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Wednesday, November 28, 2007

[chottala.com] 71 er Golpo 2007 (Cloth Drive) Saturday, December 1, 2007 at 5 PM for Victory Day

Upcoming Event – This Saturday

 

71'er Golpo 2007

History, Heritage, and Honor

 

Cloth Drive for Cyclone Sidr Victims at the show!!!

Please donate your unwanted clothes!!!

 

Cultural Show, Fashion Show, Photo Exhibition, Film Screening, Personal Stories about the Liberation War, and much more!

 

71'er Golpo is an initiative that seeks to promote awareness about Bangladesh's history and rich cultural heritage among today's youth. 

 

Please bring your friends and family to celebrate Victory Day!

 

Saturday, December 1, 2007 at 5 PM

 

George W. Johnson Center (Johnson Theater)

George Mason University - 4400 University Dr., Fairfax, VA

 

Each year, the proceeds from Ekattur'er Golpo events are used to support Bangladeshi initiatives that empower people and make a difference. Previous beneficiaries include an Orphanage in Dhaka, Bangla School of Washington DC, and Prothom Alo Acid Victim's Fund. This year's proceeds will be donated to the Cyclone Sidr Victims Fund, Liberation War Museum, and a project that ensures food security for 300 families in Bangladesh.

 

Contact:  info@71ergolpo.com or 703-728-3676

 

P.S.  Updated Flyer Attached



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[chottala.com] Economy in crisis


Economy in crisis


That the economy is going through the most critical phase of our history hardly needs to be pointed out. The local office of the Asian Development Bank paints a grim picture of Bangladesh economy. According to the ADB so far as its economy is concerned, the country is 'passing through the most critical and challenging period' since its independence. There may be some debates over whether it is the 'most critical period' or 'one of the most critical periods'. Against the above backdrop, it is heartening that the ADB, without asking the government to cut subsidies, has committed generous assistance as easy loan to help carry out the task of post-cyclone rehabilitation work. In sync with the ADB help, some other donor countries have also pledged outright grants. Such gestures of goodwill will certainly help the government in grappling with the challenges it faces to put the economy on track. The best guarantee of averting an economic crisis is to increase domestic production.
   Gopal Sengupta
   Canada

(Published in the Daily New Age, )

 

 

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[chottala.com] An Appeal - and a suggestion ?

I must admire your passion, Gopal!
Unfortunately I do not have much personal time to
devote writing a letter to Mr Singh. And applause thee
- Gopal, a Taslima lover!

Ah, since you have so much heartfelt feelings about
Taslima and her 'karma'; perhaps you can sponsor her
to Canada as a spouse. If Taslima dislike Quran,
that's her prerogative; but she can help herself by
choosing Hinduism for her own solace.

As I said, I do not have problem critiquing Muslims,
most of us are really disguise in Islamist cloak!
Growing up as a believer, we do not really learn
Islam, rather than conforming with quid quo pro. I
give credit to Taslima for that. What I really despise
her falsification & ignorance of Quranic learning.

Gopal, enjoy the ride, Gopal.


--- gopalsengupta@aol.com wrote:

