Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Dhaka's oldest surviving Mosque - Binat Bibi Mosque


Front view

East view

South east

Inside the mosque

North wall of the grave of Binat Bakht

New mosque and madrassa in the compound under construction

East view of mosque from the street

The oldest Mosque of Dhaka located near Narinda pul and police outpost survives in dilapidated condition. Architecturally insignificant, this mosque was built in 1457 during the period of Sultan Nasiruddin Mohammad Shah by Binat Bakht (or in her memory after her death) daughter of a Turkish trader Marhamat. The stone inscription of the mosque written in Farsi (Persian) is located on the north of the Mosque where Binat Bakht is buried. Construction of a new mosque inside the compound, without restoring the old one, caused row in the locality.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Shahbagh: Friday evening 24 Aug 07





















Thursday, August 23, 2007

Dhaka University Field - where the trouble started


The Gallery (Gym behind)


Swimming pool in the east


Ground mostly remains occupied by local urchins



Empty swimming pool - swim charge Tk.4,000/- for outsiders from 5-7pm

Panic rush for home - curfew starts at 20:00 hrs

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Road side view: August 21



TV tower- rampura

intellectual marty's sritishoudha- rayerbazar

gulshan-1

sentinel
street market


Sunday, August 19, 2007

In wake of receding flood in Dhaka city - 19 August '07


Behind Pan Pacific Sonargaon hotel

Banashree


Gulshan


Tejgaon industrial area





West side of flood protection bund


Satarkul - outskirt of Dhaka



Pumping out water from main city to canal outlet

Sluice gate at Rampura TV station


Canal along 'Banashree housing' adds colour to Dhaka east

Rampura canal now navigable for large boats

Importance of canals in Dhaka city is keenly felt

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Celebration of 60 Years of Engg. Edu. in Bangladesh


BUET Central Auditorium-Venue of opening ceremony for celebration of 60 yearsof Engg education

former and present VC's of BUET

Crest presented to Dr Wahiduddin Ahmed (C) by the present VC. Dr Matin Patwari on left

once the front view of Ahsanullah Engg. College- now rear part

Fuller road, main gateway to College

sketch of front view in the 50's

Entry lobby during 'College' period- Principal's chamber on the left

Fuller hostel-once hostel for the west pakistani or foreign student (now Rover Scout's bldg)

South hostel- now Nazrul Hall on Bakshibazar road

Main Hostel- now administrative office of BUET

Entry of Main hostel

VC's office- swiming pool (pond), CI room, Gym and 'chapra' canteen stood here in the 50's.

Play ground- east of Main hostel

CE faculty bldg

EEE faculty

Arch faculty

Shaheed Minar

Titumir hall-hostel

BUET campus map- College time bldgs. shown in brown colour

The celebration program for the 60 Years of Engineering Education of Bangladesh kicked off with great enthusiasm on 28 July 2007 at BUET campus, Dhaka. Although history of BUET can be traced back to 1876 when the Dhaka Survey School was established, the premier engineering degree institution Ahsanullah Engineering College came into being in 1947 as a Faculty of Engineering under the University of Dhaka, and became the East Pakistan University of Engg and Tech (EPUET) in 1962. Thereafter, it was converted to the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology (BUET) in 1971 and reached the mark of 60 years of engineering degree education in the country in 2007.

The opening ceremony in the morning got together some of the eminent academicians and alumni from the days of Ahsanullah Engineering College, the EPUET and the BUET. The program thoughtfully organized to continue upto 8 December 2007 will surely promote better contact and understanding between the old and the new starting from Ahsanullah Engineering College, leading to greater effort and cooperation toward achieving further excellence in the engineering education and practice.

The inaugural session was presided by the present VC Prof. AMM Safiullah. The distinguished guests and speakers included former VC’s Prof. Dr. Wahiduddin Ahmed, Prof. Dr. A.M.Patwari, Prof. M.H.Khan, Prof. Iqbal Mahmud, Prof. Dr.Nuruddin Ahmed and Prof. Dr. Alee Murtaza and the Convener of the Organizing Committee Prof. Mazharul Huq.

In these 60 years this institution has developed 20 times in terms of enrollment and has presently 5 Faculties offering Undergraduate and Post-graduate Degrees through 26 Departments and 6 Research Centres with 545 Faculty Members to 8480 Under-graduate and Post-graduate Students. Presently BUET is producing around 3000 Graduate Engineers, 300 Architects and 100 Planners annually. The Library section has 1,32,200 books and 218 journals.

In their notable speeches the present and former VCs and Professors stressed upon the need for more funds for research and cutting-edge facilities and also urged the alumni to try and help in this regard. In the evening session BUET Alumni was formally launched by Prof Dr. Wahiuddin Ahmed. Alumni president Prof Dr. Jamilur Reza Choudhury VC Brac University gave a detailed account of the Alumni Association.

