- 2021-08-19 05:17:41
- LAST MODIFIED: 2025-01-28 02:07:03
Looking back at Zahir Raihan, the legend
Photo Collected:
Staff Correspondent:
Dhaka, Aug-19,
Thursday marks the 86th birth anniversary of the legendary filmmaker and freedom fighter Zahir Raihan, best remembered for capturing the 1971 Liberation War on celluloid.
Born as Mohammad
Zahirullah on August 19, 1935, in Majupur village of the then Feni mahakuma in
Noakhali district, Raihan initially studied at Calcutta Alia Madrasah in India,
where his father was a professor.
After the Partition of
India in 1947, his family moved back to his ancestral village in Feni. Three
years later, he successfully completed matriculation from Amirabad High School.
And that year only, he started working as a journalist for Juger Alo.
Although he joined
medical college after completing his intermediate examination from Dhaka
College in 1953, Raihan eventually dropped out. However, he later obtained his
Bachelor of Arts degree in Bangla from Dhaka University in 1958.
After Juger Alo, he had
worked with many other newspapers, namely Khapchhara, Jantrik, and Cinema. He
also served as the editor of Probaho in 1956. His first collection of short
stories ‘Suryagrahan’ was published in 1955. He was also one of the publishers
of English Weekly Express.
Raihan went back to
Calcutta (now Kolkata) and joined Pramatesh Burua Memorial Photography School
in 1952 to learn photography. His career in the film industry began with the
film ‘Jago Huye Savera’ in 1957, where he worked as an assistant director.
As the assistant
director, he had also worked with director Salahuddin in the film ‘Je Nodi
Morupothay’ and Ehtesham in ‘Ei Desh Tomar Amar’. His first directorial venture
‘Kokhono Asheni’ was released in 1961.
After that, Raihan
successfully launched two of his revolutionary attempts as a director in 1964
by making the movie ‘Sangam’, Pakistan’s first-ever coloured film, and
‘Bahana’, Pakistan’s first cinemascope Urdu film.
He was gradually
becoming more and more successful during that time as a director with
back-to-back hits such as ‘Sonar Kajol’ (1962, jointly directed with Kolim
Sharafi), ‘Kancher Deyal’ (1963), ‘Behula’ (1966), ‘Anowara’ (1966) and ‘Agun
Niye Khela’ (1967).
Through his movies, he
had launched several prominent artistes, most notably Nayak Raj Razzak and
Babita, and worked frequently with prominent actor-directors Amzad Hossain and
Khan Ataur Rahman.
As the nation's
political situation was getting chaotic more than ever during the time, Raihan
was continuously feeling the zeal to break every shackle imposed by then
Pakistani rulers. He actively participated in the 1952 Language Movement and
1969’s Mass Uprising.
At that time, Raihan
felt the urgency of making a film based on both of these remarkable movements,
and thus made his legendary film ‘Jeebon Theke Neya’ in 1970, considered an
example of ‘National Cinema’, using discrete local traditions to build a
representation of the Bangladeshi national identity. The classic is considered
a milestone in Bangladeshi cinema.
During the 1971
Liberation War of Bangladesh, Raihan began creating English documentary films
on the subject, including ‘Let There Be Light’, which he could not finish
because of the break out of the war. After the historic 25th March of 1971, he
went to Calcutta and made his acclaimed documentary ‘Stop Genocide’,
highlighting the massacre orchestrated by the Pakistani Army.
There he also showed
his film ‘Jeebon Theke Neya’, which was highly acclaimed by legendary
filmmakers, including Satyajit Ray, Ritwik Ghatak, Mrinal Sen and Tapan Sinha.
Despite his financial hardships at the time, he donated all the proceeds from
the Calcutta event to the Freedom Fighters Trust.
In his short-spanned
career as a writer, Raihan was successful in narrating some of the most
prolific and true-to-life stories ever published in Bangladeshi literature,
through his books -- Shesh Bikeler Meye, Arek Phalgun, Trishna, Borof Gola Nodi
and most notably, Hajar Bochhor Dhore.
Raihan had been married
twice, to Sumita Devi in 1961 and Shuchonda in 1968, both popular film
actresses. With Sumita, he had two sons named Bipul Raihan and Anol Raihan.
With Shuchonda, he also had two sons named Opu Raihan and Topu Raihan.
On January 30, 1972,
Raihan went missing while attempting to locate his brother, Shahidullah Kaiser,
a well-known writer who was abducted and killed by the Pakistani Army and its
local collaborators. Raihan is believed to have been killed by armed Bihari
collaborators and the Pakistani Army hiding who had opened fire on them while
they were travelling towards Mirpur in Dhaka.
For his excellence in
filmmaking as a valiant patriot, Raihan was posthumously awarded Bangla Academy
Literary Award (1972), Ekushey Padak (1977), Independence Day Award (1992) and
Bangladesh National Film Awards (2005).
End/Dct/Nit/Sma/