BADV: A Short
History
Our organization, BADV as we call
it, came into existence at the same time as the political struggle for
our expression of democratic rights as Bangalees suddenly evolved into
an armed struggle for our existence in early 1971, following the sudden,
brutal, genocidal attack by the Pakistan Army on the night of the 25th
of March, 1971 on an unarmed sleeping populace. Moved by the
scenes of the daily carnage and the plight of the resulting refugees,
the peace loving citizens of the Delaware Valley area and the few
Bangladeshis residing here took up the cause of the nascent nation.
A decision to form two parallel organizations, Friends of East Bengal
(FEB) and the Bangladesh Association of Delaware Valley (BADV) allowed
the non-Bangladeshis to pursue the cause on diplomatic and political
fronts open to citizens of this country, while the latter allowed the
expatriate Bangladeshis to join the struggle in more appropriate ways
like providing direct material help to their suffering brethren and the
freedom fighters half a world away as well as working directly with FEB.
The first organizational meeting of BADV took place in early May 1971 at
the residence of A.M. Mozharul Hoque, then working as an electrical
engineer and living in Willingboro, New Jersey. More than two
dozen people attended this meeting and chose three officers—Mr. Hoque as
President, Mr. Monayem Chowdhury, then a graduate student, as Vice
President, and Mr. Nurul Huq as Treasurer—to run the organization.
Many others who were very active in the organization and its activities
included Farida Hoque, Sultan and Sufiya Ahmed, Rawshan Chowdhury, Jyoti
Prakash and Purobi Dutta, Nurul Islam and Salma Bhuiyan,
Rabeya Sarker, Sultana Krippendorf, Nazma Davis, Raihan and Afroza Ali,
Fakhruddin and Nina Ahmed, Rezaul and Rahima Karim, Momtaz and Mahmuda
Ali, Azhar and Lily Ali, and Aziz and Surayah Mia. Most of these
people have moved away from the local area and become leading
Bangladeshis wherever they settled.
Friends of East Bengal under the leadership of Charles Henry Kahn, then
Professor of Philosophy at University of Pennsylvania and the person
originally responsible for inspiring Mozharul Hoque to take action, was
able to increase the awareness of the struggle taking place nearly
12,0000 miles away to Philadelphians through effective use of local
media. Others, among many, include Dr. Claus Krippendorf, then
Professor of Communications, whose posters, buttons and pamphlets were
extremely effective in fund raising, Dick Taylor and Bill Moyer of the
Non-violence Action Committee of the American Friends Service Committee,
well-known architects of the effective organized blockades of Pakistani
ships at all mid-Atlantic sea-ports. Sultana Krippendorf’s appeal
to the longshoremen’s union helped persuade its membership to the cause
of Bangladesh and their support proved instrumental in effectively
stopping the loading and unloading of Pakistani ships at all US ports.
While FEB was involved in lobbying efforts in Washington DC, campus
teach-ins, and media activities, BADV members organized fund-raising
events thus helping to provide material support to the independence
struggle. When the six-person Pakistani delegation that included,
Speaker Hamidul Huq Chowdhury, Professor Sajjad Hussein and historian
Mohar Ali came to the US Congress to lobby for aid to Pakistan, FEB and
BADV members dispersed leaflets at the hearings and met with senators
and congressmen speaking about the real situation in Bangladesh.
Their concerted efforts along with Bangladesh supporters from other
regions helped to turn the tide of public opinion favorable to the cause
of Bangladesh.
Following the independence of Bangladesh, the name of the association was
changed to the Bangladesh Students Association of Delaware Valley in
1972 to enable the members, now primarily students, to take full
advantage of the opportunities available only to student organizations.
Two years later with dwindling of the student population as they
graduated, the name was changed to the original. During the next
eight years a small population of local Bangladeshis kept the
organization running but activities were limited primarily to gatherings
at the annual picnic. One must mention here, Dr. Salam Mian,
president of the organization for five straight years, and his wife.
Everyone present then fondly remembers the generosity of this couple as
many of these picnics were held in their backyard and Mrs. Salaam would
do most of the cooking.
With coming of the eighties a younger population once again grew in
numbers and the organization became more active. It began with the
organization of the first commemoration of Ekushe February in 1984 in
the basement of Barnard Hall, residence hall for the medical residents
of Fitzgerald Mercy hospital. The second commemoration was
organized at the World Culture Center of Cheney State University with
then Bangladesh Ambassador, Obaidullah Khan, as chief guest.
During the summer of 1985, Dr. Monayem Chowdhury, then BADV president
and one of the founding members, presented the Constitution that was
passed unanimously at the annual general meeting at Ridley State Park in
Delaware County. In 1986 under the Presidency of Abu Aminur Rahman,
BADV participated in the first North American Bangladesh Conference
organized at Washington DC. By1989-90, BADV now recognized as one
of the more active associations on the East Coast organized or
participated in six major events under the leadership of Dr. Ziauddin
Ahmed.
In 1991, BADV celebrated the twentieth anniversary of its founding in a
fitting manner at the Lang Performing Arts Center on the campus of
Swarthmore College. An awards ceremony recognizing the more than
fifteen individuals of the 1971 blockade efforts and the founding of
BADV was followed by a well-choreographed musical drama of the struggle
for independence or Mukti Juddha on-stage performed by the members of
BADV. Nearly 200 guests enjoyed the show as well as the food
that was provided and the printed souvenir magazine, the first for BADV.
That year BADV also organized a fund-raising effort to aid the victims
of the 1991 cyclone. In the mid-nineties, BADV gained status as a
non-profit corporation fulfilling a long felt need to enable itself to
function more fully and effectively in the local community.
The tremendous increase in the population of Bangladeshis in Delaware
Valley has resulted in the formation of new organizations catering more
to the local needs of the Bangladeshis in their respective
neighborhoods. BADV as the oldest and with a wider membership over
the entire area now plays more of a leadership role cooperating with
these organizations to enable them to meet their own as well as the
broader goals of BADV more effectively.
[This short
history represents a work-in-progress and we expect to update it with
each newer edition of the BADV Directory.
Contribution:
Professor Faruq Siddiqui
Riza Quabili,
I