Sunday 19 June 2016

Those days of The Liberation War 1971 - Ashfaq Chowdhury

7th March: It is one of the most important days in Bangladesh history. I was there and heard the famous speech of the founding father Sheik Mujibur Rahman live. Me and my chotomama (uncle) were in the Romna Park, not too far from the stage on the other side of the road. We were young and excited. After the speech we walked back to Bashabo where we used to live. Our house 'Heerajheel' was at the edge of the city, there was nothing beyond, just a 'jheel' (marshland). We lived on 1st floor with a large varanda facing the road. Schools and colleges were closed, not that we were in any mood to study, those were the days. We spent most of our time in the varanda, talking politics. We had pictures of 'Mujib Bhai' on our walls. We flew hand-made green, red and yellow flags on top of our house, they were on every roof-top around. 
25th March, Chotomama decided to go back home. I took him to Kamlapur Rail Station to see him off. That was the last Dhaka-Sylhet train to leave that night for next few months. Don't know what time it was, we woke up from our sleep at the sound of fire arms, mortar shells, machine guns etc. They attacked the whole city. One of the main targets for Pak army was Rajarbagh Police line which was not too far from us. Heavy fighting was going on there. People were screaming and shouting everywhere, we could hear distant cries of people. Some people were running in panic on our street shouting "run away, run away, they will burn the whole city, they will kill us all, run for your life" Abba told us not to open the door, and turn the lights off. Through the windows we could see balls of fire in Rajarbagh and other places. We felt bullets were going passed our ears. We saw neighbours pulling down the Bangladesh flags. So I made my way to the roof in the dark and pulled down ours. Peeled off all the pictures of Sheikh Mujib and burned them along with the flag. There are lots of heroes these days, that was not a time to be hero! 
26th March. Morning broke with 'azan' from local mosques. Azan never sounded so reassuring. Slowly people started to come out from their houses. There was a lot of confusion and uncertainty. A total shock and despair on people's faces and in the air. No one knew exactly what was going on. News of Sheik Muzib's arrest in the radio added to the frustration. We felt doomed as a Bangali nation. Then came that lightening voice of Major Zia form Chittagong Radio Station in the evening "ami major zia bolchi" Oh what a feeling! Instantly we felt alive again, not finished yet. Anyone who heard that voice that day would never forget that feeling. Why, when and how he said it is for the politicians to quarrel about. I can only talk about what I heard. I didn't hear any other announcement or declaration. Indian radio also confirmed "Purbo Pakistane grihojudhdho shuru hoyeche (civil war has started in East Pakistan)". We all knew we are in for a long struggle which would turn our lives upside down, if we survive.
The Exodus: in a day or two when curfew was lifted, we saw a constant stream of people leaving the city, thousands of them. Since Bashabo was on the edge of the city and was a bit isolated, and still there was no military presence it was naturally a popular exit route. Most of us only had a radio to connect to the outside world. We started getting horrible news and stories of extreme brutality and senseless massacre. We were worried about our relatives in the city. One of our cousin sisters Runibubu moved to our house from Shukrabad with her family for safety. The panic was in such level that one day a lot of us were chatting in our varanda, sitting on the floor so that we wouldn't be seen from the road. Suddenly there was a sound of a rickshaw tire burst. In a split second the varanda was empty! Never thought we could move that fast!
It was soon felt it won’t be wise to stay in Dhaka for too long. My father and some other relatives decided to move to the village homes in Sylhet. But how to go, no one had any idea; no train, bus or plane was running. One of my mom's cousins our Hasnat mama, man with a golden heart, lived in Dhanmondi used to take such risk to come all the way to Basabo to see us in those troubled times. He was particularly at high risk as two of his younger brothers were in the army, one of them was Captain Haroon (later General and Beer-Uttam) who revolted along with Major Zia and other one was Lt. Farooq (later took early retirement as a Colonel) who was in Pakistan. 
Hasnat mama had a Hindu tenant, who lived with her husband upstairs in his family home. She was the daughter of Nirmal Chowdhury a very wealthy man, owner of tea-gardens, who came to visit his daughter and got stuck in Dhaka. It was definitely a very dangerous time for a Hindu wealthy man in Dhaka. When he heard from Hasnat mama that we were planning to leave for Sylhet with a group of 7-8 family of relatives, he came one day to our house to see if he could tag along. He had such a rich aristocrat stature; we couldn’t picture him accompanying us. He wanted to know about our plan, but we didn't have any plan that he would like. Our plan was to take the most essentials and just set off on foot, and take any means of transport available along the way. Bashabo to Tarabo, cross the river, reach Norshindi, reach Bhoirob, reach Balaganj and reach each of our villages form there, Question was how? Answer: somehow! It would take about 8-9 days. We may get robbed even killed on the way. Had no plan for food or personal care. When Nirmal Chowdhury heard our 'somehow-plan' he was horrified, couldn't believe what he was hearing. He thought he would rather stay in Dhaka. He was dead wrong, if he did go with us that would save his life for he was later killed in Dhaka by Pak army. 
One fine morning, in early-mid April we started our long arduous journey and joined the masses leaving the Dhaka. In our group we had about 7-8 families with around 25 people including children. Only central Dhaka was under Army control, rest of the country was still free. Even Bashabo was free. We didn’t see any army before we left. We knew they will be coming soon and it will be impossible for us to get out. My father was not prepared for the situation we were in. He did not withdraw money anticipating the hard days ahead, now all the banks are closed and no one knows when they will open again. But our dulabhai, Runibubu’s husband he saw it coming and he was prepared. Both of them were extremely dedicated to my dad. Runibubu seeing my dad stressed, whispered to him, "Mamu, don’t worry, we have 20,000 rupees with us" - a lot of money for that time indeed!