Some of the Alumni of the old days strolling through the BUET campus noted the marked contrast from the days of the Ahsanullah Engineering College. The campus has vastly grown in size and number of impressive buildings. But, the famous play ground so vibrant and full of life of those days present a barren look with overgrown grass. One could recall the days of annual college sports held on this ground in the ‘50s and hotly contested games, annual sports events and gymnastics. The students of the Eden Girl’s College at Bakshibazar would take special leave for the afternoon to watch the annual sports functions of the Engineering College and line up early at the entrance to the sports arena marked for them, partly to receive their special packets of sweets and partly to cheer the feat. One evening in these times, perhaps 1957, there was a jovial incident near the South Hostel (now Nazrul Hall) of the Engineering College facing the Eden College Hostel across the road where the Alia Madrassa now stands. After the evening meals a cry was heard emanating from the Eden College Hostel with girls shouting at the top of voice “thief” and “intruder”. Their compound with a pond and bushes around remained mostly dark. Hearing the cry most students of the South Hostel rushed out and forced their entry into the girls’ hostel in order to apprehend the intruder and help out, but the girls got more alarmed and started shouting with renewed vigor that “instead of one intruder there are now hundred intruders”. Hearing this the boys turned around and beat a hasty retreat to their own hostel while the medical students of the adjacent hostel watched from balcony with amusement. The next day when the South Hostel Superintendent Prof Kazem Ali heard of the incident in college he said, “the boys did nothing wrong, and after all they would need to get married one day”.
Let us not forget what the Institution has and is giving us in our aspiration to be in the profession of engineering, architecture and planning today, and vow to return the favour.

Monday, August 13, 2007

'Mandir wala bari' at Bakshibazar, Dhaka: once believed to be haunted



Engr. Anwar Ahmed poses in the compound of 'mandir wala bari' where he spent his early days

View of Mandir, from north

Part of Dhaka Medical College hostel complex (built later) seen

Entry of Dhaka Medical College hostel complex from Bakshibazar road


View of Main hostel of Ahsanullah Engg. college (now Admin office of BUET)

Road dividing BUET campus - then railway line to Fulbaria Rail station

Sketch map of Bakshibazar-BUET area around 1949 - Mandir location marked with arrow


It had no known name, no known history. It just stood there abandoned and disintegrating, but still kept its head high among its surroundings. Even today in 2007 it stands forlorn but majestic in its own right.

It was around 1949, my friend and colleague Engr. Anwar Ahmed and his parents just stepped in a nice little bungalow house called the ‘University Bungalow’ at Bakshi Bazar in Dhaka. The moss covered structure ‘Mandir/Relic’ of more than a hundred years stood in the backyard of the house.

Bakshi Bazar was no bazaar at all, rather a jungle of big trees and sprawling green landscape amidst which this conspicuous Mandir and the house stood out as the only habitat around (map above). The house stood at one side of a very big stretch of land dotted with a lot of brick stacks and open greenery, where first the ‘South Hostel’ (now Nazrul Hall of BUET) of Ahsanullah Engineering College and later the Dhaka Medical College main hostel complex rose up over the years. The railway line (now Highway) used to run just north of the house behind the Mandir, beyond which the lush green playground of the Engineering College stretched out on the western fringe where stood a majestic red brick building, (then Main hostel, now the office of the Vice Chancellor of BUET). The few roads that existed would take one to the Secondary Education Board and the Dhakeswari Mandir in the south-west, another to the east Husainy Dalan and Nazimuddin Road in the south-east, another heading up north toward Dhaka Medical College Hospital and Dhaka University and then another narrow lane at south that connects Urdu road near Chawkbazar.

The Mandir/Relic within the bungalow compound, at that time, had no road connection to the outside as if it belonged exclusively to the house or the house belonged exclusively to it, and no one ever came to visit the Mandir while my friend's family stayed there for eight long years until 1957. Although this Mandir claimed no identity for itself, it gave an identity to the house, which with time came to be known as the “mandir wala bari”. When we appeared at the interview for admission to the Engineering College in 1954, Engr. Anwar wrote his address as ‘Mondir wala bari’ of Dhaka University Bungalow, Bakshi Bazar. In the first day of survey practical class late Prof. Nazmul Huq used to give the students the problem to work out the height of Mandir, the tallest structure visible from College field without leaving the boundary.

