The Shaheed Minar
Kazi, a BSc student at Lancaster shares about International Mother Language Day:
As a child, my family and I would visit the Shaheed Minar early on February 21st to pay our respects to the martyrs. It was a solemn yet celebratory occasion, filled with pride and unity as we enjoyed street food and markets. We'd also make makeshift monuments with our art teacher at school, paying respects with flowers. The atmosphere, whether at the actual monument or the school's tribute, always felt unified and proud.
The Shaheed Minar (Martyr's Monument) in Dhaka, Bangladesh, commemorates those killed during the Bengali Language Movement demonstrations of 1952. On February 21 and 22, students and activists were tragically killed by Pakistani police for demanding official status for their native tongue, Bengali.
A makeshift monument erected by students was quickly demolished. However, the Language Movement gained momentum, leading to Bengali gaining official status in Pakistan (alongside Urdu) in 1956. Bangladeshi sculptors Hamidur Rahman and Novera Ahmed designed the current Shaheed Minar. Despite construction delays, it was completed in 1963. Destroyed during the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War, it was rebuilt after independence.