From Bashabo we took some Rickshaw to take us as far as they would. After few miles the road ended. The rickshaw wouldn’t go any further. So we walked the village path all the way to Tarabo. We crossed the river by little ferry boats. As we suspected, Pak army did come after us. Where we crossed the river in Tarabo, the very next day Pak army shot and killed many people crossing the river. They were desperate to stop the exodus and make everything look normal to the world. If we were late by just one day, it could be our bodies floating in the river.
As we wanted to reach Norshingdi before dark, we had to keep walking. We had some children who couldn’t walk, they had to be carried. We only had enough food to last us a day. Now I have to tell you about a Bangladesh we saw, that no one would see ever again. People from nearby villages came to help us, they carried children, our belongings and gave us food and water. They were poor people, they could hardly afford to feed so many people but they did their best. They came with gur-muri, moa, batasha, banana, daab whatever they had. We stopped by little village shops along the way to buy sweets or snacks and the shop keepers were so reluctant to take money. Such was the feeling of brotherhood among fellow countrymen. Everyone wanted to help those people fleeing Dhaka.
We reached Norshingdi in the late afternoon. Our elders went looking for a big Mohajoni boat to take us to Bhoirob. Local people advised us to spend the night in Norshingdi as the waterway towards Bhairab is notorious for ‘dakats’, not safe for us. But we were desperate; at least a boat will be a shelter for us where we can rest, plus we had no time to waste, we had to move on. My uncles found a boat, a huge boat. A full size man could stand straight inside. There were 5-6 majhi-mallar (boatmen). We all could fit right in. Ladies and children went inside and men and boys on top of the ‘choi’. It was that strong. 
As the boat started to sail, sun was setting in the river. We could hear the Azan form the village mosques. Suddenly, there was a desperate cry of a man form the banks of the river, in sylheti. “O brothers, please take me in your boat, I want to go to Sylhet too, please save my life, if you leave me they will kill me, please brother please” Alarmed, we all looked at the caller, it was almost dark and from a distance, he looked like Sheikh Mujib! White pajama-punjabi, mujib coat, moustache, back brushed hair - the works. Did mujib escape? But Mujib wouldn’t speak Sylheti! The fool made himself prime target to be killed. In other time we wouldn’t take an unknown person on board in an unknown place. But that was a desperate time, we just couldn’t ignore the man’s plea. Our elders decided to take him on. As he boarded we wanted to know him. He claimed he was an Awami League leader in Elephant Road area, “every third person in Elephant Road will know me” he boasts. (after the war I found him in Elephant Road, but that is a different story, he tried to avoid recognizing me, I found him occupying few abandoned shops in Dhanmondi Hawkers Market under a banner of some association with AL logo on it ).
The majhis (boatmen) anchored the boat almost in the middle of the river Meghna, away from the banks. We saw one by one, more and more big boats came and anchored around us. We got very nervous. You can’t trust anyone, the majhis themselves could be ‘dacoits’. They know everyone fleeing Dhaka would have lot of cash and jewelleries. Law and order broke down. There is no government, no authorities, nothing to protect you. The majhis reassured us saying that the other boats are there to protect us. It was a common practice for mutual protection in the middle of the river Meghna at night. We were all tired and soon fell asleep.
We woke up at the distant sound of azan. We were alive, nothing happened, our faith and trust in ordinary people was not misplaced. The majhis were preparing for morning prayers and to set off again. Sunrise in Megna from a boat, in the mist, no sound except sound of water, ‘cholat, cholat’ unforgettable!
Our boat set sail again, it was a very slow moving boat, perhaps we were going against the current. For next few days we would spend our days on the roof of the boat watching life go by. Occasionally we saw dead bodies floating by. They could be Bangali or non-Bangali but they were human beings with loved ones who would be looking for them dead or alive but will never find.
We had one police constable in our group, Matin Mama, one of our distant relatives who, according to him, escaped Rajarbagh carnage. We heard his heroic tale of the fight. Man was ‘mister know it all’ hardly educated, but he regarded us young ones, bunch of complete ignorant. He would ‘educate’ us at every opportunity he got. We were quite fond of him and happy to play ignorant to keep it coming. He was a constant source of entertainment for us! And there was that ‘Awami Neta’. He knew everyone and everything political as if Mujib consulted him every day – another source of entertainment!
Occasionally we would stop at the riverside bazars to replenish our supplies. Same thing everywhere, they were reluctant to take money. One ‘mishti’ seller gave us some roshogolla free of charge.
After about 3 days of sailing we could see Bhairab bridge at a distant, only a faint image. We were so excited at the sight; it was like the feeling of the European immigrants sailing to America, at the first sight of the Statue of Liberty. But we didn’t know that it would take us another 3-4 days to get there. We keep going but the bridge seemed to move away, like a mirage.
After another 3 days or so we finally reached Bhairab. As our boat passed under the bridge it was like a goal achieved. We all got off the boat. The ‘neta’ left us here. Our elders went to plan the next phase of our journey and find some means of transport.
Our elders came back with good news. Motor-Launch service from Bhairab to Balaganj was still running. We took the launch to reach Balaganj in a day. Where we were received very warmly by our relatives living there. After a long 6-7 days we had a proper meal with hot rice with meat & fish.