Engr. Anwar’s parents and family moved out to a new place at Shantinagar in 1957. They had a red cow that used to remain in a shed in the corner beside the Mandir. The cow was walked out to Shantinagar (a pretty long distance via the Dhaka Club and Ramna Green), but after a few days the cow left the Shantinagar house and returned to the ‘Mandir wali bari’ on its own from where she had to be fetched again. After the family left, the University had a professor live in the house and he left the very next day for fear, complaining that a lady clad in all white came out of the Mandir at night and kept searching the house for something. After he left, the University put in another teacher in the house and, reportedly, he also left within a week alleging a white clad lady used to keep sitting on the Mandir platform for the whole night watching the house. The bungalow remained vacant for long as nobody wanted to occupy the house and some professors enquired about the house being haunted or not.

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Begunbari lake in full flood: August 2007


Panoramic view of Maghbazar over Begunbari canal (lake)

Such quiet, serene view of Begunbari lake is rarely seen in other seasons

Man walking over nearly submerged waste water pipe from Moghbazar

Place to relax


New Eskaton Road - as setting sun peeps through the blanket of rain clouds

Golden hue of Walso tower

Visa seeker's eternal wait - west footpath outside Sonargaon Hotel

Lemons on sale, at a bargain

View of NTV billboard, Karwanbazar

Nazrul Islam Avenue on weekend

Tejgaon Railway Station and Banana market


Tejgaon platform, north


South view

Non-stop train at Tejgaon station

Tejgaon road to Karwan Bazar




Wholesale market, Tejgaon

Monday, August 06, 2007

Housing complex on Ring road - Japan garden city



Shia Masjid, Mohammadpur


Ring Road, Dhaka west








View from Dhaka west, the protection embankment

Sunday, August 05, 2007

Bibi-ka Rauja - Old Husainy Dalan in Farashganj


Entry gate, Bibi-ka Rauja

Nahabatkhana of Imambara (right)

Rauja of Fatima bibi

BK. Das road, Farashganj near the Rauja

Imambara (Husaini Dalan) located in Farashganj is known to be the oldest one of the Imambaras of Dhaka. It was built in 1600 ad by one Amir Khan. It’s a common practice among the Shia community to build edifices to commemorate the martyrdom of Al-Husain, the grandson of Holy prophet of Islam Muhammad (pbuh), at the battle of Karbala in Iraq on the 10th day of Muharram 61 AH (10 October 680 AD). Imambara literally means a residence for the Imam which stands for a house or an assembly hall built by the Shiites for observing Muharram. There is a tomb of Fatima bibi inside, from which the name derives, but its creation is shrouded with mystery. However, a Parsi named SM Doshanji renovated the aging Imambara in 1861. In the year 1946 during communal riot, the Imambara was heavily damaged but the portion of ‘Nahbatkhana’ survived. The damaged portions were reconstructed later.

At one time there were 15 Imambaras in Dhaka city alone, of which the most famous is the Husainy Dalan near Bakshibazar built by Syed Mir Murad, 42 years after the Imambara of Bibi ka Rauja.

Friday, August 03, 2007

Demolition of RANGS Bhaban Begins











The Rajuk authorities started knocking down the upper floors (above 6 floors per Supreme Court verdict) of the multi-storey Rangs Bhaban at Bijoy Sarani intersection in the capital this morning. About 300 workers involved in the demolition process, under supervision of Rajuk Magistrate, removed doors, windows, glasses and furnitures of the upper floors. Complete demolition of concrete construction will take 3 months at an estimated cost of Tk. 1 crore.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

Roadside views July '07- Dhaka


Buriganga River in spate

Waiting at ferry ghat (Khea)


Flood protection embankment on Buriganga extension (Dhaka west) - collecting cattle fodder before flood water engulfs fields.

Sonargaon Road (Panthapath east) - welding without protective gear on public road is a common sight

Moghbazar-Tejgaon road (Tajuddin road)

'Hatir pool' intersection - Buddhist monks gathered at Dhaka on the occasion of presenting holy hair of Lord Buddha to Srilankan Government.

Sweating in sweltering heat - Sutrapur road

'Pichhi'- taking care of fish cargo

Rolling chairs - at Banglamotor intersection

Ailing car - at New Eskation road

As Dhaka (east) goes under flood water, boats are in demand - Maghbazar intersection

Comfortable ride

Goat's final ride

Posted in Saat Masjid area

Nilkhet hawker's market

Plenty of lemons this season on Dhaka footpaths

A pack of 15-20 sells for Tk. 10/= (15 cents)

Rare view of old time 3-minute-photography shop on tripod stand - near Gulistan

Tiny rag pickers happy to pose for camera - Dhanmondi Eidgah

Dhaka - city of wire

Bakshibazar road (Kamruzzaman road) along old railway alignment - near 'Chand khar' pool


Elephant road shoe stores