The Unfinished Memoirs

The Unfinished Memories (Bengali: অসমাপ্ত আত্মজীবনী) is the autobiography by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, founding father of Bangladesh.

The Unfinished Memoirs
The Cover page of The Unfinished Memoirs
AuthorSheikh Mujibur Rahman
Sheikh Hasina (Preface)
Original titleঅসমাপ্ত আত্মজীবনী (Asamapta Atmajibanee)
TranslatorFakrul Alam
Cover artistQayyum Chowdhury (the original Bengali version)
CountryBangladesh, India and Pakistan
LanguageOriginal : Bengali
Other Translations: English, Chinese, Japanese, French, Hindi, Palestinian Arabic, Turkish, Asamiya , Spanish, Urdu and Russian.
GenreAutobiography
PublisherThe University Press Limited, Penguin Books and Oxford University Press
Publication date
June 12, 2012 (2012-06-12)
Pages323
ISBN9789845061100
Followed byKaragarer Rojnamcha 

Background

Photograph of a page from The manuscript.

Inspired by his wife, Fazilatunnesa Mujib, Mujib started writing his autobiography in his notebooks during his sojourns in jail as a state prisoner between 1967 and 1969.[1] Later Mujib gave the notebooks to Moni to prepare a typed copy. But after the assassination of Sheikh Mujib and Sheikh Fazlul Haq Moni, the notebooks slid in oblivion and remained so until one of his relatives discovered four notebooks in a drawer of Sheikh Moni in 2004.[2] By then, the notebooks' pages became discolored and brittle.

The contents of the notebook were extracted by Sheikh Hasina along with Sheikh Rehana and Baby Moudud. The compiled notes were published as a book on 12 June 2012 from The University Press Limited. The book was named by Rehana and prefaced by Hasina.[3] Since it has been translated into 14 language. On 7 October 2020, brail version of the book was released.[4]

Content

In his memoirs, Mujib portrayed vividly many aspects of his life in and out of prison. Mujib also narrated the beginning of his ancestry, birth and childhood, days in school and college, and social and political involvements.[5] Mujib also recounted the historical events that he closely observed as a political activist before and after the India partition – famine, communal riots in Kolkata and Bihar, partition, politics of Kolkata-centric State Muslim Student League and Muslim League, Pakistan central government's discriminatory attitude.[6][7] It also chronicles Bengali language movement, the first stirrings of the movement for autonomy and independence, and powerfully conveys the great uncertainties as well as the great hopes that the Bengali nation had at that time. Mujib expressed his views on other prominent leaders of the time, including Maulana Bhashani, Yar Mohammad Khan, Mahatma Gandhi, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Liaquat Ali Khan, Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, A.K. Fazlul Haq, Abul Hashim, Khawaja Nazimuddin, Ghulam Muhammad, Mohammad Ali Bogra, Chaudhury Muhammad Ali, and Nurul Amin.[8] The last part portrays with the events accompanying the struggle for democratic rights in 1955.

References

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