Foreign Policy Blogs

Good Introduction to Contemporary Politics in Bangladesh

I’d like to alert you  to a short piece written recently on Bangladesh.

The piece was published in the Japan Times a little more than a month ago.   The author Gwynn Dyer expertly runs through the last three  decades in the running gag of an internecine conflict in Bangladesh between two powerful families:

As Dyer writes:

“If a Shakespeare should ever arise in Bangladesh, he would have plenty of tragedies around which to weave his history plays. The country is only 38 years old, but the vendettas among leading families have been just as tangled and bloody as the ones in 14th- and 15th- century England that gave the great playwright so much of his material.”

Of course Shakespeare-like talent has grown and died in Bangladesh– more properly, in Bengal. The poets Rabindranath Tagore and Kazi Nazrul Islam, though both born in Kolkata, considered all of Bengal their native inspiration.  Neither could have foreseen the plague the Begums have blighted on our houses.  The piece is too optimistic–by  half–but hews close to the facts and makes the connections that are necessary to thread through to properly understand the familial politics that has long roiled policy-making in Bangladesh.

 

Author

Faheem Haider

Faheem Haider is a political analyst, writer and artist. He holds advanced research degrees in political economy, political theory and the political economy of development from the London School of Economics and Political Science and New York University. He also studied political psychology at Columbia University. During long stints away from his beloved Washington Square Park, he studied peace and conflict resolution and French history and European politics at the American University in Washington DC and the University of Paris, respectively.

Faheem has research expertise in democratic theory and the political economy of democracy in South Asia. In whatever time he has to spare, Faheem paints, writes, and edits his own blog on the photographic image and its relationship to the political narrative of fascist, liberal and progressivist art.

That work and associated writing can be found at the following link: http://blackandwhiteandthings.wordpress.com