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Interesting Video of Chinese Students learning Bengali

Because Muslims are in miserable condition there . They are the poorest people in India but That wasn't the question . If 50 other ethnicities didn't demand for their language to be a national language then how come Bengali's demanded it ?

Bcoz they have inferiority complex, they accuse us for treating them bad but they cant show a single example of Bengalis treated as inferior kind in KPK, Punjab, Balochistan or Sindh..
 
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Yes thank god I am Indian and not a born ingrate traitor like you lot.

We actually trade something with major countries like China that boycotts can affect, not some cheap feeble amounts that a low science country (which produces a little more science quantity than Estonia a country 100 times smaller by population) can muster.

Now continue your sylheti - bongo civil war here. It is quite amusing to see the hypocrisy that you feel 1971 was justified, but any talk of syhleti being a separate language is false propaganda.
Please stay out of civil wars, especially among 'Muslim' nations.

What does that mean?
 
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LOL, this thread..:laughcry:


You people claiming your Prophet and God doesn't differentiate between different people and cultures. And yet here you are once again arguing about the Arab culture and language being the purist for Islam.

:close_tema: God does not speak in human tongue, nor right with human utensils. I wonder if that's in the Quran, if not it should be, not that it would help you all. :coffee:
 
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Pakistani didn't kill Mujib along with his family. What's your thought on this?

I think Pakistanis showed maturity by not killing Mujib in 1971. Anything that happened after 1971 doesn't concern Pakistan.

Anyway You aren't getting the point. By Alienating "Bengali".... Pakistan weakened Islam in Bengal. Because Bengali is our mother tongue, You just can't make Italians talk German. Can you?

If You want Islam to have stronger presence in Bengal, Bengali and Islam will have to come closer. The quicker Jamatis understand that the better.


There is no second option.

Anyway Bye.
 
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I think Pakistanis showed maturity by not killing Mujib in 1971. Anything that happened after 1971 doesn't concern Pakistan.

Anyway You aren't getting the point. By Alienating "Bengali".... Pakistan weakened Islam in Bengal. Because Bengali is our mother tongue, You just can't make Italians talk German. Can you?

If You want Islam to have stronger presence in Bengal, Bengali and Islam will have to come closer. The quicker Jamatis understand that the better.


There is no second option.

Anyway Bye.

So per your logic Pakistani are better Muslim than bengali.
 
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One of the beauty of Pakistan is it's diversity in languages , landscapes , climate , people and cultures . In total about 70-90 Languages are Spoken in Pakistan . If none of them had any problem with urdu why did bengali's have problem with it ? I am a Pashtun and none of my forefathers were native urdu speakers but i love the language and hold it dear to me . If we had made bengali the national language then 50 other ethnicities would have demanded the same .
Hindi/Bengali are competing language since 1000s of year for dominance. Bengali is too big to be shadowed by Urdu.
 
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Yes thank god I am Indian and not a born ingrate traitor like you lot.

We actually trade something with major countries like China that boycotts can affect, not some cheap feeble amounts that a low science country (which produces a little more science quantity than Estonia a country 100 times smaller by population) can muster.

Now continue your sylheti - bongo civil war here. It is quite amusing to see the hypocrisy that you feel 1971 was justified, but any talk of syhleti being a separate language is false propaganda.

Pot calling the kettle black, is it? It could be argued that you indians help the environment the most by openly defecating by the number of 490 million (a conservative figure in Wikipedia), that's four times the population of Russia.

And I seem to notice that you have a tendency to switch sides on and off. Siding with israeli on israel vs muslim, pakistanis on pk vs bd, burmese on burma vs bd and you call us pole vaulters :rolleyes:
There is nothing called Sylheti Nationalism.

You even can understand hindi written in Bangla script. So?
Sylheti has its own script?