>
> In a message dated 11/28/2007 12:51:07 AM Eastern
> Standard Time,
> GopalSengupta writes:
>
> Hon'ble Dr. Manmohan Singh
> Prime Minister
> Government of India
> South Block, Raisina Hill,
> New Delhi,
> India-110 011.
> Telephone: 91-11-23012312.
> Fax: 91-11-23019545 / 91-11-23016857.
>
>
> Hon'ble Prime Minister,
> The recent agitation in Kolkata demanding that the
> visa of Taslima Nasreen
> should be invoked and that she should be asked to
> leave the country is most
> unfortunate. Ms. Nasreen has applied for Indian
> citizenship, and in accordance
> with the ruling of the Supreme Court, no person can
> be denied permission to
> reside while the application for citizenship is
> pending. Ms. Nasreen has been
> residing in Kolkata for sometime and felt at home.
> Ms. Nasreen is a South
> Asian. Universal Brotherhood and Human rights being
> India's civilizational
> values, Government of India should allow Ms. Nasreen
> to permanently reside in
> India in accordance with Indian law.
>
> A small section of Muslims is agitated that
> Ms.Nasreen has authored books
> with text derogatory to Islam while she was in
> Bangladesh. We recall the story
> of a Jewish woman who always threw rubbish on
> Prophet Mohammed whenever he
> passed her house. When she didn't one day, Prophet
> Mohammed inquired why she
> didn't and learnt that she was not well. Prophet
> went to inquire about her
> health and wish her well. We note that many Muslim
> religious leaders had
> condemned the attack on Ms. Nasreen in Hyderabad.
>
> I call upon the West Bengal Government to do
> everything to see that Ms.
> Nasreen can reside peacefully. The statement of the
> Chairperson of the Left Front
> in West Bengal stating that if there was any law
> and order problem,
> Ms.Nasreen could be asked to leave her residence in
> Kolkata is also very unfortunate.
> I also appeal to the Prime Minister of India to
> take speedy steps to grant
> her Overseas Citizenship by virtue of which she
> will have life time Indian
> Visa.
>
> With warmest regards,
>
> Yours truly,
> Gopal Sengupta
> Canada
> _gopalsengupta@aol.com_
> (mailto:gopalsengupta@aol.com)
>
>
> CC:
> Shri Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee
> Chief Minister, West Bengal
>
>
>
> Pages
>
>
> Editorial
> Govt should clarify its
> position on Taslima
> Taslima Nasreen, one of Bangladesh's most
> controversial writers, has
> reportedly been on the run in India after extremist
> Muslims of West Bengal demanded
> her expulsion from their country. She initially
> left Bangladesh in 1994
> after huge street protests by Islamist extremists
> who decried her writings as
> blasphemous and demanded that she be punished for
> hurting religious sentiments.
> Originally making her way to India, she then spent
> a few years in different
> Western countries until she chose a couple of years
> back to return to the
> Indian state of West Bengal â€" a place she
> describes as 'closest to what I know
> as home'.
> However, as it appears from the recent protests
> against her in Kolkata, the
> capital of the communist-run state, the government
> of the officially
> proclaimed secular India has been exposed to
> difficulties as regards providing her
> with a safe home. 'Mentally distressed', she is now
> reportedly hiding at a
> government residence in New Delhi under tight
> security. The union cabinet of
> India has reportedly reached a consensus to ensure
> her safety, while in
> parliament the Communist Party of India argued for
> granting her Indian citizenship
> and the Bhartiya Janata Party demanded that Taslima
> be granted permanent visa
> and asylum in the country. But we wonder what the
> government of Bangladesh,
> of which Taslima is a citizen by birth, is going to
> do about the issue.
> Otherwise critical of the past administrations of
> Khaleda Zia and Sheikh Hasina,
> the government of Fakhruddin Ahmed in this case has
> so far followed in the
> footsteps of its predecessors: maintaining complete
> silence â€" an opportunist
> position indeed â€" about an issue causing enormous
> embarrassment to the country
> across the world.
> Taslima, an overtly atheist writer, proclaims
> herself to be a 'humanist',
> while boldly expressing her views about religions,
> particularly from the
> perspectives of women's rights, which many a
> faithful does not feel comfortable
> with. We believe many of her interpretations of
> religious propositions
> seriously lack sound political, philosophical and
> historical understanding of the
