus were warned to leave Pakistan immediately 11 At Loppur Bazar he addressed another gathering where he said that he would make shoes out of Hindu skin torn from their back Once the violence escalated Khan became occupied with the marriage of his niece The marriage was attended by Abdul Monem Khan the Governor of East Pakistan and Kazi Abdul Kader member of the National Assembly and East Pakistani Minister of Food and Agriculture 12 Arabinda Bhattacharyya a reputed pleader of Khulna repeatedly rang Khan for taking necessary action but every time he excused himself by citing his unavailability due his niece s marriage 13 Dhaka Edit On 13 January a meeting was held at the Dhaka stadium regarding the Hazratbal incident 14 On 14 and 15 January Hindu passengers in the mail trains arriving at Dhaka from Chittagong and Sirajganj was asked to get down at Tongi and Tejgaon Those who refused to get down were slaughtered 15 16 On 15 January a Muslim mob arrived at 20 Nawabpur Road entered the house and struck off the head of the priest and desecrated the images of Radha Krishna Four male members of the house were killed 17 The Das Studio on Nawabpur Road was looted and burnt to ashes 18 On the night of 15 January the Hindu houses of Nagarkhanpur were attacked and looted 19 On 15 January the Ramakrishna Mission at Tikatuli was burnt Three buildings seven huts one temple one charitable hospital one library and one students hostel were completely destroyed 20 Two Hindus were stabbed to death 21 After the Hazratbal incident the Hindu students hostel of East Pakistan University of Engineering and Technology were pelted with stones every night 22 The Muslim students owing allegiance to the Jamaat e Islami began to call the Hindu students Indian spies 22 On 16 January Krishna De of Central Bank Pran Kumar De of United Industrial Bank and another Hindu employee of Baroda Bank were fleeing in a car after hiding in the bank premises for two days Their car was stopped and they were killed 17 The F M E School public library Vivekananda Physical Club and the Hiralal Lohia Charitable Hospital at Hiralal Sewagram were burnt 23 Truckloads of dead bodies were brought to the hospitals from where they were sent to the burial grounds Hundreds of Hindus were buried with military escorts Even the identified bodies were not returned to their relatives 24 In Rayerbazar the Kumbhakars were attacked by the Bihari Muslims from Mohammadpur and the Noakhali Muslims from the Hazaribagh tanneries 25 Each and every house were set on fire 96 Bengali Hindus were killed in the massacre 25 Many women were raped and many young girls were abducted 25 The locality was ethnically cleansed of Bengali Hindus and renamed to Zafrabad 26 Bani Bhaban a Hindu boy s hostel at Ishwar Das Lane was broken into and completely looted The boys escaped and took shelter in a relief camp 21 Nari Shiksha Mandir was attacked where Abani Guha Roy the head clerk was killed and Jagajiban Bose a senior teacher was stabbed 21 In localities like Tikatuli and Wari the walls were painted with slogans like Kill Hindus Hindu Marwari Maro etc 27 On 18 January the 24 hour curfew was imposed with troops patrolling the streets The curfew was later extended till 8 am on 19 January 28 Hundreds of villages all around Dhaka city were burnt to ashes 17 On 18 January The Daily Ittefaq reported that 95 of the ruined houses belong to the Hindus in old Dhaka and about 100 000 Hindus were rendered homeless in Dhaka city 29 On 23 January The Hindu quoting the Pakistan authorities reported that around 1 000 persons were killed in communal violence in Dhaka for the last one week 30 However an American Peace Corps nurse stated that on 21 January there were 600 dead in Dhaka Medical College and Hospital alone 30 Narayanganj Edit Karim the General Manager of the Adamjee Group declared a holiday in the Adamjee Jute Mills on 13 and 14 January and spread a rumour that his brother had been killed in Kolkata 23 On the night of 13 January the workers of the Adamjee Jute Mills attacked the Hindu quarters mostly inhabited by the workers of Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills No 2 and set the Hindu houses on fire Satyen Roy the Manager of Dhakeshwari Cotton Mill No 2 called Sunil Bose the managing director at 3 am and reported that the mill was on fire and asked for police and military 31 Early in the morning at about 5 AM 20 000 workers of Adamjee Jute Mills broke into the compound of Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills No 2 and resorted to indiscriminate looting arson and murder More than 700 Hindus men women and children were massacred Several women were abducted 32 At about 7 AM about 2 000 to 3 000 Hindu men women and children rushed to the compound of Lakshminarayan Cotton Mills for safety The mill was stopped and the workers rushed outside and closed the gates Thousands of Hindus had assembled outside the gates seeking shelter and the gates had to be opened to let them in By 9 AM around 10 000 Hindus had taken shelter in the compound Soon after a 2 000 strong Muslim mob armed with lathis and iron rods broke in and launched a severe assault on the hapless people in which three persons died and about a dozen were injured 31 The house of Kshetranath Ghosh