Caught between the call of jihad and the politics of poverty, Sheikh Hasina is battling alone for Bangladesh. India and the West had better take notice.
For a celebrated artist whose photographic works border on the melancholy and the macabre, Dhaka-based Shumon Ahmed is a happiness habitué, guffawing at the slightest hint of a joke. The burly 29-year-old has had an unpleasant if not traumatic childhood, born to a differently abled mother and a strict, laconic father, but betrays not a whiff of lament about those years, about how he overcame taunts and provocations in a joint family that was extremely judgmental. The grimness of contemporary Bangladesh, however, is never too far from the mind. “To be honest,” he pauses mid-conversation to say, “we are all shaken. I wouldn’t do things I would have otherwise done.” Ahmed, seated in the VIP Lounge of the Dhaka Art Summit, sipping coffee, is referring to the fatal attacks on atheists and bloggers over the past few years in a country that has prided itself on its hyped secular credentials.
The zealous public display of Bengali identity over the Muslim one, a cause championed by the ruling Awami League led by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, is under fire. And lately, with the shadow of IS designs on the country looming large, artists and writers are too overwrought to listen to the all-is-well counsel offered by caviar liberals, who it seems are unabashedly aligned with the federal government. It is run with an iron hand by Hasina, daughter of Mujibur Rahman, Bangladesh’s founding leader whose death in 1975 at the hands of renegade military officers threw the country into political turmoil and frequent bouts of military dictatorship.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Can Therapy Break The Taboo Of Hypersexuality?
Can therapy break the taboo of hypersexuality?
Afghanistan: Waiting For A New Life
Ravaged by war, terror and bad politics, Afghanistan is waiting for a new life after the withdrawal of American troops.
Grand Opening Of Dance Bars, Are The Girls Excited?
Following a Supreme Court order, Mumbais dance bars are preparing for a grand opening. Are the girls equally excited?
Discovery Of Colonial India
Lord Hastings 1814 journey from Calcutta to Punjab with painter Sita Ram is a discovery of Colonial India through lives mundane and magical.
Imtiaz Ali: Auteur In Love
Imtiaz Ali's new film too is a celebration of desire and longing. The filmmaker in conversation with Divya Unny.
Athleisure, A Lifestyle Trend Of This Decade
As the defining lifestyle trend of this decade, athleisure has changed the way we dress, appear, move and feel.
Hate Wave In Communal India
Provocative clerics, frenzied mobs and the widening fault lines of communal India.
Delhi Government: Getting Even With The Odd Chief Minister
A righteous Kejriwal makes the governance of Delhi all about one man’s whims and paranoia.
India’s Cricket Prodigies: Who Will Stay Like Tendulkar?
India’s cricket prodigies today are luckier than their predecessors, but who will stay the distance like Tendulkar?
Dating Apps: A Sexual Revolution
As the dating app sets up office in India, its first ever outside the US, Lhendup G Bhutia signs on to see what the fuss is all about. He comes out unwanted.