Although Bangladesh
has existed as an independent country only since the late 20th century, its
national character within a broader South Asian context dates to the ancient
past. The country’s history, then, is intertwined with that of India,
Pakistan,
and other countries of the area. The land
of Bangladesh, mainly a delta formed
by the Padma
(Ganges
[Ganga]) and the Jamuna (Brahmaputra)
rivers in the northeastern portion of the Indian subcontinent, is protected by
forests to the west and a myriad of watercourses in the centre. As such, it was
long the inaccessible frontier beyond the north Indian plain and therefore was
home to a distinctive regional culture. In early times a number of independent
principalities flourished in the region—called Bengal—including
Gangaridai, Vanga, Gauda,
Pundra, and Samatata, among others. In the 14th century Shamsuddin Ilyas Shah
was instrumental in unifying many of these principalities. The Mughals
added more territories, including Bihar and Orissa (now
states of India),
to constitute Suba Bangalah, which the British colonial administration later
called the Bengal Presidency. In 1947, when British colonial rule ended, a
downsized province of Bengal was partitioned into East Bengal and West Bengal. East Bengal was renamed East Pakistan in
1955, and in 1971 it became Bangladesh.
Buddhist, Hindu, and Muslim dynasties until c. 1700
From the 3rd century bce Buddhism
flourished as the Mauryan
emperors extended their influence in Bengal.
Under the Gupta
kings, who reigned from the early 4th to the late 6th century ce, Hinduism reestablished its hold, but Buddhism
did not fully disappear. The two religions coexisted under the Pala
(8th–12th century) dynasty, as well as under the Chandra (10th–11th century)
dynasty in the southeast. By the end of the 11th century, the Senas,
who were strongly Hindu, had gained control over a large part of Bengal.
As early as the 9th century, Arab traders had taken Islam to Bengal. About 1200, Muslim invaders from the northwest
overthrew the Senas. Muslim rule culminated in the Mughal
dynasty (16th–18th century). In eastern Bengal,
as in much of the northern part of the Indian subcontinent, Islam became the
religion of the majority.
Muslim rule in Bengal promoted a society
that was not only pluralistic but also syncretic to some degree. The rulers
largely remained uninterested in preaching religion; rather, they concentrated
on incorporating local communities into the state system. In their
administration, high office holders, influential traders, eminent literati, and
musicians came from diverse religious traditions. Nevertheless, practitioners
of Sufism
(mystical Islam) and Muslim saints did indeed preach Islam, and Muslim settlers
received patronage. Although high-caste Hindus received land grants under early
Muslim rule, under the Mughals most grants were awarded to Muslim settlers.
These settlers developed an agrarian economy in Bengal
that ultimately helped the spread of Islam. Meanwhile, the extensive interaction
between Islam and Hinduism was reflected in social behaviour and the
flourishing of various cults, notably that of the Hindu saint Caitanya
(1486–1533). In contrast to more orthodox forms of Hinduism, the Caitanya
sect—like Islam—was open to all members of society, regardless of caste or
social rank.
Under the Mughals the political boundaries of Bengal expanded to become Suba
Bangalah (the Province
of Bengal), and economic
activity increased.
The British period, c. 1700–1947
During the rule of the emperor Aurangzeb
(reigned 1658–1707), the English East
India Company was permitted to establish its base at Calcutta (Kolkata).
The British gained strength in the region as the Mughal empire weakened. In 1757,
following a battle in the town of Plassey
between forces led by British soldier Robert
Clive and the Mughal nawab (viceroy) Sirāj-ud-Dawlah,
the East India Company emerged as the dominant political power in Suba
Bangalah. Under Gov.-Gen. Charles
Cornwallis (served 1786–93), a permanent settlement system was established
in the territory—now called the Bengal Presidency—whereby property rights were
granted in perpetuity to local zamindars (landlords). This property
policy indirectly stimulated the growth of a new landed middle class—especially
in Calcutta—called
the bhandralok. Initially, the bhandralok was dominated by
upper-caste Hindus, but the Muslim presence began to increase toward the end of
the 19th century. In time, this middle class emerged as the most active
advocate of Indian self-government.
The province of Bengal was almost impossible to administer, even
after Assam
was made a separate province in 1874. In 1905, largely at the initiative of the
viceroy George
Nathaniel Curzon, two new provinces were created, ostensibly on a
geopolitical basis; these provinces were Western Bengal, including Bihar and
Orissa, and Eastern Bengal and Assam.