Balaganj was a small riverside trading post (ganj bazar) by river Kushiara. People heard about the army operation in Dhaka but had no idea about what to do but everyone wanted to fight with whatever they had. They were preparing to fight an army with modern arms and ammunitions with spears and machetes.
Next day our relatives found us few small boats to take us to Badepasha, a small village by the river Kushiara where we had a relative. My cousin sister’s father-in-law was a very influential man there. We reached around evening. We sent someone from the bazar to our relatives to tell them about our arrival. Within minutes our in-laws came with an army of people to receive us and carry our stuff and small children. They were over the moon to have so many guests form Dhaka which they wouldn’t have in such a remote village. Again they threw a feast for us. Next day they got us few more small boats to take us to our destination, Raigarh, our village by a canal called ‘Kuragang’ The name suggests it was actually a man-made irrigation canal through our ancestral agricultural lands, couple of miles behind our village. It was a very relaxing and peaceful trip. We reached the canal behind our village in the evening. We were so excited and relieved to make to our destination alive, we hardly could wait to get off and get to our ‘Bari’ (ancestral home). In the villages they have an invisible communication system. Somehow the news of our arrival reached home and our cousins, uncles, aunts came to greet us. It was a wonderful home coming. We wasted no time to jump into the ponds – we were free!!!
Life in the villages: Our ancestors settled in the village Raigarh some 600 years ago after the defeat of Pathans to the Mughals.  Now divided into 4 ‘sharikans’ (families from same descend) with 6 houses, it all became one big house and accommodated us all. And there are more to come, people we never seen before, ghostly figures appearing from the dark, people with dark and mysterious past, scaremongers and militants one called ‘Kaua Latif’ another one ‘Jongi Mashuk’ and real ghosts of course!
From April to August 1971 we stayed largely in Raigarh. Compared to rest of the country we had a peaceful time. I am sorry to say, that was the most amazing time I had in my life. I am not being insensitive to those who suffered and lost loved ones, I am trying to be truthful as I tell the story. Pak Army never came in Raigarh. I don’t know why exactly, but if I give you an idea about the geographical character of our village, may be it will provide some answer. 
Raigarh is a very hilly area. Every house was on top of a hill called ‘tila’. Every tila had three sections. On the bottom of the tila there is always a pond or dighi. One flight up the stairs (made of stones) is the mid-layer, where there is always a Tongi (a multipurpose house shared by all) then another flight up the stairs is the top of the hill where the family houses were. The original settlers flattened the top of the hills, dug the middle part leaving a wall of earth around called ‘dewar’ for privacy. The main residential houses were built in the middle deep planes. In between the hills there were narrow, bendy and rough walkways. Some parts of those walkways (locally called 'handi') were dark even in daytime due to heavy vegetation. The village was only linked to the Dhakadakhshin Bazar and the main trunk road by a 2 miles long narrow unpaved village path, not suitable for heavy army vehicle. The village was not densely populated as majority population were Hindus who migrated to India over the years after 1947 partition. 
No army takes unnecessary risks without any serious cause. And the geography of Raigarh perhaps was militarily a bit risky for them and it didn’t pose any serious threat anyway. So when they came month later they just went through the main road.
So we felt quite safe.  Our houses were spread out in three connected hills. Our tongi was a large hall. It always housed a tutor (mastor) and a moulavi (miasab) for the children of the house. Because of the sudden influx of guests they laid out mass-beds where 8-10 people slept who are not closely related to the owners of the house. We would pass our day playing chess, pasha (dosh-pochish), cards, ludo and carom in the tongi. 
In the late afternoon we would all walk to the bazar in groups. Our uncles had business there. My father and his cousins would meet their childhood friends. We would wonder around, on our own or tag along with the elders. My uncle bought a large abandoned Hindu house near the bazar; we would go there and fish in the pond. There was a tea-stall, our favourite, called ‘cherag’s tea-stall. It was the hub of all the political news and gossips. And the tea there was out of this world. Never had better tea anywhere!
We spent a lot of time in our uncle’s pharmacy. He was a pharmacist, but in the bazar and surrounding villages he was the ‘doctor’, quite a good one and very popular. He had a back room with all kinds of syrups to prepare medicines. We finished them all! Chacha (uncle) knew but didn't say anything, got some more. In the front room he would hold a durbar (court) with his friends. We enjoyed their chats – all politics. That was not a time for anything else. But everyone had to be careful not to say anything against Pakistan or the army in public. 
One day an army jeep came and stopped in front of my chacha’s pharmacy. Everyone became quite alarmed. They asked people on the street for someone to guide them to a house near the bazaar. Instantly two men sitting in my chacha’s pharmacy jumped into the jeep and the jeep drove away. We looked at the disappearing jeep at awe. That’s how ordinary people around us became collaborator. That’s the nature of a civil war, your enemy could be in your house. Whole nation was divided in two camps and unfortunately that divide still exists and getting wider day by day. Luckily we did not hear anything happened to anyone in that house. But that taught us how close our enemy within is. A slip of tongue can cost your life. Our chacha was a cool one. Although he had that court every day we never seen him making any comment. He would listen with eyes closed, chewing 'paan' and puffing his cigarette - that’s old school!
On market day our going to bazar was a big deal. We would go together with elders including the tutor and the moulavi, along with our servants, still remember some of their names; Surman, Suruz, Mayar bap, Monu etc. with their ‘Sikka-Bung’ (sorry, cant translate) to carry back the shopping hanging from two ends of a bamboo stick on their shoulder. There was no electricity. Whole bazar was lit by 'kupis' (kerosene lamps). The atmosphere was surreal. You can see only things around the 'kupi' with shopkeeper’s face glowing. We would sometime join the prayer at the nearby mosque. 