Allah has dealt with them already . They have become puppets of the highest order .

http://thediplomat.com/2016/10/bangladesh-just-became-a-vassal-state/

Bangladesh Just Became a Vassal State
Sheikh Hasina’s crackdown on dissent leaves her government overreliant on Delhi’s support.

By Esam Sohail
October 04, 2016


While the excuse was the usual one of “interference in internal affairs,” Bangladesh’s perfectly choreographed dovetailing to India’s refusal to attend the Islamabad South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) conference removed any doubt remaining about the relationship between those two neighbors. To put it charitably, Bangladesh under the Sheikh Hasina regime is far closer to the stature of Bhutan and Maldives vis-à-vis India than to, say, pluckier Nepal and prickly Sri Lanka. Under the current Bangladeshi government, the relationship between Dhaka and Delhi has steadily evolved from being that of two theoretically sovereign and equal nations to one of client and vassal in the image of the former communist countries of the Eastern Bloc and the erstwhile USSR. Very similar dynamics are at work as well.

After securing a comfortable victory in Bangladesh’s last free elections in 2008, Hasina quickly moved to ensure – like the Communists in the aftermath of the immediate post-World War II elections in Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, and East Germany – that the painfully built up democratic institutions would never again be used to end her Awami League party’s rule. To that effect, she first broke long the long-held tradition of respecting seniority and appointed her sympathizers to the highest bench of the judiciary. She quickly followed by stacking the technically neutral Election Commission with known cronies and non-entities.

The coup de grace came in 2011 when her parliament, where floor crossing results in cancellation of membership, dutifully got rid of the linchpin of free elections in Bangladesh since 1990: the neutral, election-time caretaker government provision. Not surprisingly, the Supreme Court, by then fully staffed by Hasina’s hand-picked men, was persuaded to give a judgment against the constitutional amendment that had created the caretaker provision. As to how a constitutional Amendment, approved by an internationally supervised popular referendum, could be “unconstitutional” is best left up to the chicanery of judges who have much more in common with the “people’s” judges of the USSR than with those in independent judiciaries.

With the results of any future elections not in doubt and the judiciary suitably tamed, the Awami League government moved decisively to make all dissent very costly, without being so overt as to look askance to European and North American donors. Newspapers and television stations deemed not suitably obeisant to the concept of “chetona” (the Awami ideology that mixes a cult of Hasina’s family with a carefully crafted historical narrative) were shut down. Several prominent newsmen were sent to jail where some still rot without any judicial verdicts against them. New laws on cyber crimes and defamation were hurriedly passed to make any negative reference to members of the ruling family or to the ruling party’s historical narrative a criminal offense.

By the time the next national elections came around in 2014, the results were never in any doubt and the main secular opposition parties saw no point in contesting them. Subsequent elections to local government bodies followed the typical pattern where any opposition figures brave enough to contest or journalists courageous enough to report the irregularities were either beaten up by the Awami League-affiliated Bangladesh Chhatra League (BCL) or roughed up by the police. By early 2015, it was quite clear that the only parts of organized society not controlled by the ruling party were a couple of professional and trade bodies, and some human rights related NGOs. Using organizational elections in the same manner as the national ones, that year the journalists union, the national bar council, and the apex chamber of commerce were all brought under the control of pro-Awami League executives while the last two remaining non-Awami League mayors of major cities were jailed by the regime. All funds coming to NGOs from abroad were required, by new regulations, to be escrowed in government accounts and released only on showing that their educational or human rights work was not a threat to the regime’s sinecure. As if to send a message to the remaining independent journalists, the government orchestrated 88 separate defamation cases against the editor of the premier English newspaperDaily Star. (That the said editor had long been a vocal proponent of the Awami League narrative was not enough to balance against his occasional critique of the regime’s election-time hijinks.)

