Nilima Ibrahim

Summary

Neelima Ibrahim (11 October 1921 – 18 June 2002) was a Bangladeshi educationist, littérateur and social worker. She is well known for her scholarship on Bengali literature but even more so for her depiction of raped and tortured women in the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War in her book Ami Birangana Bolchi.[1] She was awarded Bangla Academy Literary Award in 1969, Begum Rokeya Padak in 1996 and Ekushey Padak in 2000 by the Government of Bangladesh for her contributions to Bangla literature.[2][3]

Neelima Ibrahim
নীলিমা ইব্রাহীম
Director General of Bangla Academy
In office
12 August 1974 – 6 June 1975
Preceded byMazharul Islam
Succeeded byMustafa Nur-Ul Islam
Personal details
Born
Neelima Roy Chowdhury

(1921-10-11)11 October 1921
Mulghar, Fakirhat, Bagerhat, British India
Died18 June 2002(2002-06-18) (aged 81)
Dhaka, Bangladesh
NationalityBangladeshi
SpouseMuhammad Ibrahim
EducationPhD (Bengali literature)
Alma mater
Occupationwriter, educationist
Awardsfull list

Early life and education edit

Neelima was born on 11 October 1921 in Bagerhat, Khulna to Zamindar Prafulla Roy Chowdhury and Kusum Kumari Devi.[4] Ibrahim passed her school leaving examination and entrance level examinations from the Khulna Coronation Girls' School in 1937 and from the Victoria Institution in Calcutta in 1939.[1] Later she earned bachelor's degrees in arts and teaching from the Scottish Church College, which was followed by an MA in Bengali literature from the University of Calcutta in 1943.[1] She would also earn a doctorate in Bengali literature from the University of Dhaka in 1959.[1][4]

Career edit

Neelima was a career academic. She taught in respectively the Khulna Coronation Girls' School, Loreto House, the Victoria Institution, and finally at the University of Dhaka, where she was appointed as a lecturer in 1956, and as a professor of Bengali in 1972.[4] She also served as the chairperson of the Bangla Academy, and as the Vice Chairperson of the World Women's Federation's South Asian Zone.[1][4]

In 1972, after the Bangladesh Liberation War, Ibrahim worked at centers set up to rehabilitate women who had been raped during the conflict.[5] Such women were accorded the title Birangona (war heroine) by the Government of Bangladesh,[6] but this did not prevent them from being stigmatized. Appalled by newspaper accounts that some victims of sexual violence preferred to be sent to prisoner of war camps in India with their Pakistani rapists, rather than endure familial rejection and social scorn in Bangladesh, Ibrahim was moved to interview them.[7][8]

She published a collection of seven of these first-person narratives in her two-volume Ami Birangona Bolchi (The Voices of War Heroines) in 1994 and 1995.[9] Social anthropologist Nayanika Mookherjee writes that, "The text suggests that ... 'traditional, backward Islamic norms' cause the rejection of raped women and contribute to their trauma."[9] Bangladeshi academic Firdous Azim describes the book as "path-breaking"[8] and "an integral part of a feminist historicizing of the war of liberation in Bangladesh."[7]

Works edit

Non-fiction edit

  • Sharat-Pratibha (The Creative Faculty of Sharatchanda), 1960,
  • Banglar Kavi Madhusudan (Madhushudan, the Poet of Bengal), 1961,
  • Unabingsha Shatabdir Bangali Samaj o Bangla Natak (Bengali Society and Bengali Drama in the 19th century), 1964,
  • Bangla Natak: Utsa o Dhara (Bengali Drama: Origin and Development), 1972,
  • Begum Rokeya, 1974,
  • Bangalimanas o Bangla Sahitya (Bengali Mentality and Bengali Literature), 1987,
  • Sahitya-Sangskrtir Nana Prasanga (Various Aspects of Literature and Culture), 1991

Fiction edit

  • Bish Shataker Meye (Girl of the Twentieth Century), 1958,
  • Ek Path Dui Bank (The Forked Road), 1958,
  • Keyabana Sancharini (Traveller of Keya Forest), 1958,
  • Banhi Balay (The Bangle of Fire), 1985

Plays edit

  • Due Due Char (Two and Two Make Four), 1964,
  • Je Aranye Alo Nei (The Dark Forest), 1974,
  • Rodjwala Bikel (The Sunburnt Afternoon), 1974,
  • Suryaster Par (After Sunset), 1974

Short stories edit

  • Ramna Parke (At Ramna Park), 1964

Translations edit

  • Eleanor Roosevelt, 1955,
  • Kathashilpi James Fenimor Cooper (Storyteller James Fenimore Cooper), 1968,
  • Bostoner Pathe Pathe (On the Streets of Boston), 1969

Travelogue edit

  • Shahi Elakar Pathe Pathe (Along the Royal Streets), 1963

Autobiography edit

  • Bindu-Bisarga (Dot and Ghost), 1991

Narratives/Ethnography edit

  • Ami Birangana Bolchhi (I, the Heroine, Speaks), 1996

Awards edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Islam, Sirajul (2012). "Ibrahim, Nilima". In Islam, Sirajul; Ali, Zeenat (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  2. ^ পুরস্কারপ্রাপ্তদের তালিকা [Winners list] (in Bengali). Bangla Academy. Archived from the original on 6 June 2017. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  3. ^ একুশে পদকপ্রাপ্ত সুধীবৃন্দ [Ekushey Padak winners list] (in Bengali). Government of Bangladesh. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d নীলিমা ইব্রাহিম. Gunijan (in Bengali). Retrieved 26 November 2012.
  5. ^ Ibrahim, Nilima (26 March 2016). "As a War Heroine, I Speak". The Daily Star. Translated by Hasanat, Fayeza.
  6. ^ Mahtab, Moyukh (16 December 2016). "The Birangona beyond her wound". The Daily Star.
  7. ^ a b Azim, Firdous (2012). "Keeping Sexuality on the Agenda". In Loomba, Ania; Lukose, Ritty A. (eds.). South Asian Feminisms. Duke University Press. p. 273. ISBN 978-0-8223-5179-5.
  8. ^ a b Azim, Firdous (Winter 2014 – Spring 2015). "Speaking the Unspeakable or the Limits of Representability". Society, Culture and Development. 41 (3/4): 252. JSTOR 24390793.
  9. ^ a b Mookherjee, Nayanika (2010). "Friendships and Encounters on the Political Left in Bangladesh". In Armbruster, Heidi; Lærke, Anna (eds.). Taking Sides: Ethics, Politics, and Fieldwork in Anthropology. Berghahn Books. p. 78. ISBN 978-1-84545-701-3.