Our trip back was even more surreal. There was no electricity; people would carry a hurricane lantern or a flash light. Once your eyes get used to the dark you can see quite far. In moonlit night it’s all different. If you have not walked in village roads in a moonlit night, there is something missing in your life. As we were returning home other people were coming from opposite direction.  Almost everyone would ask the price of the fish we bought. Often we had to get off the road to let others get passed. One of our clever cousins would shout “bash bash” meaning we are carrying bamboo, people from other side would get way off the road to save themselves from the wiggling tips of the bamboo but there was no bamboo of course!
Along the way we had to pass our family graveyard. It’s a scary jungle complete with Banyan trees. Invariably one will start a ghost story, believable real encounters such as hearing footsteps while no one behind, white dog walking above the ground and so on. When strange noise coming from the graveyard with tree trunks rubbing each other and banyan fruits dropping on your head, you would believe anything, and you want to believe! Believed or not, we wouldn't brave there alone at night.
The village was so beautiful at dark night. Only light were the orange light of the oil lamps coming through the windows of the houses up the hill, down below it was the fireflies everywhere, lots of them. 
In next few weeks more and more people were coming to take shelter in our house. Some related, some not. All houses were full of people. There were some very interesting characters. One of them reportedly killed a non-Bangali, he was so terrified, even when he was sleeping if someone said the word ‘punjabi’ or ‘army’ he would jump up. There were Dhaka University students who escaped the massacre with stories to tell. Our moulavi (Helal moulavi) was a jolly good person. In our heated debates he stayed calm and neutral. Moulavi was our connection with Sylhet town. Because of his appearance it was safe for him to go to Sylhet. He would comeback with info on the situation in the town.  And there was that tutor, always trying to outsmart us, he always pulled pranks on some of our cousins and they did the same to him.
Other house in the village also sheltered people who would come to our tongi for socialising. One of them was called Kaua Latif, for his very dark complexion. He was an ‘ansar’ commander or something like that. He felt that it was his duty to start military training for the young village boys and so he did. It didn't quite catch on and he left the village to fight in the front. Later we learned he was killed. 
Every night there was a congregation in our tongi, lit by only one lamp. All the men and boys of the whole house would sit together and listened to the news programmes, Shadhin Bangla Betar, Radio Pakistan, Akashbani, BBC and VOA. After all the news programmes finished there would be chats on current affairs, rumours, social issues, stories with endless supply of tea, snacks and tamak. Occasionally we could hear the ‘voom’ sound of artillery far away. Some of us younger ones would lightly kick the pillars supporting the roof to create a ‘voom’ to spark a reaction in the nervous ones!
My fufa from doukhno bari (south house) he was a good story teller, he was very knowledgeable of our family history, local history and also stories of Assam i.e. Shillong, Badarpur, Karimganj, Dibrugarh etc. – fascinating stories. We looked forward to this nightly events. 
Outside the tongi was pitch dark. Out of this darkness some face would suddenly appear with worrying news, like there are some suspicious movement of some unknown people in the village, or army was seen heading this way and so on. One of them called Jongi Mashuk, he never had any good news.
Slowly the effect of the war was being felt; essential items were disappearing from the shops. Things like oil, sugar, salt, flour and medicines were becoming scarce. Prices were going up the roof. Smuggled Indian goods started appearing in the black market, particularly cigarette and ‘biri’ 
One day a bad news reached the bazaar, pak army is heading this way, this time it was real. We heard that they were burning houses and shops along the way. The news set off a panic in the bazaar. Every shop started shifting their goods elsewhere. My chacha had emptied his pharmacy and moved his whole business home. There was panic in the village too. Elders decided to send all the girls to our relatives in remote village Badepasha where we stopped on our way from Dhaka. Young boys of the houses would go hiding in the hills for the night. So we went up an abandoned hill with thick forest. Normally we wouldn't dare to go there because of poisonous snakes. 
We could hear the gun shots getting closer and smoke going up in the sky at a distance. We were counting every moment wondering when they would come in the village, but they didn't. They burned Jamidar Kali Prashanna (prominent Hindu landlord) houses in their estate near the bazaar and caused some damage to the Mhahaprobhu Sri Chaityanya’s ancestral home and temple before they moved on towards Sylhet along the main road. Relieved, we came out of our hidings. It was dark in the forest. As we were walking by some ghost hot-spots one of my village cousins would call the ghosts by ‘mamu’ meaning uncle. It was a mechanism to conquer fear in the dark; your uncle wouldn’t hurt you of course!
But now the once thriving bazar is dead. People were too afraid of reopening their business. Luckily it was Kathal (Jack-fruit) season. Our dadabari was full of Kathal trees, planted by our forefathers, thanks to them. Kathals from every tree were different and they were the best kathals you could have. We had breakfast with Kathal and muri, lunch & dinner with kathal bichi curry and the peels of the kathal fed the cows.
Weeks later Pak Army ordered, on the radio, for all government officers to report to their work or face dismissal. Trains were running sporadically as Muktibahini (freedom fighters) were blowing up tracks and bridges. So they used to put few empty goods-carriages in front of the engine. Limited PIA domestic flights from Sylhet to Dhaka were also running under strict military control. My father and uncles had to risk their lives to go back to Dhaka by train, we were not sure if we would see them again. 
