Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy
Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy | |
|---|---|
| হোসেন শহীদ সোহরাওয়ার্দী | |
| 5th Prime Minister of Pakistan | |
| In office 12 September 1956 – 17 October 1957 | |
| President | Iskandar Ali Mirza |
| Preceded by | Chaudhry Mohammad Ali |
| Succeeded by | I. I. Chundrigar |
| Leader of the Opposition of Pakistan | |
| In office 7 July 1955 – 11 September 1956 | |
| Leader | Mohammad Ali Bogra Chaudhri Muhammad Ali |
| Preceded by | Dhirendranath Datta |
| Succeeded by | I. I. Chundrigar |
| 3rd Prime Minister of Bengal | |
| In office 23 April 1946 – 14 August 1947 | |
| Monarch | George VI |
| Governors General | Earl Wavell Earl Mountbatten |
| Preceded by | Sir Khawaja Nazimuddin |
| Succeeded by | Position abolished (Khawaja Nazimuddin as Chief Minister of East Bengal) (Prafulla Chandra Ghosh as Premier of West Bengal) |
| President of Pakistan Awami League | |
| In office 27 July 1956 – 10 October 1957 | |
| General Secretary | Sheikh Mujibur Rahman |
| Preceded by | Abdul Hamid Khan Bhashani |
| Succeeded by | Abdur Rashid Tarkabagish |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 8 September 1892 Midnapore, Bengal Presidency, British India |
| Died | 5 December 1963 (aged 71) Beirut, Lebanon |
| Cause of death | Cardiac arrest |
| Resting place | Mausoleum of three leaders, Dhaka, Bangladesh |
| Citizenship | British India (till 1947) Pakistani (1947 onwards) |
| Political party | National Democratic Front (1962–1963) |
| Other political affiliations | All-Pakistan Awami League (1950–1958) Pakistan Muslim League (1947–1949) All-India Muslim League (1926–1947) Swaraj Party (1922–1926) |
| Spouse(s) |
Begum Niaz Fatima
(m. 1920; died 1922)Vera Alexandrovna Tiscenko Calder
(m. 1940; div. 1951) |
| Children | Begum Akhtar Sulaiman (daughter) Rashid Suhrawardy (son) |
| Parents |
|
| Relatives | Suhrawardy family,
Hasan Shaheed Suhrawardy (brother) Shaista Suhrawardy Ikramullah (cousin) Naz Ikramullah (cousin) Salma Sobhan (cousin) Princess Sarvath El Hassan (cousin) Shahida Jamil (granddaughter) |
| Residences | |
| Alma mater | Calcutta University (BS in Maths, MA in Arabic lang.) St Catherine's College, Oxford (MA in Polysci and BCL) |
| Profession | Lawyer, politician |
Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy[a] (8 September 1892 – 5 December 1963) was a Pakistani barrister and politician who served as the fifth prime minister of Pakistan from 1956 to 1957 and before that as the prime minister of Bengal from 1946 to 1947. In both Pakistan and Bangladesh, he is regarded as a patron of separate homeland for South Asian Muslims, for which he is revered as one of the leading founding statesmen of Pakistan; and also as the pioneer of the Bengali civil rights movement in Bangladesh.
Born in 1892 at Midnapore, Bengal, Suhrawardy was a scion of one of Bengal's most prominent Muslim families, the Suhrawardys. He studied law at the University of Oxford, and joined the independence movement during the 1920s as a trade union leader in Calcutta, initially associated with the Swaraj Party. He joined the All-India Muslim League and became one of the leaders of its Bengal branch. Suhrawardy was elected to the Bengal Legislative Assembly in 1937 and led the Muslim League to decisively win the 1946 provincial general election in Bengal, serving as the last prime minister of Bengal until the partition of India. His premiership was notable for his proposal to create a separate and united Bengal — supported by the Muslim League but opposed by the Indian National Congress — and failing to prevent the Great Calcutta Killings.[1][2][3][4] In 1947, the Bengal Assembly voted to partition the province. Suhrawardy briefly remained in India after partition to attend to his ailing father and manage his family's property. He eventually moved to Pakistan and divided his time between Karachi (Pakistan's federal capital) and Dhaka (capital of East Pakistan).