> religious texts concerned, while we have doubts
> about her contributions in
> advancing the feminist cause of the women she is
> apparently writing for, but we
> have no doubt about her democratic right, the
> inalienable right that is, to
> put forward her views on issues of public
> importance. In this regard, we also
> believe that it is the responsibility of a
> government in a democratic
> dispensation to protect the rights of every citizen
> in expressing their views â€" a
> responsibility the subsequent governments of
> Khaleda Zia and Sheikh Hasina
> failed to discharge, particularly in the case of
> Taslima Nasreen.
> The non-partisan incumbents of the day, who made a
> pledge to us to work to
> improve on whatever democratic norms that political
> governments had
> practiced, should come forward to pave the way for
> Taslima to return home safely and
> provide adequate security to her here in
> Bangladesh. Most importantly, the
> government should make its position clear to the
> public, at home and abroad, on
> whether there is any official bar on her return to
> Bangladesh in the first
> place and whether the government is ready to
> provide her with adequate
> security if she returns home. If the government
> fails to do so, it will fail us, the
> citizens of the country, in our attempts to tell
> the world that we are not
> a moribund society incapable of accommodating
> dissenting views. This is a
> real test for a government, apparently comprising
> some highly educated
> individuals, in proving that they are capable of
> standing up to the basic democratic
> spirit of accommodating opposing views,
> particularly when they are tolerating
> many an obscurantist interpretation of religion by
> the obscurantist
> Islamists who oppose Taslima's right to put forward
> her interpretations of
> religion/s.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Taslima Nasreen controversy
>
> I am perplexed that the Islamic organisations are
> so sensitive and swift in
> taking action against any religious intruder who
> hurts Islamic ideology.
>
=== message truncated ===> From: GopalSengupta@aol.com
> Date: Wed, 28 Nov 2007 00:51:07 EST
> Subject: An Appeal
> To: pmosb@pmo.nic.in
> CC: cm@wb.gov.in
>
> Hon'ble Dr. Manmohan Singh
> Prime Minister
> Government of India
> South Block, Raisina Hill,
> New Delhi,
> India-110 011.
> Telephone: 91-11-23012312.
> Fax: 91-11-23019545 / 91-11-23016857.
>
>
> Hon'ble Prime Minister,
> The recent agitation in Kolkata demanding that the
> visa of Taslima Nasreen
> should be invoked and that she should be asked to
> leave the country is most
> unfortunate. Ms. Nasreen has applied for Indian
> citizenship, and in accordance
> with the ruling of the Supreme Court, no person can
> be denied permission to
> reside while the application for citizenship is
> pending. Ms. Nasreen has been
> residing in Kolkata for sometime and felt at home.
> Ms. Nasreen is a South
> Asian. Universal Brotherhood and Human rights being
> India's civilizational
> values, Government of India should allow Ms.
> Nasreen to permanently reside in India
> in accordance with Indian law.
>
> A small section of Muslims is agitated that
> Ms.Nasreen has authored books
> with text derogatory to Islam while she was in
> Bangladesh. We recall the story
> of a Jewish woman who always threw rubbish on
> Prophet Mohammed whenever he
> passed her house. When she didn't one day, Prophet
> Mohammed inquired why she
> didn't and learnt that she was not well. Prophet
> went to inquire about her
> health and wish her well. We note that many Muslim
> religious leaders had
> condemned the attack on Ms. Nasreen in Hyderabad.
>
> I call upon the West Bengal Government to do
> everything to see that Ms.
> Nasreen can reside peacefully. The statement of the
> Chairperson of the Left Front
> in West Bengal stating that if there was any law and
> order problem,
> Ms.Nasreen could be asked to leave her residence in
> Kolkata is also very unfortunate.
> I also appeal to the Prime Minister of India to take
> speedy steps to grant
> her Overseas Citizenship by virtue of which she will
> have life time Indian
> Visa.
>
> With warmest regards,
>
> Yours truly,
> Gopal Sengupta
> Canada
> _gopalsengupta@aol.com_
> (mailto:gopalsengupta@aol.com)
>
>
> CC:
> Shri Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee
> Chief Minister, West Bengal
>
>
>
> Pages
>
>
> Editorial
> Govt should clarify its
> position on Taslima
> Taslima Nasreen, one of Bangladesh's most
> controversial writers, has