was attacked and looted His family took shelter inside the mills 19 The police arrived at 4 PM and provided a protection of 20 policemen Within half an hour there was another attack in the outer compound in which one worker was killed 31 By the evening about 25 000 Hindus taken shelter in the compound of Lakshminarayan Cotton Mills 19 The Hindus who took refuge in the mill premises were without food for four days till 20 January 23 Professor Richard Novak of Notre Dame College went to Narayanganj to take photographs of mass violence He was stabbed to death at Lakhadgola near the Adarsha Cotton Mills 33 On 14 January Gosthabihari Saha a well known businessman of Narayanganj was killed and his printing press Satyasadhana was looted and set on fire 17 In the village of Panchasar the miscreants killed Renubala Pain along with her two children and Shobharani Basu along with her two daughters 17 In the village of Narasinghi 350 Hindu houses were burnt down One Bimala Sundari Pal was ruthlessly killed 34 Sixteen members of the family of Barada Prasad Ray the Union Board President of Maiman village were killed 24 All the houses in the Hindu village of Murapara and burnt Seventeen women were burnt to death 34 In the village of Bhulta about 250 Hindus were mercilessly killed and seventeen burnt alive 35 On 17 February 623 Hindus were killed in Golakandail Union Council in Rupganj in Narayanganj sub division Some Muslim hooligans attacked Haran Ghosh s house at Ghoshpara Narsingdi and set fire There after they looted and set fire all the houses at Ghoshpara Mudakpara Kuripara Baulpara Paittalpara Hooligans could not cross C amp B road to enter other densely populated Hindu areas surrounding Narsingdi bazar as Muslims mainly from Tekpara resisted hooligans People from disturbed villages took shelter at Narsingdi College building and some privately arranged houses under the care of some influential Muslims In the Narayanganj sub division alone about 3 500 Hindus were killed 300 Hindu women were abducted 31 000 Hindu dwellings were destroyed as a result of which 80 000 Hindus from 151 villages were rendered homeless 20 Rajshahi Edit All the Hindu villagers in the village of Mainam near Nagaon in Rajshahi district except two little girls were massacred 22 Anti Hindu violence took place in Durusha where the Santhals were targeted In Darsa village under Paba police station 5 000 people were killed Thousands non Muslims are taken shelter in a school but brutally it was burnt And they have buried by digging like pond with banana trees The riot occurred while DC of Rajshahi was PN Aziz and all Hindus are killed with burnt 36 Sylhet Edit In Sylhet the Hindus were forced to close their shops during Ramadan and kirtan was prohibited for 24 hours 10 In the 35 odd tea gardens of Sylhet the Hindu workers were pressed to convert to Islam They were asked to take beef in lieu of mutton On the day of Eid ul Fitr Basudev Sharma who was considered a guru by thousands of Hindu workers was forced to take beef 24 Mymensingh Edit Lands belonging to Garo and Hajong people were grabbed in Nalitabari Kalmakanda Durgapur Haluaghat and Sreebardi areas of the then Mymensingh district 37 Repressive measures EditOn 12 January 1964 the East Pakistan government promulgated the East Pakistan Disturbed Persons Rehabilitation Ordinance I of 1964 that prohibited the sale of immovable property by any Hindu When the exodus started the Hindus had no other option that to leave their properties and flee to India Their assets were subsequently misappropriated by vested quarters of the Muslim leadership The ordinance was challenged at the Dhaka High Court by Chittaranjan Sutar where the government of East Pakistan lost the case 38 Manoranjan Dhar an advocate of Dhaka High Court former Finance Minister of East Pakistan and General Secretary of Pakistan National Congress was arrested from his residence in Mymensingh Pulin De a professor former member of East Pakistan legislative assembly and Secretary of Pakistan Socialist Party was arrested from Dhalghat in Chittagong Press censorship Edit The press reports were heavily censored in Pakistan Photography was prohibited 39 The Pakistan government imposed censorship on The Daily Ittefaq and Pakistan Observer for their unbiased reporting In protest five dailies of East Pakistan stopped publication 17 When Reuters reported that over 1 000 people had been killed in Dhaka alone Pakistan government lodged an immediate protest 15 Exodus Edit nbsp Hindu refugees from East Pakistan on their way to Kolkata nbsp Hindu Refugees reaching Kolkata after 1964 Khulna riotsThousands of Hindus arrived in India as refugees Everyday about 5 000 to 6 000 Hindus queued up in front of the Indian embassy in Dhaka to emigrate to India But only 300 to 400 used to get the permit 40 As a result of this migration Khulna the only Hindu majority district in East Pakistan became a Muslim majority district 9 Large scale influx of Hindu refugees occurred in Jalpaiguri as a result of the oppression on the Indian chitmahals within East Pakistan by the East Pakistan Rifles 10 On 2 March The Globe and Mail reported that thousands of Hindus eager to emigrate to India are stranded in Dhaka 41 According to Indian authorities an estimated 135 000 