Bangladesh’s second experiment with pluralist democracy, which began in 1990, is dead. Yet Hasina knows her country and its people well enough to realize how volatile 160 million Bengalis in a 56,000 square mile parcel of land can be. In the absence of any electoral legitimacy, her autocracy is undergirded by the troika of formal security services, which have become very adept at making key dissenters and their family members “disappear”; BCL, which regularly uses street violence to break up any attempts at non-Awami League rallies and processions; and the benevolence of the Narendra Modi government in India. The most important of this troika is, of course, the last one mentioned: with the Obama administration having subcontracted most of its South Asia policy to New Delhi, the mandarins at South Block are both the sword and the shield of the Hasina regime.

For Dhaka to have a foreign policy different than its patron in Delhi would have been a surprise. By meekly following India’s lead in pulling out of the now-postponed SAARC Summit, Bangladesh triggered no surprise.
Come on mate. Don't bring Allah in this. By your logic, Allah's punishing you guys by bombing you for your crimes atm?
 
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Learning a non-native tongue as lingua franca doesn't alienate one's mother tongue. Azeris, Balochis in Iran learn Persian, Basques, Catalans in Spain learn Spanish without much hesitation, so learning another language isn't that big a deal. At the end of the day, language is a tool of communication and the languages which have wider reach are more useful to learn compared to languages which are local in nature. If people here have no problem learning foreign language like English and using it, there really isn't any reason for not learning a subcontinental language as lingua franca, especially one which enjoys substantially more coverage than other local languages in the subcontinent.
 
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Learning a non-native tongue as lingua franca doesn't alienate one's mother tongue. Azeris, Balochis in Iran learn Persian, Basques, Catalans in Spain learn Spanish without much hesitation, so learning another language isn't that big a deal. At the end of the day, language is a tool of communication and the languages which have wider reach are more useful to learn compared to languages which are local in nature. If people here have no problem learning foreign language like English and using it, there really isn't any reason for not learning a subcontinental language as lingua franca, especially one which enjoys substantially more coverage than other local languages in the subcontinent.
Wow bro you just hit nail on its head. Fitting reply. The hypocrisy of Bengali chauvinists here is apalling
 
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Learning a non-native tongue as lingua franca doesn't alienate one's mother tongue. Azeris, Balochis in Iran learn Persian, Basques, Catalans in Spain learn Spanish without much hesitation, so learning another language isn't that big a deal. At the end of the day, language is a tool of communication and the languages which have wider reach are more useful to learn compared to languages which are local in nature. If people here have no problem learning foreign language like English and using it, there really isn't any reason for not learning a subcontinental language as lingua franca, especially one which enjoys substantially more coverage than other local languages in the subcontinent.

In that case, W. Pakistan should had learned Bengali instead of Urdu? NO?
 
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Wow bro you just hit nail on its head. Fitting reply. The hypocrisy of Bengali chauvinists here is apalling
Thanks. Btw not all Bengalis are like them. Indian Bengalis are quite open-minded and welcoming of other cultures. There are many Bengali, Gujarati, Marathi students in our college in Delhi. We use Hindi amongst ourselves ( English is too formal for our tastes), while amongst themselves they speak their native tongues. Their native tongues didn't get obliterated because of Hindi, rather they are flourishing quite well in our country. In fact Bengali cinema and culture have been brought to the forefront by West Bengali artistes.

Bangladeshi Bengalis over-enthusiasm for their language quite frankly baffles me- language is not something you generally fight over, there are more important things to worry about in life. Hope they realize this.

In that case, W. Pakistan should had learned Bengali instead of Urdu? NO?
I think Arefin and Desert Fighter have already answered it. Don't ask same questions over and over again
 
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Pot calling the kettle black, is it? It could be argued that you indians help the environment the most by openly defecating by the number of 490 million (a conservative figure in Wikipedia), that's four times the population of Russia.

And I seem to notice that you have a tendency to switch sides on and off. Siding with israeli on israel vs muslim, pakistanis on pk vs bd, burmese on burma vs bd and you call us pole vaulters :rolleyes:

He is an Indian, bro. Whenever there is an open field, he will defecate! :rolleyes:
 
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