> reportedly been on the run in India after extremist
> Muslims of West Bengal demanded
> her expulsion from their country. She initially
> left Bangladesh in 1994
> after huge street protests by Islamist extremists
> who decried her writings as
> blasphemous and demanded that she be punished for
> hurting religious sentiments.
> Originally making her way to India, she then spent
> a few years in different
> Western countries until she chose a couple of years
> back to return to the
> Indian state of West Bengal â€" a place she
> describes as 'closest to what I know
> as home'.
> However, as it appears from the recent protests
> against her in Kolkata, the
> capital of the communist-run state, the government
> of the officially
> proclaimed secular India has been exposed to
> difficulties as regards providing her
> with a safe home. 'Mentally distressed', she is now
> reportedly hiding at a
> government residence in New Delhi under tight
> security. The union cabinet of
> India has reportedly reached a consensus to ensure
> her safety, while in
> parliament the Communist Party of India argued for
> granting her Indian citizenship
> and the Bhartiya Janata Party demanded that Taslima
> be granted permanent visa
> and asylum in the country. But we wonder what the
> government of Bangladesh,
> of which Taslima is a citizen by birth, is going to
> do about the issue.
> Otherwise critical of the past administrations of
> Khaleda Zia and Sheikh Hasina,
> the government of Fakhruddin Ahmed in this case has
> so far followed in the
> footsteps of its predecessors: maintaining complete
> silence â€" an opportunist
> position indeed â€" about an issue causing enormous
> embarrassment to the country
> across the world.
> Taslima, an overtly atheist writer, proclaims
> herself to be a 'humanist',
> while boldly expressing her views about religions,
> particularly from the
> perspectives of women's rights, which many a
> faithful does not feel comfortable
> with. We believe many of her interpretations of
> religious propositions
> seriously lack sound political, philosophical and
> historical understanding of the
> religious texts concerned, while we have doubts
> about her contributions in
> advancing the feminist cause of the women she is
> apparently writing for, but we
> have no doubt about her democratic right, the
> inalienable right that is, to
> put forward her views on issues of public
> importance. In this regard, we also
> believe that it is the responsibility of a
> government in a democratic
> dispensation to protect the rights of every citizen
> in expressing their views â€" a
> responsibility the subsequent governments of
> Khaleda Zia and Sheikh Hasina
> failed to discharge, particularly in the case of
> Taslima Nasreen.
> The non-partisan incumbents of the day, who made a
> pledge to us to work to
> improve on whatever democratic norms that political
> governments had practiced,
> should come forward to pave the way for Taslima to
> return home safely and
> provide adequate security to her here in
> Bangladesh. Most importantly, the
> government should make its position clear to the
> public, at home and abroad, on
> whether there is any official bar on her return to
> Bangladesh in the first
> place and whether the government is ready to provide
> her with adequate
> security if she returns home. If the government
> fails to do so, it will fail us, the
> citizens of the country, in our attempts to tell
> the world that we are not a
> moribund society incapable of accommodating
> dissenting views. This is a
> real test for a government, apparently comprising
> some highly educated
> individuals, in proving that they are capable of
> standing up to the basic democratic
> spirit of accommodating opposing views,
> particularly when they are tolerating
> many an obscurantist interpretation of religion by
> the obscurantist
> Islamists who oppose Taslima's right to put forward
> her interpretations of
> religion/s.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Taslima Nasreen controversy
>
> I am perplexed that the Islamic organisations are
> so sensitive and swift in
> taking action against any religious intruder who
> hurts Islamic ideology.
> Ironically, they are not sensitive at all to other
> religions. Are Indians
> bending their knees to these organisations who
> issue fatwas? I think the government
> should handle these organisations with a firm hand.
> Otherwise
=== message truncated ===

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