Bengali Hindu refugees had arrived in West Bengal 42 During this time many of the remaining Hindu residents of Panamnagar left for India 43 Eviction of tribals Edit nbsp Garo refugees from East Pakistan in Garo Hills Assam India More than 75 000 refugees of which about 35 000 were Christians from East Pakistan arrived into Assam within one and half months since the genocide began The refugees mostly Garos Hajongs and Dalus from Mymensingh took refuge in Garo Hills in Assam now in Meghalaya 44 The Observer reported that 12 provisional camps have been set up at Tura in the Garo Hills for the 50 000 refugees 44 Lakshmi Menon the Deputy Foreign Minister of India stated at the Lok Sabha that a column of 1 000 refugees from Mymensingh had been fired at by the East Pakistan Rifles while they were crossing over to India 45 By 28 March around 78 000 tribal refugees had migrated from Mymensingh District in East Pakistan to present day Meghalaya in India 42 The forced migration of the tribal people especially Christian tribal created a lot of stir in the international community 42 Realizing the consequences the Pakistan government made an effort to woo the tribal people back home The district administration of Mymensingh appealed to the refugees to return The Archbishop of Dhaka met President Ayub Khan and wrote a letter appealing to the tribal refugees to come back home 42 The Indian authorities announced the appeal of the Pakistan government and the Archbishop of Dhaka to the refugees in the camps and offered them free transportation to the border The tribal refugees rejected the appeal and declined to go back to Pakistan 42 Relief and rehabilitation in India Edit In India the refugees were provided relief in temporary relief camps in Assam West Bengal and Tripura Later they were provided rehabilitation in different parts of India 6 000 Chakmas were provided shelter at a relief camp in Silchar 16 12 provisional camps were set up at Tura in Garo Hills to provide relief to around 50 000 Garos and other tribals from East Pakistan 46 Relief measures in Pakistan EditIn the afternoon of 15 January 1964 around 300 Bengali Hindus of neighbouring area including women and children took refuge in the house of Swadesh Nag at Hemendra Das Road in Sutrapur Dhaka Nag arranged for a meal of rice and lentils for the refugees Next day the Government of East Pakistan began shifting the Hindu minorities from the disturbed areas of Dhaka in government trucks into the compound of Dhaka Court Soon the court premises were packed to capacity On 17 January the government shift many refugees to Jagannath College where a relief camp had been opened At the Jagannath College there were around 7 000 to 10 000 refugees However there were no arrangement for latrines As a result the condition of the camp soon became unhygienic 47 The Bengali Hindus of Tantibazar and Shankharibazar fed the refugees at the camp for two days with khichuri 47 All together 25 relief camps were opened in Dhaka 48 out of which only one was run by the Government and the rest by private Hindu organizations A relief camp was opened at Jagannath Hall of Dhaka University where 800 people including three legislators of the East Pakistan assembly took shelter 49 According to local newspapers there were around 50 000 to 80 000 Hindus in the 20 relief camps by last week of January 50 By 28 March the situation had calmed The violence against the minority Bengali Hindus in East Pakistan put a section of the educated Muslims to shame 50 During this time some Muslim leaders of East Pakistan like Ataur Rahaman Khan Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Mamud Ali Zalur Hossain and Tofazzal Hossain visited the refugee camps 47 Depiction in culture EditAmitav Ghosh s 1988 English novel The Shadow Lines has the riots as the underlying theme Across Borders by Shuvashree Ghosh also has the riots as the underlying theme Chhimchhangar Duta Par a 1965 Assamese novel by Umakanta Sharma has the persecution and subsequent exodus of Garos from East Pakistan during the riots as the central theme citation needed Chitra Nadir Pare a 1999 Bengali film by Bangladeshi filmmaker Tanvir Mokammel has the riots in the backdrop 51 See also Edit1964 East Pakistan riots Persecution of Hindus in Bangladesh Freedom of religion in BangladeshReferences Edit Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 89 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 Baidya Kalidas 2005 Bangalir Muktiyuddhe Antaraler Sheikh Mujib Kolkata Shankar Karmakar p 84 Trivedi Rabindranath 23 July 2007 The Legacy of the plight of Hindus in Bangladesh Part VII Bengali Muslims Fight Communalism in 1964 Asian Tribune World Institute for Asian Studies 12 492 Archived from the original on 31 March 2020 Retrieved 27 August 2013 a b Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 48 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 53 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 52 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 a b Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 56 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 a b Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 58 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 a b Ghosh Dastidar Sachi 2008 Empire