In 1952, a Pakistani police officer comes to a small town in southern east Pakistan (Now Bangladesh), and orders all soldiers in the police station to speak in Urdu, and eventually becomes more aggressive to change the people's language. His autocratic behavior breaks the small town into a silent protest and reassembles the whole country. Fagun Haway tells us about the spirit of protecting the mother language represents that of Dhaka where police opens fire on the procession. Salam, Barkat, Zabbar and Rafique dies. Mother tongue is our right. No one can take it away.
In 1952, a Pakistani police officer comes to a small town in southern east Pakistan (Now Bangladesh), and orders all soldiers in the police station to speak in Urdu, and eventually becomes more aggressive to change the people's language. His autocratic behavior breaks the small town into a silent protest and reassembles the whole country. Fagun Haway tells us about the spirit of protecting the mother language represents that of Dhaka where police opens fire on the procession. Salam, Barkat, Zabbar and Rafique dies. Mother tongue is our right. No one can take it away.
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