Our Nanabari (maternal grandfather’s house) was in Rankely another village about three miles away. We visited them frequently as my mom was there most of the time. But the house was on the main road, too exposed – so we didn’t stay there for too long. Once, while we were staying there, a school friend of mine from Chandpur suddenly arrived in our nanabari. He got the address from my dad in Dhaka and somehow made his way to Rankely. We never knew who he was working for, the army or the Muktibahini or he was just a fool. He said it was too dangerous for him to stay in his village. But he posed a serious danger for us since he was a non-sylheti in a sylheti village. Village people know everyone and which house or family they belong to. When anyone enquired about him, we felt very uncomfortable and alarmed. We wanted him to leave but couldn’t deny him shelter either. Eventually he left one day and we all had a sigh of relief.
While we were in Raigarh (dadabari) we had a bad news that our chutomama has been taken away by the army. Some of his friends made bad remarks about members of the ‘peace committee’ passing by, who were also relatives from the same village. Normally they would complain to the elders but that was a bad time, people turned against each other. They went and complained to the army. The army came and caught some of those boys, but my mama and other boys fled. A young army officer (Capt. or Maj. Sharfaraz, later killed) came and told my elderly Nana that if chutomama don’t surrender himself by next day they will have to take my Nana away. There was another officer named Iftekher Zandal. However they were very respectful. So chutomama surrendered. They were taken to Sylhet, tortured and released after a week or so. They were all in very bad shape, at least they were alive. On the day when Army raided my nanabari my brother Mustaq and I narrowly escaped being taken by the Army as we left nanabari for Raigarh only two hours before the raid.
Few times during the liberation war I looked at the face of death eye to eye. It’s a miracle that I am still alive. One day a lodger boy in our nanabari, called Mustafa and I were walking along the main road to go to Raigarh, suddenly two Pakistani fighter jets came out of nowhere flying very low towards us. We had only a fraction of a second to take cover in a cave nearby. Seconds later we heard them firing and dropping bombs somewhere.
Another day my younger brother Mustaq (later Home Secretary of Bangladesh) and I were walking along the same road to go from Rankeli to Raigarh, It was late afternoon, road was empty and everything looked peaceful. It was a bendy road snaking through the valleys between the hills. You can only see up to the bend ahead. As we walked around a bend we suddenly found ourselves right in front of some Pak soldiers with their machine guns pointed at us.
I realised, only thing we could do was keeping cool. Anything else will cause sure death. I whispered to my brother "keep walking, don’t run and don’t look at them". As we kept walking towards them I could see they had couple of Bangali collaborators with them. They were whispering to the soldiers. Obviously it was an ambush and perhaps they told the soldiers that we were not the ones they were waiting for. We were expecting that at least they would stop and question us. But they didn’t do anything, just watching us as we passed them. It crossed my mind, “are they going to shoot us from behind?” As we went around another bend and felt they won’t be able to see us any more, we looked back to be sure, we couldn’t see them, we ran, never looked back. That was a close call.
By July things settled down a bit, bazaar opened again. We were able to go to Sylhet to visit our relatives. In Dhaka muktibahini was running some guerrilla operations but the army wanted to make things look normal at least in Dhaka. They opened some colleges. My brother Mustaq was student of Dhaka College. Army asked students to attend the college particularly children of government employees had to attend to avoid severe consequences.
Back to Dhaka: My father asked us to go back to Dhaka by plane. We managed to get the tickets for our whole family. My chacha was a practical man, he asked us not to travel all in one plane, just in case! But we were lucky to have managed to get tickets through one of our uncle who used to work in the PIA office. It wasn’t easy. On the day of the flight we were escorted into a bus by the army personnel. Once we arrived at Sylhet airport we had to stand in line for body search. They also searched everything we were carrying. I had a radio in my hand. A soldier shouted at me “battery chamber kholo”. I did and he threw away all the batteries. There was a young army officer with shaved had, he was looking at us as if he owned us. Then we were escorted by soldiers to board the plane one by one. Once we entered the plane the soldiers were telling us where to sit. Naturally we all wanted to sit by the windows. As I tried to move to a window seat, a soldier grabbed my shoulders and pushed me down in an aisle seat saying angrily “Yaha baitho (sit here)”. As the plane started to move, a soldier with a gun sat at the front facing the passengers, watching our every move. Move we did not, nor did we have peanuts and drinks, no one went to toilets. There were no air hostesses, all we had was this gunman ready to kill if anyone made a move. I think there was another one at the back, but we did not turn our head to look. That was the most horrifying 45 minutes flight. Plane landed at Tejgaon airport in strict security. Whole airport was full of army. Dad received us and we went back home to Bashabo after 4 months.
Mustaq started attending the college. There was very poor attendance and there was not much of teaching in the classes. One day Mustaq came home and told us that a hand grenade was thrown into their classroom through the window. It did not explode. I think it was not intended to explode and kill the fellow Bangali students. Everyday bombs were exploding all over the city. It was far from normal. We lived in a constant fear of death. We heard that the whole family of our two uncles Capt. Haroon and Lt. Farook, their mother, older brother, sisters, a brother-in law and two children were in army custody. They were later released but their brother-in-law, Mr. Nurul Amin Khan, a very handsome young CSP officer and DC of Barisal was taken in again and never returned. His wife, my aunt never accepted the death as it was never confirmed, nor his body was ever found.
Sometime we took city bus to go to Gulistan or Newmarket. By the time the bus reached Newmarket most of the passengers remained were Urdu-speaking. They were passengers for Mohammadpur and Mirpur. We had to listen to their jokes about ‘Mukutlog’ (Muktibahini) and heroic tales about pak army’s successes of dealing with them, laughing all the way.
