Bangla Academy

Bangladesh's national language authority From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Bangla Academy (Bengali: বাংলা একাডেমি, pronounced [baŋla ækaɖemi]) is the official regulatory body of the Bengali language in Bangladesh. It is an autonomous institution funded by the government of Bangladesh that fosters the Bengali language, literature and culture, works to develop and implement national language policy and conducts original research in Bengali. Established in 1955, it is located in the Burdwan House in Shahbagh, Dhaka, on the grounds of the University of Dhaka and Suhrawardy Udyan. The Bangla Academy hosts the annual Ekushey Book Fair.

AbbreviationBA
Formation3 December 1955; 70 years ago (1955-12-03)
Quick facts Abbreviation, Pronunciation ...
Bangla Academy
বাংলা একাডেমি
AbbreviationBA
Pronunciation[ˈbaŋla ˈækaˌɖemi]
Named afterAcadémie Française
Formation3 December 1955; 70 years ago (1955-12-03)
TypeAutonomous institution
Legal statusLanguage regulator
PurposeResearch, publication and translation related to the Bengali language, literature and culture
HeadquartersBurdwan House
Location
Region served
Bangladesh
Official language
Bengali
Mohammad Azam
President
Abul Kashem Fazlul Haq[1]
Parent organization
Ministry of Cultural Affairs
FundingGovernment of Bangladesh
Websitebanglaacademy.gov.bd
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History

Moder Gorob, depicting the language movement martyrs, is one of the features of Bangla Academy.

The importance of establishing an organisation for Bengali language was first emphasised by the linguist Muhammad Shahidullah.[2][3] Later, following the Language movement, on 27 April 1952, the All Party National Language Committee decided to demand the establishment of an organisation for the promotion of Bengali language. During the 1954 parliamentary elections, the United Front's 21-point manifesto stated that, "The prime minister from the United Front will dedicate the Bardhaman House, also known as Burdwan House, for establishing a research center for the Bengali language".[3][4] The building was the official residence of the Chief Minister of East Pakistan, Nurul Amin during the Language movement and part of the University of Dhaka before that.[4][5] Following the election success of the Front, the education minister Syed Azizul Haque placed the order to fulfill this promise.

In 1955, the government formed a committee to expedite the process. The committee was composed of leading intellectuals like Muhammad Shahidullah, Qazi Motahar Hossain, S.M. Bhattacharya, W. H. Shadani, and Muhammad Barkatullah. On 3 December 1955, the Chief Minister of East Bengal, Abu Hussain Sarkar, inaugurated the institute.[3] Barkatullah acted as the Special Officer in charge. In 1956, Muhammad Enamul Haque took over as the first director.[6]

In 1957, an act of the parliament formally established the funding source and the Government support for the institute.[3] The first book published by the academy was Laili Maznu, an epic by the medieval poet Dawlat Ujir Bahram Khan, and edited by Ahmed Sharif. The first fellow of the academy was the poet Farrukh Ahmed.[3]

The publication division was established in early 1957; the research, culture and library divisions and translation division were set in 1958 and 1961 respectively.[7]

After the independence of Bangladesh, the director's position was renamed Director General.[6] Mazharul Islam, head of Bangla Department of Rajshahi University, was the first Director General of the institute.[8] On 19 September 2008, a new 8-storey building, containing a 500-capacity auditorium and a 100-capacity seminar room, opened next to the main building.

Structure

The functions and structure of the institute were devised on the model of the French Academy.[6]

Divisions

  1. Research, compilation and folklore
  2. Language, literature, culture and publication
  3. Textbook
  4. Planning and training

Activities

The main task of the academy is to conduct research on Bengali language, culture, and history, and to publish Bengali literary and research work.

To commemorate the Language movement and the Language martyr's day, the academy organizes the month-long Ekushey Book Fair, the largest book fair in the country. It was introduced by former director general Monzur-I-Mowla in 1979.

Criticism

In recent years, Bangla Academy has been widely criticized for allowing different organizations to arrange events in English and denigrating Bengali in the premise of Bangla Academy, which is a violation of the vision of the institution.[9] "The Academy has misused a lot of funds in producing useless books, books that are unoriginal," opines Salimullah Khan.[10] Khan is of the opinion that the academy is short on original publications long on dross.[10] He believes that both in research and in the field of creative writing, originality must be given priority. He also adds that most of the problems lie in the process of selection. The selection process the crucial decision to ditch one manuscript to pick another that will be added to the long list of academy publications, is faulty and in dire need of revision.[10]

Awards conferred by Bangla Academy

Bangla Academy confers the following awards annually or biennially.[11]

Bangla Academy Literary Award

Rabindra Award

This award is the recognition of research of Rabindra literature and lifelong pursuit of Rabindra music since 2010.[12]

Mazharul Islam Poetry Award

This award is conferred to the Bangladeshi poets since 2010.[12][19]

S'adat Ali Akhand Literature Award

This is a literature award commemorating the writer S'adat Ali Akhand.

