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Famous People


Gyanchandra Majumdar

Gyanchandra Majumdar was born in 189 in the village of Raipur in Barhatta Upazila. He was one of the leading figures of the anti-British independence movement in the Indian subcontinent and a fiery revolutionary. From the time of studying in Dhaka College in 1908, the founder of the practice association P. He came to the ally of Mitra and was the first to take the formal oath as a member. After passing his B.Sc. in 1910, he was admitted to the Presidency College for his M.Sc. While studying for his M.Sc., he drew the attention of Prafulla Chandra. After the end of the First World War, he joined the Congress movement in 1919 and founded the Mymensingh Congress. He was one of the leading leaders of Bengal in 1925-30. In 1936, he joined hands with Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose against the then Congress High Command and was elected a member of the Bengal Executive Council as his nominee. He has to be imprisoned many times. After partition, he lived in Pakistan until 1967 and was a member of the Pak Constituent Assembly.

He died on October 3, 1980.


Poet and painter Nirmalendu Gun


Full name Nirmalendu Prakash Guna Chowdhury. He was born on June 21, 1945 (Ashar 7, 1352 BS) in Kashaban village of Barhatta upazila. He is widely known in Bangladesh as Nirmalendu Guna and is a poet and painter. The first book of poetry, Premanshur Rakta Chai, gained popularity after its publication in 1960. The Hulia poem, written in the historical context of this book, became very popular and later Tanvir Mokammel made an experimental film based on it. He is primarily a modern poet. Class struggle, anti-authoritarianism, love and women have come up again and again as the main themes of his poems. Besides poetry, he also wrote travel stories. His own discourses on poetry and prose are among the most widely recited poems - Hulia, Unfinished Poems, Manus (1960 Love Blood Wanted), African Love Poems (196 Niranjan's World), etc.

Published books

Poetry: Premanshur Rakta Chai (1970), Na Premik Na Biplobi (1972), Kavita, Amimansit Ramani (1973), Dirgh Dibas Dirgh Rajoni (1974), Chaitrer Bhalobasha (1975), O Bandhu Amar (1975), Ananda Kusum (1986). ), Soil of Bengal, Water of Bengal (1986), Before That I Want Socialism (1989), Chasabhushar Kavya (1981), Achal Padabali (1982), Prithibijora Gaan (1982), Dur Ha Duhshasan (1973), Nirbita (1973), Decree of Peace (1974), Iskra (1974), First Day Sun (1974), Blow Again (1974), Why Not That Bird (1975), Niranjan's World (197), Everlasting Flute (198), Don't Sorrow, Live (198), 198 (198), When I Open My Chest (1989), The Running Deer's Glory (1992), Kavyasamagra, Volume 1 (1992, Compilation), Kavyasamagra, Volume II (1993, Compilation), Ananta Barafabithi (1993) ), Anandaudyan (1995), Fifty Thousand Years (1995), Dear Woman's Lost Poems (1996), Shire Bangladesh, Yahiyakal (1997), I Saw Time to Born (2000), Batsyayan (2000)

Storybook: People of your group

Book of Rhymes: Sonar Kuthar (196)

Autobiographical Books: My Childhood, My Voice, Autobiography 1971 (2006)

Translation: Blood and Flowers (1983)

He was awarded the Bangla Academy in 1982, the Ekushey Padak in 2001 and the Swadhinata Puraskar in 2016.


Professor Dr. M Innas Ali


Professor Dr. M Innas Ali was born on September 1, 1960 in Bikramshree village of Barhatta upazila. He is a Bangladeshi physicist and the founder of the Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission. He did his MSc in Physics from Dhaka University in 1940. He received his MEE in Electronics from New York University in 1948 and his PhD in Nuclear Physics in 1955 from the University of London. Innas Ali, a science lover in science research, devoted himself to research on electronics and nuclear at Dhaka University. He also did research at the Indian Institute of Cultivation and Science, Calcutta, the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore, New York University, University College in London and the Brook Haven National Laboratory in the United States. In addition to his original five books, he has published more than 150 research papers. He joined Dhaka University as a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Physics. He served in this department from 1947 to 1973. Professor Innas was a member of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission from 1963 to 1966. He was the Dean of the Department of Science, Dhaka University from 1986 to 1982. After the great war of liberation and independence, he joined Chittagong University as the Vice Chancellor. He was also a founding member of the University Grand Commission, Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission, Science Adviser to the President and a member of the Planning Commission. He also served as a professor at King Abdulaziz University in Jeddah from 1989 to 1982.

He died on 4 May 2010.

Honors:
Sitara-i-Qaeda-e-Azam, 1989
Permanent Complex Peace Award, 198
Independence Medal, Science and Technology, 1991
Lifetime Achievement Award, Bangladesh Academy of Sciences, 2006
Honorary Fellowship, Bangla Academy, 2006