On 7 March, Bangabandhu showed us the Promised Land
On 7 March 1971, we chose the road to freedom. On that day, we crossed the Rubicon.
We turned our backs on a disturbing, debilitating past. On that afternoon, we followed the lead of our Great Man, the guiding light in our lives, and in the gathering twilight set out in search of a new dawn. It was our moment of self-assertion. It was his finest hour. We simply turned the page, found a new leaf on which to write new history, our history.
When Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman rose to speak before that huge crowd of a million people gathered at the Race Course in Dhaka, indeed stood before the 75 million people of Bangladesh, in formidable political presence, something of the electric coursed through the air. Over the preceding few days, reports and rumours had been making the rounds about an impending declaration of independence by the political leader whose party, the Awami League, had secured a clear majority of seats (167 out of a total of 313) in Pakistan's national assembly at the general elections of December 1970.
What should have been a journey to power as Pakistan's prime minister on Bangabandhu's part had by early March 1971 been transformed into a movement for Pakistan's eastern province to walk out of the state created through the division of India in 1947 and of which it had been a part for 24 years. The reasons were all out there. They had to do with the intrigues which had already been set in motion to thwart the assumption of power at the centre by the Awami League.
History was made on the day. The speech Bangabandhu delivered at the Race Course served the very crucial purpose of bringing home the truth that Bangladesh was on its way to political freedom. On an intellectual level, the speech was a masterpiece. Within its parameters, Mujib deftly negotiated his way out of a bind, one in which he had found himself since President Yahya Khan had unwisely and indefinitely and provocatively deferred the scheduled 3 March meeting of the new national assembly in a broadcast on the first day of the month. Almost immediately, the Bangalee nation moved miles ahead to demand that Bangabandhu declare Bangladesh free of Pakistan.
Over the next few days, such demands began to be echoed insistently, eventually persuading everyone that Bangladesh's leader was actually about to go for an independence declaration. His rejection of an invitation to a roundtable conference called by General Yahya Khan for 10 March was seen as evidence of his intended action. Besides, there had been no perceptible move by him to restrain the students of Dhaka University when they decided to hoist the flag of what they believed would be an independent Bangladesh.
And yet those who stayed in touch with Bangabandhu, or watched the way he handled the situation in those tumultuous times, knew of the complexities he had been pushed into. Caught between a rock and a hard place, he needed to find an acceptable, dignified way out of the crisis. On the one hand, a unilateral declaration of independence would leave him confronting the charge of secessionism not only from the Pakistan authorities but also from nations around the world. He knew that as the leader of the majority party, he could not have his reputation sullied in such cavalier manner. There were before him the not too enlightening instances of Rhodesia's Ian Smith in 1965 and Biafra's Odumegwu Ojukwu in 1967, images he was not enthused by and did not wish to add to. Besides, any unilateral declaration of independence would swiftly invite the retribution of the Pakistan military, at that point steadily reinforcing itself in East Pakistan through shipments of men and matériel all the way from West Pakistan.
Tikka Khan had just landed in Dhaka and clearly had macabre plans in mind. On the other hand, Bangabandhu realised that as undisputed spokesman of the Bangalees he was expected to provide his people with a sense of direction, one that would reassure them about the future. A recurring image, one that has engraved itself in our consciousness, is of Bangabandhu taking slow, ponderous steps as he went up to the dais on that March afternoon. It was the image of a man carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders. There is every reason to believe that he was still shaping and refining his ideas, those he would soon give expression to before that crowd of expectant Bangalees.
And then he began to speak, in oratory that was to prove once more the reality of why he had over the years scaled the heights in the politics of Bengal, of Pakistan. In that one speech, in those riveting eighteen minutes, he painted the entire history of why Pakistan had failed as a state. Even as he did so, he laid out his arguments in defence of what the Bangalee nation needed to do. He mocked the conspiracies then afoot to deprive Bangalees of political power.
With prescience, he told his people that even if he were not around, not amidst them, they should move on to protect the land, its history, from those who would trifle with it. Every moment bubbled with excitement. Bangabandhu soared, and we scaled the heights with him, as he defined our path to the future. The leader who only minutes earlier had seemed wracked by deep worry now offered us a clear path out of the woods and into a very bright blue yonder.
"The struggle this time is the struggle for our emancipation. The struggle this time is the struggle for independence," declaimed Bangabandhu.
We cheered. We raised, loudly, the slogan for freedom. We knew that Bangabandhu had not declared independence, but we were made aware that he had set us on the path to liberty. He had refused to be a secessionist, refused to go down in history as a separatist; and he had abjured all ideas of a unilateral declaration of independence. He had told us, in precise, unambiguous terms, that liberation was down the road, that it was a mere matter of time. We were content. As we went back home, with loud refrains of Joy Bangla around us and in our souls, we told ourselves that life for us had changed forever. Bangabandhu had transcended to being a statesman.
On 7 March 1971, Bangabandhu gave us reason to believe in ourselves once again. He narrated to us, indeed reminded us of, the finer points of our history, and because he did, we remembered our heritage, our innate secular beliefs. Because of him, we were Bangalees again, ready to repudiate the mistake made nearly a quarter century earlier.
Because of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, we reached out to one another, to the world outside the one we inhabited, to build our own brave new world. We were ready to scale the heights. Bangabandhu had pointed out, to his seventy-five million Bangalees, the Promised Land of liberty and happiness.