Kabir Chowdhury Children Literature Award

Meher Kabir Science Literature Award

Bangla Academy has been conferring Meher Kabir Science Literature Award bi-annually since 2005 commemorating Meher Kabir (1919–2018), an academic and a litterateur. This award recognizes overall contribution of notable writers in science literature. The prize money of Tk 1,00,000, a certificate and a memento are presented to the award-winning writer in the annual general meeting of Bangla Academy. The initial fund was provided by National Professor Kabir Chowdhury, also the husband of Meher Kabir.

Halima-Sarfuddin Science Writer Award

This award is conferred biannually following the Bengali calendar.[26]

  • 1397–1398: Md Lutfor Rahman and Md Alamgir Hossain for Computer Science
  • 1401–1402: Atul Kumar Pal for Exportable fisheries of Bangladesh and Shahidullah Mridha for Bay of Bengal: Biodiversity, Marine Science and Marine Resources
  • 1405–1406: Farseem Mannan Mohammedy for Jyoti: Introduction to Physics
  • 1407–1408: Hafizuddin Ahmed for Deadly disease SARS
  • 1409–1410: Basudev Kumar Das for Environment: Chemical composition and pollution
  • 1411–1412: Ferdousi Begum for Why am I like my parents?
  • 1415–1416: J. B. M. Jafar Sadeq for Clinical Skin, Leprosy, Venereal Diseases and Their Treatment
  • 1418–1419: Dwijen Sharma for Talking about trees and flowers
  • 1420–1421: Asif for At the turning point of history on the path of evolution
  • 1422–1423: Zayed Farid for Plant Nature
  • 1424–1425: Mukaram Hossain for Nisarga Akhyan
  • 1426–1427: Saumitra Chakravarty[20]
  • 1428–1429: Abdul Gaffar[22]
  • 1430–1431: Safiq Islam for Goniter Rajye Anondobhromon[23]

Syed Waliullah Award

Bangla Academy confers this award commemorating the writer Syed Waliullah. The award consists of a certificate, a crest of honour and Tk 50,000. The award was formally called "Bangla Academy Probashi Lekhak Award" (lit: Bangla Academy Expatriate Writer Award).[27]

  • 2014 – Iqbal Hasan and Syed Iqbal
  • 2015 – Manju Islam and Fras Bhattacharya
  • 2016 – Shamim Azad and Nazmun Nesa Peyari
  • 2017 – Masud Khan and Mujib Irm

Litterateur Mohammad Barkatullah Essay Award

Poet Jasimuddin Literature Award

Bangla Academy introduced this biennial literary award in 2019. The winner receives Tk 2,00,000 and a crest as part of the award.[28]

Professor Momtazuddin Ahmed Natyajan Award

This award was introduced as Adhyapak Momtazuddin Ahmed Natyajan Puraskar in 2021 after the death of dramatist Momtazuddin Ahmed.[29][note 1][note 2]

Abu Rushd Literature Award

This award was introduced in 2021 as a tribute to academic and writer Abu Rushd Matinuddin to recognize Bangladeshi authors.[30]

Rabeya Khatun Fiction Award

  • 2022 – Jyoti Prakash and Swakrita Noman[31]
  • 2025 – Subrata Barua and Anisur Rahman[23]

Presidents

More information Years, President ...
YearsPresidentProfession
1961–1961Mohammad Akram KhanJournalist and politician
1962–1963Mohammad BarkatullahWriter
1964–1965Muhammad Qudrat-i-KhudaEducationist
1969–1971Syed Murtaza AliWriter and historian
1972–1974Zainul AbedinPainter
1975–1977Syed Murtaza Ali
1977–1979Syed Ali AhsanPoet and educator
1980–1982Abdul Haque FaridiIslamic scholar
1982–1983Abu Mohammed Habibullah
1986–1990Abdullah-Al-MutiEducationist
1990–1992Gazi Shamsur RahmanLawyer
1993–1994Abdur Rahman ChowdhuryJustice
1994–1996Gazi Shamsur Rahman
1996–1999Shamsur RahmanPoet
1999–2002Anisuzzaman
2002–2006Wakil Ahmed
2007–2009M Harunur Rashid
2009–2011Kabir Chowdhury
2011–2020Anisuzzaman[32]
2020–2021Shamsuzzaman Khan[33]Folklorist
2021–2021Rafiqul Islam[34]
2022–2024Selina Hossain[35]Novelist
2024-Abul Kashem Fazlul Haq[36]Educationist
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List of honorary fellows

As of 2022, there are 193 persons made honorary fellows by the academy.[37]

1975
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015[39]
2016
2017
2018
2020
2021
2022[42]
2023[43]

Footnotes

  1. The Adhyapak Momtazuddin Ahmed Natyajan Puraskar–2019 was awarded to Asaduzzaman Noor by a different organization before Bangla Academy started hosting it since 2021
  2. A similar sounding award Momtazuddin Ahmed Natyakar Puroshkar is conferred by a separate organization since 2020

References

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