Syed Nazrul Islam was a Bangladeshi politician and a senior
leader of the Awami League. During the Bangladesh Liberation War, he served as
the acting President of Bangladesh in the absence of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
Syed Nazrul Islam was born in 1925 at
Jashodal Dampara in the Kishoreganj District (then Mymensingh District) of the
province of Bengal. He obtained degrees in history and law from the University
of Dhaka and was an active student political leader in the Muslim League. Syed
captained his college's cricket and hockey teams and participated in the Pakistan
movement. He entered the civil service of Pakistan in 1949 but resigned in 1951
to work as a professor of history at the Anandmohan College in Mymensingh,
where he also practised law.
Syed Nazrul's political career began when
he joined the Awami Muslim League and participated in the Language Movement in
1952, for which he was arrested by Pakistani police. He would rise to various
provincial and central party leadership positions, becoming a close confidante
of the party's leader Sheikh Mujib. He was elected to the National Assembly of
Pakistan in 1970, where he served briefly as deputy leader of the majority.
Following the arrest of Mujib on March 25, 1971 by Pakistani forces, Syed
escaped to Mujibnagar with other party leaders and proclaimed the independence
of Bangladesh. Mujib was elected president of Bangladesh but Syed would serve
as acting president, with Tajuddin Ahmed as prime minister. Syed played a key
role in leading the nationalist cause, coordinating the Mukti Bahini guerrilla
force and winning support from India and other nations.
After the independence of Bangladesh, Syed
was appointed minister of industries, the deputy leader in parliament and a member
of the constitution committee. When Mujib banned other political parties and
assumed sweeping powers as president in 1975, Syed was appointed vice president
and became a chief organiser of the BAKSAL party and Mujib loyalist groups.
Following the assassination of Sheikh
Mujibur Rahman on 15 August 1975 Syed fled underground with other Mujib
loyalists such as Tajuddin Ahmed, A. H. M. Qamaruzzaman and Muhammad Mansur Ali,
but was ultimately arrested by the regime of the new president Khondaker Mostaq
Ahmad. The four leaders were imprisoned in the Dhaka Central Jail and
assassinated on November 3 under controversial and mysterious circumstances.
This day is commemorated every year in Bangladesh by the Awami League as Jail
Killing Day.
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