s Last Casualty Indian Subcontinent s vanishing Hindu and other Minorities Kolkata Firma KLM p 170 ISBN 978 81 7102 151 2 a b c d Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 95 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 54 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 none The Morning News 6 January 1964 Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 57 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 66 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 a b Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 102 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 a b Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 50 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 a b c d e f Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 101 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 105 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 a b c Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 61 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 a b Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 96 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 a b c Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 68 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 a b c Roy Tathagata 2002 My People Uprooted A Saga of the Hindus of Eastern Bengal Kolkata Ratna Prakashan pp 220 221 ISBN 81 85709 67 X a b c Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 62 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 a b c Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 103 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 a b c Das Swapan Kumar 30 October 2010 র য রব জ র র প লপ ড এখন শ ধ ন ম ই Kaler Kantho in Bengali Dhaka Archived from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 29 August 2013 Ahmed Mahiuddin 16 November 2012 প রত ম ভ ঙ ন ভ ঙ ছ আস থ ও ব শ ব স Prothom Alo in Bengali Dhaka Archived from the original on 29 August 2013 Retrieved 29 August 2013 Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 70 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 Dacca Troops Bring Peace The Straits Times Singapore 19 January 1964 Retrieved 29 August 2013 none The Daily Ittefaq Dhaka 18 January 1964 a b 1 000 Killed in Riots The Hindu Madras 23 January 1964 Archived from the original on 29 January 2014 Retrieved 17 August 2014 a b c Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 60 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 64 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 Novak Michael December 2008 January 2009 The Day My Brother Was Murdered The American Spectator Archived from the original on 10 December 2011 Retrieved 2 May 2011 a b Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 99 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 100 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 Rajshahi Deanery Church of Bangladesh Archived from the original on 19 July 2013 Retrieved 27 August 2013 Bangladesh Indigenous Leaders Demand Land Commission For Restoration of Their Dispossessed Lands in Greater Mymensigh Area Commercial Pressures on Land International Land Coalition Archived from the original on 1 September 2013 Retrieved 1 September 2013 Ray Debojyoti 2005 Keno Udbastu Hote Holo in Bengali Revised 2nd ed Kolkata Vivekananda Sahitya Kendra p 60 Archived from the original on 7 February 2023 Retrieved 10 September 2021 Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 91 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 Baidya Kalidas 2005 Bangalir Muktiyuddhe Antaraler Sheikh Mujib Kolkata Shankar Karmakar p 91 none The Globe and Mail Toronto 2 March 1964 a b c d e Brady Thomas F 5 April 1964 Moslem Hindu Violence Flares Again The New York Times New York Archived from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 17 August 2014 Ahmed Iftekhar 2006 A Participatory Approach to Conservation Working With Community To Save The Cultural Heritage of Panamnagar PDF BRAC University Journal Dhaka 3 2 26 Archived PDF from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 17 August 2014 a b Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 108 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 114 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 109 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 a b c Mukhopadhyay Kali Prasad 2007 Partition Bengal and After The Great Tragedy of India New Delhi Reference Press p 47 ISBN 978 81 8405 034 9 Bhattacharyya S K 1987 Genocide in East Pakistan Bangladesh Houston A Ghosh p 106 ISBN 0 9611614 3 4 Halder Dhirendra Nath Jagannath Hall Background Jagannath Hall Alumni Association UK Archived from the original on 3 January 2014 Retrieved 1 September 2013 a b Nevard Jacques 24 January 1964 Riots Arouse Moslem Shame The New York Times New York Archived from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 17 August 2014 Mukherjee Srideep June 2022 Mangled Homes Tangled Homeland Religion and Gender in Tanvir Mokammel s Chitra Nadir Pare BioScope 13 1 117 135 doi 10 1177 09749276221100280 S2CID 249631876 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1964 East Pakistan riots amp oldid 1177586507, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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