With its capital at Calcutta, Western Bengal had
a Hindu majority, while the province
of Eastern Bengal and Assam, with its capital at Dhaka, was
predominantly Muslim. Aside from increasing administrative efficiency, Curzon’s
move was intended to position the Muslims as a counterweight to the Hindus.
The partition elicited vociferous protest in Western Bengal, especially in Calcutta, where the Indian
National Congress (also called the Congress Party; formed in 1885) played a
prominent role. Indian Muslim leaders, however, mostly supported the partition,
and in 1906 they gathered at Dhaka under the
patronage of Nawab Salimullah and set up the All-India Muslim
League. Their efforts secured separate electorates and separate
constituencies for the Muslims under the constitutional reforms of 1909, but
they could not save the partition. In 1912 the partition was annulled, Bihar
and Orissa were constituted into a new province, and Assam reverted to its separate
status.
Following the reunification of Bengal, the
Congress Party and the Muslim League worked together for self-government; among
the leaders of this effort were Nawab Salimullah, Chitta
Ranjan Das, Fazl ul-Haq, and Sarat Chandra Bose. Communal animosities
resurfaced in the early 1920s, however, in the wake of a failed nonviolent
alignment between the Indian Muslim front known as the Khilafat
Movement and the Hindu-led Indian nationalist Noncooperation
Movement under Mohandas
Karamchand (Mahatma) Gandhi. Consequently, in order to achieve political goals,
it became necessary to adopt coalition tactics that would transcend communal
antagonisms; the politician who proved most adept at this was Fazl ul-Haq,
chief minister of Bengal from 1937 to 1943. He
set up his own Peasants and Tenants (Krishak Proja) Party and formed a
coalition with the Muslim
League. In 1940, at the league’s annual gathering at Lahore, Fazl
ul-Haq proposed the so-called “Pakistan Resolution,” demanding independent
states for Muslims. The following year, however, he was expelled from the
Muslim League; he formed a new coalition and continued to serve as chief
minister.
In 1942 new rounds of political dialogue commenced, but no agreement could
be reached. With legislative elections in 1946, the Muslim League returned to
power under the leadership of Hussain
Shaheed Suhrawardy, who subsequently became chief minister of Bengal. In August of that year an intense Muslim-Hindu
communal conflict erupted in Calcutta, and it
eventually spread well beyond the borders of Bengal.
This event, combined with protracted and unfruitful discussions between the
various groups, made the partition of India appear inevitable.
Suhrawardy, Sarat Chandra Bose, and several other prominent political leaders
reopened negotiations for a separate, independent, united Bengal.
In March 1947 Louis
Mountbatten became the last viceroy of British India,
with a mandate to transfer powers. As plans were being formulated for the
partition of India, Mohammed
Ali Jinnah, a leading figure of the Muslim League, advocated for the formation
of a united Bengal; Mountbatten was not
against the idea, but Mahatma Gandhi and the Congress Party opposed it. When
British colonial rule ended in August 1947, two new countries—India and Pakistan—were
born, and Bengal was split between them. West Bengal
went to India, and East
Bengal formed the eastern wing of Pakistan,
which was bisected by a vast tract of northern India.
The Pakistani period, 1947–71
Although the boundaries of East Bengal were based ostensibly on religion, they did
not entirely reflect it. Owing to disagreements between the Hindu and Muslim
contingents of the commission tasked with delimiting the province, the
frontiers were ultimately determined by the head of the commission, Sir Cyril
Radcliffe. Excluded wholly or partly from East Bengal were such Muslim majority
districts as Murshidabad
and Nadia; included, however, were Khulna,
which was nearly half Muslim, and the Chittagong Hill Tracts, where Muslims
constituted only a small fraction of the population. Even Sylhet, a
predominantly Muslim district of Assam that joined Pakistan
through a referendum, lost a part of its territory to India. The
partition catalyzed large-scale migration on both sides of the new boundary as
hundreds of thousands of people who believed themselves to be members of a
threatened minority moved into what they perceived as a place of refuge. Along
with Muslim Bengalis arriving in East Bengal from Hindu majority districts,
there were many Muslims who came from other parts of India,
mostly from Bihar.