In Dhaka, Suhrawardy emerged as the leader of the Bengali-dominated Awami League which became the principal opposition party to the Pakistan Muslim League. In 1956, the Awami League formed a coalition government with the Republican Party to unseat the Muslim League. Suhrawardy became prime minister in the coalition government, forging stronger ties with the United States by leading Pakistan's diplomacy in SEATO and CENTO. He also became the first Pakistani premier to travel to Communist China. His pro-US foreign policy caused a split in the Awami League in East Pakistan, with Maulana Bhashani forming the break-away pro-Maoist National Awami Party. Suhrawardy's premiership lasted for a year. His central cabinet included figures like Feroz Khan Noon as foreign minister and Abul Mansur Ahmad as trade minister. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was considered Suhrawardy's chief political protégé.[5]
Suhrawardy was premier under Pakistan's first republican constitution and also the mastermind of The Direct Action Day of 16 August 1946. During the 1958 military coup, Suhrawardy was arrested by the military government, due to which he missed the wedding of his niece, Salma Sobhan, Pakistan's first woman barrister.[6] He founded the National Democratic Front in 1962 as a political alliance to oppose the military regime of Ayub Khan but one year later in Beirut due to a heart attack. After his death, the Awami League veered towards Bengali nationalism and launched the 6-point movement, ultimately leading to a civil war in East Pakistan and secession of Bangladesh from Pakistan in 1971.
Suhrawardy is also remembered for his role as the Minister for Civil Supply during the Bengal famine of 1943.[3][4][5][7] In India's West Bengal, he is seen as the Butcher of Bengal and mastermind behind the Direct Action Day; directly responsible for the 1946 Calcutta killings.[8][9][10][1] Suhrawardy's only daughter Begum Akhtar Sulaiman was a social worker and activist in Pakistan; his son, Rashid Suhrawardy, from his second marriage to Vera Alexandrovna Tiscenko Calder, was a British actor known for his role in the film Jinnah. His brother Hasan Shaheed Suhrawardy was a diplomat, writer and art-critic. Many places in South Asia bear his name, including an avenue in Islamabad, a large park near his mausoleum in Dhaka, and streets, dormitories and memorials across Bangladesh. The Suhrawardy family home in Kolkata has been leased as a Library and Information Centre to the Bangladesh High Commission in India by the city's waqf board.
Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).
- ^ a b Neha Banka (7 February 2020). "Streetwise Kolkata: Suhrawardy Avenue... no, not named after the 'Butcher Of Bengal'". The Indian Express.
- ^ Ayesha Jalal (1994). The Sole Spokesman: Jinnah, the Muslim League and the Demand for Pakistan. Cambridge University Press. p. 265. ISBN 978-0-521-45850-4.
The Hindu Mahasabha's demand for partition ... Suhrawardy's only hope was ... asking for an united and independent Bengal. Paradoxically he had a greater chance of getting Jinnah's endorsement for this scheme than of getting it ratified by the Congress High Command ... Jinnah told Mountbatten ... 'What is the use of Bengal without Calcutta; they had better remain united and independent.'
- ^ a b Pranab Chatterjee (2010). A Story of Ambivalent Modernization in Bangladesh and West Bengal: The Rise and Fall of Bengali Elitism in South Asia. Peter Lang. p. 219. ISBN 978-1-4331-0820-4. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
- ^ a b Krishna Dutta (2003). Calcutta: A Cultural and Literary History. Signal Books. p. 163. ISBN 978-1-902669-59-5. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
- ^ a b "An unlikely partnership: Bangabandhu and Suhrawardy". Dhaka Tribune (opinion). 6 December 2019.
- ^ "Remembering Salma Sobhan". The Daily Star. 29 December 2014.
- ^ Unfinished Memoirs. University Press Limited, Bangladesh. November 2013. ISBN 978-984-506-111-7.
- ^ Y.G. Bhave (1995). The First Prime Minister of India. Northern Book Centre. pp. 9–. ISBN 978-81-7211-061-1.
- ^ Tomasz Flasinski. "Dr. Jekyll, Mr Hyde or Bengali Hamlet? Hussein Shaheed Suhrawardy as the last Prime Minister of undivided Bengal" (PDF). Journals PAS.
- ^ M K K Nayar (24 February 2014). Story of an Era Told Without Ill-will. DC Books. p. 113. ISBN 978-93-81699-33-1. Retrieved 9 August 2021.