INTBBF | About Us
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About Us

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Prof. Dr. Abul Hasnat Milton
Chairman
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Ahmed Feroz
Secretary General
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David Rahman
Organizing Secretary
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Khandakar Mahmudul Gani
Treasurer
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Engr. Mahfujur R. Bhuiyan
President, Sweden Chapter
3
Dr. Samsul Kabir
President, Romania Chapter
5
Mahfuz Faroque
President, Germany Chapter
6
Imran Khan Murad
President, Switzerland Chapter
7
Advocate Muhiuddin Ahmed
President, Canada Chapter
4
Farida Arvi
President, United States of America Chapter
1
Taruna Bahar Hussain
President, United Kingdom Chapter
Rebeka Sultan Mukti
Rebeka Sultana Mukti
Member Advisory Council
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M.K.R. Sheikh Kamal
President, Maldives Chapter
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Rumi Aktar Poli
Member Advisory Council
4
Sheikh Shamim Kamal
President, Italy (Italian Republic) Chapter
Pavel Nicoleta
Pavel Nicoleta
Member Advisory Council
3
Md. Ashikur Rahman Avi
President, Bangladesh Chapter
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Fais Kamal
President, Kuwait Chapter
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Khaled Hasan Khan
President, Ukraine Chapter
Devid Ekram
Devid Ekram
President, South Korea Chapter
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Shafiqul Islam Prodhan
President, Qatar Chapter
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Azhar Kabir Babu
President, Czech Republic Chapter

Bangabondhu’s Incomplete Work…

INTERNATIONAL BANGABANDHU Foundation, is an organization of joint cooperation of 29 chapter in 29 countries until now. In future more country will join with us. It is totally a non-governmental organization. It is affiliated by International Bangabandhu Foundation Central Organization and Vienna, Austria is its head quarter.

 

The main objective of International Bangabandhu Foundation is to support to share Bangabandhu’s ideology and practices as well as fulfil his dream of ‘Sonar Bangla’, Encourage Research on Bangabandhu’s life and works, Implement Project on Bangabondhu’s incomplete work and establish him in European countries and generate support on implementing the vision of Digital Bangladesh.

 

Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the father of the Bengali Nation, is not a mere individual. He in an institution. A movement. A revolution. An upsurge. He is the architect of the nation. He is the essence of epic poetry and he is history. This history goes back a thousand years. Which is why contemporary history has recognized him as the greatest Bengali of the past thousand years.

The future will call him the superman of eternal time. And he will live, in luminosity reminiscent of a bright star, in historical legends. He will show the path to the Bengali nation his dreams are the basis of the existence of the nation. A remembrance of him is the culture and society that Bengalis have sketched for themselves. His possibilities, the promises thrown forth by him, are the fountain-spring of the civilized existence of the Bengalis.

 

He is a friend to the masses. To the nation, he is the Father. In the view of men and women in other places and other climes, he is the founder of sovereign Bangladesh. Journalist Cyril Dunn once said of him, “In the thousand – year history of Bangladesh, Sheikh Mujib is the only leader who has, in terms of blood, race, language, culture and birth, been a full – blooded Bengali. His physical stature was immense. His voice was redolent of thunder. His charisma worked magic on people. The courage and charm that flowed from him made him a unique superman in these times.” Newsweek magazine has called him the poet of politics.

British PM Harold Wilson Wrote…

The leader of the British humanist movement, the late Lord Fenner Brockway once remarked, “In a sense, Sheikh Mujib is a great leader than George Washington, Mahatma Gandhi and De Valera.” The greatest journalist of the new Egypt, Hasnein Heikal (former editor of Al Ahram and close associate of the late President Nasser) has said, “Nasser is not simply of Egypt. Arab world. His Arab nationalism is the message of freedom for the Arab people. In similar fashion, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman does not belong to Bangladesh alone. He is the harbinger of freedom for all Bangalis. His Bengali nationalism is the new emergence of Bengali civilization and culture. Mujib is the hero of the Bengalis, in the past and in the times, that are.

 

Embracing Bangabandhu at the Algiers Non – Aligned Summit in 1973, Cuba’s Fidel Castro noted, “I have not seen the Himalayas. But I have seen Sheikh Mujib. In personality and in courage, this man is the Himalayas. I have thus had the experience of witnessing the Himalayas.

 

Upon hearing the news of Bangabandhu’s assassination, former British Prime Minister Harold Wilson wrote to a Bengali Journalist, “This is surely a supreme national tragedy for you. For me it is a personal tragedy of immense dimensions.” Refers to the founder of a nation-state. In

Europe, the outcome of democratic national aspirations has been the rise of modern nationalism and the national state.

Those who have provided leadership in the task of the creation of nations or nation-states have fondly been called by their peoples as founding fathers and have been placed on the high perches of history. Such is the reason why Kamal Ataturk is the creator of modern Turkey. And thus, it is that Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman is the founder of the Bengali nation – state and father of the nation of his fellow Bengalis. But in more ways than one, Sheikh Mujib has been a more successful founding father than either Ataturk or Gandhi. Turkey existed even during the period of the Ottoman Empire. Once the empire fell, Ataturk took control of Turkey and had it veer away from western exploitation through giving shape to a democratic nation – state.

Agartala Case…

Sheikh Mujib’s demand was ignored. Bangladesh began to be called East Pakistan by the rulers. Years later, after his release from the so – called Agartala case, Sheikh Mujib took the first step toward doing away with the misdeed imposed on his people. On 5 December 1969, he said, “At one time, attempts were made to wipe out all traces of Bengali history and aspirations. Except for the Bay of Bengal, the term Bengal is not seen anywhere. On behalf of the people of Bengal, I am announcing today that henceforth the eastern province of Pakistan will, instead of being called East Pakistan, be known as Bangladesh.” Sheikh Mujib’s revolution was not merely directed at the achievement of political freedom. Once the Bengali nation – state was established, it become his goal to carry through programs geared to the achievement of national economic welfare.

 

The end of exploitation was one underlying principle of his program, which he called the Second Revolution. While there are many who admit today that Gandhi was the founder of the non – violent non – cooperation movement, they believe it was an effective use of that principle which enabled Sheikh Sheikh Mujib to create history. Mujib’s politics was a natural follow – up to the struggle and movements of Bengal’s mystics, its religious preachers, Titumir’s crusade, the Indigo Revolt, Gandhi’s non – cooperation, and Subhash Chandra Bose’s armed attempt for freedom. The secularism of Deshbandhu Chittaranjan Das, the liberal democratic politics of Sher-e-Bangla A. K. Fazlul Hague and Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy Contributed to the molding of the Mujib character.

National Martyrs’ Memorial, Savar, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
National Parliament House, Sher-e-Bangla Nagar, Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Speak of his Dreams…

He was committed to public welfare. Emerging free of the limitations of western democracy, he wished to see democracy sustain Bengali nationalism. It was this dream that led to the rise of his ideology. At the United Nations, he was the first man to speak of his dreams, his people’s aspiration, in Bangla. The language was, in that swift stroke of politics, recognized by the global community. For the first time after Rabindranath Tagore’s Nobel achievement in 1913, Bangla was put on a position of dignity. The multifaceted life to the great man cannot be put together in language or color. The reason is put on; Mujib is greater than his creation. It is not possible to hold within the confines of the frame the picture of such greatness. He is our emancipation – today and tomorrow. The greatest treasure of the Bengali nation is preservation of his heritage, a defense of his legacy. He has conquered death. His memory is our passage to the days that are to be.