Pakistan
began as a parliamentary democracy with a constituent assembly that was charged
with the dual function of drafting a constitution and serving as the new
country’s legislative body; however, overbearing central leadership eventually
nullified the system. Failing to earn the support of Jinnah, who had become the
first governor-general of Pakistan,
Suhrawardy stayed in India
to work with Gandhi for communal harmony, and Khwaza Nazimuddin became chief
minister of East Bengal. In the central government
(based in the western wing of Pakistan)
Bengalis held the majority in the legislative branch but had little
representation in the executive. Physically and linguistically separated, the
two parts of Pakistan
had only tenuous links; their overriding common interest was fear of Indian
domination. Jinnah and his advisers believed that unification might be achieved
through a common language, Urdu,
which was used in the army and administration. By 1948, however, Bengalis had
begun to resent the nonacceptance of Bengali as an official language, the
domination of the bureaucracy by non-Bengalis, and the appropriation of
provincial functions and revenue by the central government.
During Jinnah’s tenure as
governor-general, he maintained a powerful central government under his
authority. When Jinnah died in 1948, Nazimuddin became governor-general, but
the real power lay with Liaquat
Ali Khan, the prime minister. When Liaquat was assassinated in October
1951, Nazimuddin succeeded him as prime minister and installed Ghulam
Mohammad, a Punjabi, as governor-general. Ghulam Mohammad consolidated a coalition
of civil and military forces in the central government and secured a virtual
transfer of power from the politicians to the coalition, first by dismissing
Nazimuddin (who still had a majority in the legislature) in 1953 and then by
dismissing the entire constituent assembly shortly after the general elections
of 1954. In those elections, almost all the seats had been won by the United
Front, a coalition of opposition parties led largely by Fazl ul-Haq and his
revamped Peasants and Tenants Party (now called the Peasants and Workers Party)
and by Suhrawardy, who had made a comeback with a new party, the Awami
League. In 1955 Ghulam Mohammad left office, and Maj. Gen. Iskandar Mirza,
who had served both as governor in East Bengal
and as a central minister, took office as governor-general. Under Mirza, East
Bengal was renamed East Pakistan.
With a newly elected constituent assembly, Pakistan in 1956 at last adopted a
constitution in which both the eastern and western wings of the country were
equally represented. The new constitution also gave the federal government wide
powers. Mirza became president and was obliged to appoint Suhrawardy, heading
an Awami League coalition, as prime minister; by late 1957, however, Mirza had
orchestrated Suhrawardy’s exit from office. In December of that year Firoz Khan
Noon became the prime minister, with support from the Awami League.
In 1958 the government of Pakistan
came under military control, and Mirza was exiled. The elite civil servants
assumed great importance under the military regime, which adversely affected
the country’s eastern wing. In 1947 there had been very few Bengali Muslims in
the Indian Civil Service (ICS), whereas the western wing had produced several
dozen. Although equal recruitment from the two wings was national policy, by
1960 only about one-third of the members of the Civil Service of Pakistan
(successor to the ICS) were Bengalis. Moreover, the military installations were
concentrated in West Pakistan, as was the bulk
of economic aid and development.
Bengali discontent festered, finding a voice in Mujibur
Rahman (popularly known as Sheikh Mujib). Like previous leaders, Mujib
belonged to a landed family. He had been one of the founders of the Awami
League in 1949 and became its leading figure after Suhrawardy’s death in 1963.
A superb organizer and orator who was jailed repeatedly by the military, Mujib
acquired an aura of martyrdom. Following a 1965 clash between India and Pakistan,
primarily over control of territories in the Kashmir
region of the western Himalayas, he announced
a historic six-point demand for East Pakistani autonomy. When in December 1970 Yahya
Khan, president of Pakistan and commander in chief of the armed forces, ordered
elections, Mujib’s essentially separatist Awami League won 167 of the 169 seats
allotted to East Pakistan in the National Assembly. This gave the league an
overall majority in a chamber of 313 members. In West
Pakistan the Pakistan People’s Party, led by Zulfikar
Ali Bhutto, won 81 of 144 seats; Bhutto consequently saw himself as Mujib’s
rival.
Throughout March 1971 Pres. Yahya Khan negotiated at length with Mujib in Dhaka
while government troops poured in from West Pakistan.