Fall of Dacca: In next few months Muktibahini intensified their operations and situation were deteriorating again. One night the guerrillas bombed a collaborators house in Bashabo and they escaped through our houses shouting ‘Joy Bangla’ and disappeared into the jheel. Every night there was curfew anyway, by November they started issuing curfew at the day time as well. Our movement became limited. They lifted the curfew for a limited time every day and we would run to the Khilgaon Bazaar to buy the essentials. Everything was in short supply. There was no fuel to cook with. All we had was an electric heater to cook. Electricity and water supply was very unreliable.
They also issued blackout in the city. We covered all our doors and windows with layers of newspapers. And ensured no trace of light can leak out as it can invite trouble form the paramilitary, i.e. Razakars and Al-Badars as they were roaming the streets at night. One night we heard footsteps and murmurs of a lot of people on the road in front. We got up from our bed and looked through our windows with horror.
We saw the paramilitary (militia) were parading around a hundred men in their sleepwear with their hands up, down the street. They were all murmuring prayers. After a while they disappeared in the dark. We never knew what happened to them. Some people said they have been released after detention because they broke the curfew. That many people broke the curfew risking their lives in the middle of the night - not convincing, so to me it still remains a mystery. 
Another night we woke up at banging noise on the door of the house opposite the road. The Razakars (militia group formed by Jamat-e-Islam party to support pak army) were banging on the door with their rifle and shouting to open the door. They forgot to cover the ventilators and streaks of light were coming out through them. We could hear the Razakars were accusing them for that. But that was only an excuse, real motive was loot and rape. The neighbour had two stunningly beautiful daughters between the age of 16-20. The Razakars demanded to search the house for any so called anti-state activities. The owner had no choice but to open the door otherwise they would have broken it down. They entered the house and in the commotion some of them took the girls away while the others kept the parents busy. Only when the razakars left, the mother realised that the girls were missing. She went crazy, despite the curfew she came out on to the street screaming “they took my daughters, I want my daughters, someone help me, is there no one in this town to help me” - there was no one. No one responded to that cry, though everyone in the whole neighbourhood was watching the whole thing hiding in the dark. She started running around on the street, screaming and went the way the razakars went and her scream faded away. After a while we saw an army jeep came and stopped in front of the house and the mother and daughters came out of the jeep and entered the house. The jeep drove away and the whole neighbourhood was quiet again as if nothing happened. Later we learned as she was chasing the Razakars, hearing her scream a kind army officer on patrol drove his jeep to her to find out what happened and he rescued her daughters and brought them home.
We had a cousin and his family and an uncle who lived in another house behind ours, back to back, separated only by a short wall. Even in the curfew we could go to each other’s house over the wall. It was a great source of mutual support.
When Pak Army realised they are about to lose the war to the Muktibahini, they wanted to drag India into the war openly, although India was helping the Muktibahini in the background. Surrendering to Muktibahini could be catastrophic since Muktibahini was not a regular army and was not under any obligation to honour Geneva Convention. So Pakistan launched pre-emptive air strikes on Indian airbases on 3 December. Naturally all-out war broke out between India and Pakistan. For next few days India launched air strikes in Bangladesh, mainly in Dhaka. It was our daytime entertainment. Everyone used to go up to the roof to watch the dogfight of the fighter jets. We used to cheer the Indian jets. One day I heard someone shouting in Urdu from the street below “ye tomhara bap ka plane hai keya” meaning “are they your father’s planes?”
At night we have been terrorized by a Pakistani plane dropping bombs on civilian neighbourhood. They even dropped bombs on an orphanage killing children. Next day they would take press photographers to the scene claiming it was done by the Indians. It was a slow flying old Dakota cargo plane, not a fighter jet. Every night we heard the sound of that ‘angel of death’ plane flying over us and the bombs going off, we spent the night in the fear that the next bomb could be on us.
Soon it became obvious that Pak Army was preparing for a fight in Bashabo. They were installing heavy artillery in many places and on some rooftop as they were anticipating that the Muktibahini will make their advance from this side of the town. We felt it won’t be safe for us to stay in Bashabo.  We had an uncle who lived in Motijheel colony (government employee’s apartments) towards the centre of the city. They also accompanied us in our trip to Sylhet in April. He advised us to move to Motijheel colony and break into any abandoned apartment as many people are doing the same. So one day when the curfew was lifted we hurriedly got some rickshaw and moved to Motijheel and broke into an abandoned apartment near our uncle.
Our aunt strongly advised us never to look at a particular apartment in another building across. She explained a vicious Bihari woman lives there who has inflicted terror in the whole neighbourhood due to her connection with the army. She has helped army to take away a lot of young man.
15th December. We couldn’t sleep at the night, everyone knew its coming to an end, but didn’t know how it will end and if we would live to see it. General Niazi declared he would not surrender until Indian tanks rolls over his body, which meant he was prepared to take us down with him. We could hear the gunfire all around. We could see some razakars banging on some doors randomly. Most of the apartments were empty. We were watching through the cracks of the door and were terrified about them banging on our door next. We could see some kind of bonfire going on in the State Bank (now Bangladesh Bank) Motijheel Commercial Area. Later we learned they were burning paper currency.