Then, on March 25, the army launched a massive attack; destruction was immense,
and many students were among the casualties. Mujib was arrested and flown to West Pakistan. Most of the Awami League leaders fled, set
up a government-in-exile in Calcutta (Kolkata),
and declared East Pakistan the independent state of Bangladesh. Internal resistance was
mobilized by some Bengali units of the regular army. Among the most notable of
the resistance leaders was Maj. Zia ur-Rahman, who held out for some days in Chittagong before the
town’s recapture by the Pakistani army. He then retreated to the border and
began to organize bands of guerrillas. A different resistance was started by
student militants, among whom Abdul Kader Siddiqi, with his followers, known as
Kader Bahini, acquired a reputation for ferocity.
Some 10 million Bengalis, mainly Hindus, fled over East Pakistan’s frontier
into India
while the Indian government watched with alarm. The Awami League, which India
supported, was a moderate middle-class body like the Congress Party; many
guerrillas, however, were leftist and a cause of concern. With some of the
major world powers taking sides—the United States and China for a united
Pakistan, and the Soviet Union and India for an independent Bangladesh—the
Indian army invaded both the western and eastern wings of Pakistan on Dec. 3,
1971. The Pakistani defenses surrendered on December 16, ensuring Bangladesh’s
independence. A few days later, Yahya Khan was deposed in Pakistan and replaced by Bhutto; Mujib was
released from jail and returned to Dhaka to a
hero’s welcome.
Bangladesh since independence
In January 1972 Mujib was installed as the first prime minister of the new
parliamentary government of Bangladesh,
and Abu Sayeef Choudhury became president. Still troublesome, however, were
various local paramilitary forces, known as Razakars, that supported the
Pakistani cause. The Bengali Razakar force was called Al-Badr, while the
Urdu-speaking force was known as Al-Shams. As Bangladeshi retribution against
these pro-Pakistani forces ensued, Urdu speakers—known as Biharis, though most
had been born locally rather than in Bihar—fled
into enclaves where their numbers gave some security; nevertheless, many were
killed. Hundreds of thousands of Biharis were placed in overcrowded refugee
camps, where decades later many still awaited asylum in Pakistan.
Bangladesh’s
constitution of 1973 provided for a secular state, a parliamentary form of
government, a bill of rights, and a strong commitment to local government.
Acceptance by the international community, however, presented a challenge. The
initial application of Bangladesh
to join the United
Nations was vetoed by China;
it was not until 1974 that Bangladesh
was admitted to the organization. The new country confronted many other
problems as well, including the restoration of transportation, communication,
and international trade networks; the rehabilitation of the power supply; the
revitalization of education, health, and population programs; and the
resumption of agricultural and industrial production.
Elections held in 1973 gave Mujib a landslide majority, but the euphoria
soon evaporated. Following a policy of economic socialism, the state had
absorbed industries and businesses abandoned by Pakistanis, but economic
troubles persisted. Prices escalated, scarcities continued, and in 1974 a great
famine claimed tens of thousands of lives. Faced with crisis, Mujib abridged
freedoms and became a virtual dictator; corruption and nepotism reached new
depths. On Aug. 15, 1975, Mujib was assassinated along with most of his family.
Right-wing pro-Pakistan army officers were behind the killing; some politicians
also were involved in the conspiracy, and there were allegations of outside
support. Unsure of their hold, the armed forces split into rival factions.
Another coup, in November 1975, brought Maj. Gen. Zia ur-Rahman into power.
Once a freedom fighter, Zia now took an anti-India posture and favoured
pro-Pakistan elements. In an effort to legitimize his power, he held a
referendum in May 1977, received a vote of confidence, and assumed the office
of president in 1978. After ensuring his control over the armed forces, Zia
lifted martial law the following year. Although accused on some fronts of
institutionalizing corruption in politics, Zia made notable achievements in the
reconstruction and development of Bangladesh. He strengthened the
military, empowered the bureaucracy, and improved law and order while
emphasizing food production, irrigation, primary education, and rural
development. He also initiated economic cooperation with nearby
countries—efforts that led to the organization of the South
Asian Association for Regional Co-operation in 1985. Nevertheless, military
coup attempts continued, and on May 30, 1981, he was assassinated in Chittagong by some army
officers.
The military high command in Dhaka did not lend support to the actions of
the officers at Chittagong,
and the conspirators were executed. Meanwhile, the civilian vice president,
Abdus Sattar, was confirmed as president by a nationwide election in 1981, but
he was ill, and real power was exercised by Lieut. Gen. Hussein Mohammad Ershad
and a National Security Council. On March 24, 1982, Ershad ejected Sattar and
took over as chief martial-law administrator. In December 1983 he assumed the
office of president. To validate his authority he called elections for a
National Assembly, and he formed his own National Party (Jatiya Party). In the
election of May 1986, which was boycotted by many opposition parties, the
National Party won most of the seats in the legislature.
Confident that the army was now under control, Ershad withdrew martial law
later that year and called for a presidential election in October. Once again,
the main opposition parties—the Awami League, now led by Mujib’s daughter Sheikh
Hasina Wazed, and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), headed by Khaleda Zia
ur-Rahman, wife of the slain president—boycotted the election, and Ershad
received the overwhelming majority of the vote.
The opposition parties began a campaign of strikes and demonstrations to
force Ershad’s resignation. In the late 1980s the poor state of the country’s
economy brought greater pressure on Ershad, and in December 1990, after weeks
of violent antigovernment demonstrations, he finally agreed to step down. A
caretaker government, headed by Chief Justice Shahabuddin Ahmed, was chosen by
the opposition parties. In parliamentary elections held just two months later,
the BNP emerged as the single largest block, and Khaleda became prime minister.
Among Khaleda’s achievements in office were the reinstatement through
constitutional amendment of a parliamentary (as opposed to presidential) form
of government and the advancement of the country’s economic and educational
reform programs. Her tenure as prime minister was hampered, however, by strikes
instigated by the Awami League and other opposition parties and by a cyclone in
1991 that killed some 130,000 people. The opposition frequently called for
Khaleda’s resignation, demanding that a caretaker government be appointed and
new elections held, but Khaleda resisted. In February 1996 general elections
were held, and the BNP won an overwhelming victory; however, it was a hollow
triumph, as only a small percentage of eligible voters had cast ballots,
heeding a boycott called by the Awami League. Finally bowing to public
pressure, Khaleda resigned about six weeks after the elections in favour of a
caretaker government. In subsequent elections in June, the opposition swept to
power, and Mujib’s daughter Hasina became prime minister.
The political situation did
not improve much during Hasina’s tenure in office. The BNP regularly boycotted
the parliament, and antigovernment demonstrations were common. The country also
was beset in 1998 by a disastrous monsoon that flooded some two-thirds of Bangladesh’s
territory for two months and left more than 30 million people homeless. On
other fronts, the government made progress in its relations with India, signing
a treaty for sharing water from the Ganges River; it negotiated an agreement
(opposed by the BNP) for guerrillas seeking greater autonomy for the indigenous
population in the Chittagong Hill Tracts to surrender their arms after a
20-year insurgency; and the economy (particularly agriculture) showed some
signs of improvement. In 2001 Khaleda, promising to eliminate corruption, was
returned to office, her BNP and its allies capturing more than two-thirds of
the seats in the legislature. The victory, however, did little to curb the
tense relations between the BNP and the Awami League.
By the end of Khaleda’s second
term, scant progress had been made toward controlling corruption. She stepped
down as prime minister in late 2006, transferring power to a caretaker
administration until elections could be held early the following year. However,
unrest between the BNP and the Awami League led the interim head of government
to resign and to install a new caretaker administration before the polls
opened. A state of emergency was declared, and the elections were canceled. The
new caretaker government embarked on an aggressive program to rid the country
of corruption prior to holding elections, which were scheduled for the end of
2008. Meanwhile, the ongoing political battles between Khaleda and Hasina were
perceived by the administration to be a hindrance to the country’s stability,
and in 2007 both women were arrested—Khaleda on charges of corruption and
Hasina on charges of extortion. Both were released from custody in 2008. The
Awami League prevailed in the elections held in late December, and in January
2009 Hasina again became prime minister. Five former military officers, who had
been convicted of assassinating Hasina’s father in 1975, were executed in
January 2010, and a military tribunal to try war crimes cases from the 1971 war
of independence was set up later that year.
The political turmoil since independence ultimately has had little relevance
to the country’s basic problems. At the 1974 census the population of Bangladesh numbered about 71 million; by the end
of the first decade of the 21st century, the population had more than doubled,
despite large-scale emigration to neighbouring Assam
and Tripura in India and a
smaller exodus over the Arakan border with Myanmar. Agriculture and fishing
were still the occupations of nearly half the labour force, and what economic
development there had been was largely confined to the environs of Dhaka and Chittagong.
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