16th DecemberFinally the day 16th December arrived. The razakars melted away from the streets into the darkness. We could hear a very faint ‘Joy Bangla’ cry coming from very far away. Slowly it was getting closer and louder. Indian planes have been dropping leaflets all over the city asking the Pak army units to surrender. Pak Army also started broadcasting in the radio in Urdu “ek jaruri elan, surrender honewala hai, hatiyar daal do” (we are about to surrender, give up your weapons). But people were still too scared of coming out after living in terror for so long. Gun fire was going on everywhere it was too dangerous out there. It was like Wild Wild West. A lot of people got killed that day as they couldn’t contain their joy and went onto the street to celebrate. Terrified Pak army units scattered throughout the city were trying to get to the Race Course where surrender was taking place. The only way they could get there was by racing through the streets and firing their guns randomly and kill anyone trying to get close. They knew very well that if they stop they will be brutally massacred by the mob. My father strongly advised us not to go to the street and stay within the colony compound.
But it was hard to resist the temptation to peek out. We saw people coming from Motijheel commercial area with stack full of burned Pakistani currency in their hands, pockets and in lungi as much as they can carry. Because they were so tightly packed they were not fully burned. A lot of it in the middle of the stack were intact. Pak currency remained valid for quite some time until replaced by Bangladesh currency printed in India.   
I saw a crowd at the gate of the compound just opposite the Motijheel Ideal School gate. I went to see what’s going on. I made my way through the crowd and there it was. I saw a crowd at the gate of the compound just opposite the Motijheel Ideal School gate. I went to see what’s going on. I made my way through the crowd and there it was. The dead body of that vicious Bihari woman lay on the ground. Muktijodhdhas from Motijheel colony did not waste any time to take revenge for their friends who were her victims. They dragged her out of her house in the early hours of the day and killed her. She had a cricket ball size hole in the middle of her chest. It didn’t look like an ordinary gunshot; they must have used some kind of heavy weapon to kill her.
On 17th December my brother and I decided to join the crowd on the streets. Muktijoddhas and Indian Army were roaming the city. There was constant sound of celebratory gunfire. The Muktijoddhas were firing their automatic guns towards the sky as people were cheering them. Indian soldiers were not firing at all. People were greeting and hugging them. Most of us never seen any Sikh before, particularly soldiers. Their turbans and the tied-up beard generated a lot of interest.
We walked towards Motijheel commercial area. As we reached in front of the Modhumita Cinema Hall. Suddenly among the mayhem we heard a brush-fire on the opposite side of the road. A lot of people ran on the other side where the sound came from, we did too. Someone just killed a whole Bihari family who were trying to escape from wherever they lived. Someone spotted them and killed them all, adults and children.
As I am telling my story I am trying to be truthful and not to exaggerate. But that incident was so traumatic, because I never seen people being killed right before my eyes, I had bad dreams about it many times. I still can see that one particular little girl moving and hear her groaning in my head. As I was describing it, reality, imagination and dream all got mixed up. I was thinking, was it in my dream or from a horror movie? My Brother Mustaq was with me and he remembers it all. His account of the incident is very vivid and accurate.
Mustaq writes "The Bihari family of about 12 people including innocent looking 4 or 5 young girls were groaning in pain of bullet wound on the footpath. Then one clean-shaven fair skin person in an open jeep arrived on the scene and asked the onlookers for their consent to end the agony of the ill-fated family. He then complied with a shining revolver and shot the dying persons, who recoiled at each shot. We could not bear anymore and left the scene. Who knows whether all such human tragedies still haunt the nation to this day...!?"
I remember that 'clean-shaven fair skin man' mentioned by Mustaq. He was like Indiana Jones, with similar outfit, he also had a straw hat on. Where did he come from? He was unusually fair skinned for a Bangali, but he spoke in clear Bangla. He didn't look like any other freedom fighters. He was too fashionable, his jeep was spotless. His revolver was in shining silver colour. After finishing off those young girls he drove off. That was a terrible time, no one asked questions, no one was accountable to no one. That was the time when a lot of Razakars, Al-Badars and collaborators became freedom fighters overnight.
We walked from Shapla Chottor (present) towards Baitul Mukarram then High Court then through Ramna Park to Elephant Road all the way to New Market. Roads were full of people, Muktijoddhas, Indian Army, foreign journalists, gunshots, smokes and commotions everywhere. Air was thick with smell of gunpowder. There were empty bullet shells on the ground. We saw a smartly decorated white Jeep or Land Rover with a colourful sign 'Crack Platoon' written all over it. It was full of some smartly dressed urban armed guerrillas as if they are from a Hollywood movie. Later we learned writer Jahanara Imam's son Rumi was one of the members of the 'Crack Platoon' who got killed only days before the victory day.
There were a lot of dead bodies on the sidewalks and the middle islands of the streets. We saw a Pakistani soldier’s dead body in Ramna Park with his right palm cut off. Obviously someone took it as souvenir. We saw some mutilated dead bodies in the middle aisle on the road between Balaka Cinema Hall and Dacca New Market.
It was a very dangerous time, anyone could kill anybody in impunity. For some people it was an opportunity to settle old scores, take revenge and so on. Next few days it was time for ordinary people to go home and start rebuilding their life. There was a lot of uncertainty, how the new country will look like, wills the Indian Army leave, will Sheikh Mujib return etc. but we were happy that it’s over, we were free.
We went back to Bashabo. We found out that a lot of boys from our neighbourhood who went to the war or disappeared, whom we knew, never returned. One of the boys who went to the war got caught. His decomposed body was found in the jheel, he was tortured.
Shops started opening. Non-Bangali owned shops remained closed, looted or occupied. We were amazed to see the Indian Army soldiers were sopping like crazy. The washing up soap ‘570’ was their favourite. They were buying anything western. Foreign goods were banned in India and their products were inferior quality, we were about to find out as Indian goods started appearing in the market to disappoint us.
Some kind of normalcy was returning. Mujib bhai returned from Pakistan. Indian Army was withdrawn by Indira Gandhi at his request. There was a farewell ‘kuchkawaj’ (Army Tattoo) in Dacca Stadium. I was there, it was a very enjoyable show. Months later Indira Gandhi came for a goodwill visit. A huge boat shaped stage called ‘Indira Moncho’ was built where the children’s park is now in Racecourse (now Sohrwardi Uddyan).
Law and order was deteriorating. Armed robbery and hijacking was rampant. Sheikh Mujib made a personal appeal to the Muktijoddhas to surrender their arms. There was an arms surrender event near our house in Bashabo field. One of the Muktijoddha groups surrendered their arms to Sheikh Moni on the day. Kader Siddiqui did the same to Sheikh Mujib in Tangail. But many of them didn’t return their weapons and got involved in crime or with underground anti-government groups. It was not safe to be out after dark.
We soon moved to Lalbagh as our father wanted us to be closer to the best educational Institutions in Bangladesh, Dhaka University, Dhaka Medical College and Engineering University (BUET)
Schools and Colleges opened. I went back to Victoria College in Comilla. A lot of our classmates were missing. Some returned to tell the war stories. One of my roommates showed pictures of his brother in action. Travelling in Bangladesh was very difficult as roads and bridges were destroyed. I took all day to go to Dhaka from Comilla with 3-4 ferries in between. Going to Sylhet was even more difficult. Bhairab Bridge was  badly damaged. We had to get off the train on this side of the bridge, walk down the muddy banks and cross the river in small boats in a hurry to catch another train on the other side for the remaining journey.
Law and order situation was in steady decline. Different armed gangs were fighting each other. One of our neighbourhood gang leaders Fahim was gunned down in his house not too far from ours. Another day we heard a hand grenade gone off near our house. It was so powerful the debris from the blast was falling on the tin roof houses around making a hailstorm sound. People were rushing to the scene. I went down too. Oh, what a horrible sight. Never seen anything like it. The victim a young man in his twenties fell on the road. He was carrying a hand grenade tied in his waist to kill someone which accidentally exploded. The middle part of his body was completely blown away. His legs and upper part of the body were not connected, yet he was still alive and talking as some people were taking down some information from him. He had only minutes to live, but he was talking as if nothing happened, no sign of pain - amazing.
For first time in our life we were witnessing a terrible famine in 1974. I saw starving people dying, one of them was an old frail man on the street not far from our house. He was too weak to beg. Everyday newspapers printed pictures of people without food and clothes. One of those pictures that hit the international media was a woman trying to cover herself with fishing net. We had to stand in long line in front of the ration dealers for everything essential from salt to cooking oil. International food aid was pouring in. But a lot of the food was completely unknown to people. We got canned ready to eat food and vegetables like canned macaroni & cheese, Pasta in tomato sauce, cream of mushroom soup and so on. They were all blend and distasteful. There were canned vegetables and fruits like brussels sprout and mushrooms, beans, apricot and pears; we also got pasta, spaghetti and noodles. Most people didn’t know what to do with them. The common option was to boil them like rice and eat with daal or curries. And there were strange kinds of rice, one of them, now I know, was Sushi rice from Japan. They looked almost synthetic, people called it ‘tetron rice’. There was peanut butter, golden syrup, chocolate spread, mayonnaise, marmite and so on which were completely foreign to the population. All of these are very familiar ordinary stuff for a lot of us now!
And that dreadful ‘attar ruti’. There wasn’t enough rice available and people were given atta (wheat flour) instead of rice through ration dealers, and government was encouraging people to eat ‘attar roti’. In one BTV drama the heroin (Shubarna Mostapha) said to her poor fat lover “ruti khete parenna?”(Can’t you eat ruti) – Message was clear!
The word ‘hijack’ was introduced for first time in ordinary people’s vocabulary. There was hijacking everyday particularly car hijack. Stripping off parked cars were common even in broad daylight. People were too afraid to challenge because they could be armed. Law enforcement agencies almost dysfunctional. In such lawlessness people started taking law in their own hands. Throughout the city there were lynching every day. The word ‘gonopituni’ was introduced by the newspapers. Ordinary people were so frustrated and angry that they were prepared to kill anyone for any alleged petty crime. I was in Motijheel CA in front of the American Express building. Suddenly a mob gathered and started beating up a person, it was alleged that he was trying to steal a tyre from a parked car. The young man was on the ground trying to defend himself in vain. People were using whatever they could find to hit him, sticks, bricks anything. One was trying to smash his head. It was highly unlikely that he would survive. Perhaps many innocent died in such lynching. People were not in the mood to ask questions or look for proofs and witnesses. They needed somebody to take out their anger and frustration. It was very dangerous for anyone who could be the next victim easily.
Bhutto: Pak PM Z A Bhutto came to visit Bangladesh in 1974. That was a strange situation. Nostalgia hit peoples mind plus Anti-Indian sentiment started crystallizing for various reasons in those early days and it was demonstrated by people lining the route from Airport to the centre of the city in huge numbers chanting ‘Pakistan Zindabad’. I was there in the crowd somewhere near the High Court. Mujib Government was shocked to see such spontaneous warm public reception for the man who was the main cause for their sufferings, that they issued ‘144 order’ banning people lining the route on the day Bhutto left.
Pending Chapters: 
  • Bakshal
  • Face to face with Sheik Mujib
  • Killing of Sheik Mujib and aftermath 
  • Killing of Khaled Musharraf
  • Face to face with Zia
  • Killing of Zia
  • Killing of Monzur
  • Ershad