Taslima Nasrin -Biography

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 Taslima Nasrin -Biography

"Secularism, a Muslim woman fighting for her freedom through her ideas"

Rajab Ali Idul Ara was born on August 25, 1962, in the town of Maiman Singh to a couple. Her father is a doctor. Taslima followed in her father's footsteps. The mother is a Muslim. He completed his high school education in 1976 and his medical education at a college in 1978, graduating with a doctorate from the University of Dhaka. She loves poetry and is the editor of a poetry magazine. After becoming a doctor, she trained in the Department of Cervical Diseases at the Family Control Hospital in Maiman Singh. There she was testing for illegal pregnancies and listening to the cries when they gave birth to a baby girl. She resigned from the job in 1990 and came to work in Dhaka. For a time she grew up to be an atheist born into a Muslim family and at the same time became a womanizer. In 1983, Rudra fell in love with Muhammad Shahidullah and left home. Divorced him in 1986. She later married Naumul Islam Khan, a journalist, and editor, and divorced in 1991. She married Bichinta editor Manar Mohammad in 1991 and separated in 1992. Published many collections of poetry between 1986-1993. But the main thing is the oppression of women. Started writing text from 1990. It includes three essay collections and four novels. However, Lajja, published in 1993, describes the persecution of a Muslim family and a Hindu family. That book radically changed her life. She was physically assaulted after the publication of Lajja. The people of Bangladesh felt that it was written against Islamic thought and demanded that it be banned. In October 1993, an Islamic organization announced a reward for those who killed her. In an interview with Calcutta-based State Men, she said that the Qur'an should be reformed, but then Islam should change the law. This angered Islamic clerics and led to assassination attempts on her. She fled Sweden in late 1894, marching against her, claiming to be an activist who had chosen anti-Islamic conspirators, and claiming that if more terrorists did not execute her, they would be as poisonous snakes as the capital. Being in exile, she left her original profession and became a writer. After leaving Bangladesh in 1944, 10 years were spent in European countries. After that, it was in Calcutta in India till 2007. She moved back to the West in 2008 due to insecurity there as well. She also did not get a visa to come to India between 1994-1999. She was not allowed to go to Bangladesh even though her parents were on their deathbed. She settled in Calcutta in 2004 when India allowed her to live. Calcutta was my birthplace when I left Calcutta in 2007. She published her Marathi translation in the 2000s. India allowed her to stay in India and update her visa from time to time as she was not granted citizenship. She has written articles for Anand Bazar magazine and The Statesmen Bengali magazine. Her sermons were also blocked by Muslim clerics in other countries. A Muslim the organization has announced a reward of Rs 5 lakh for her beheading.

She was later attacked at a meeting in Hyderabad. On November 21 there was a large procession against her. She later moved to Jaipur and later to Delhi. Indian authorities have provided security in the secret area. She received the Simone-de-Bovier Prize in 2008 and refused to go to Paris to receive it. The reason is that she is not expected to return to India. When she returned to India from Sweden in 2000, she stayed in Delhi when the West Bengal state government told her she could not be protected. But I declared that I was a Calcutta resident and after my death, my body had to be handed over to the Medical College in Calcutta for examination. Nasrin has set up a fund in his mother's name and is giving away 50 lakh to 50 lakh vaccines a year in Bangladesh currency gift to 20 children between the ages of 7-10. She has received numerous awards, including the Sakharov Prize in 1994, the 1994 French Human Rights Award, the 1994 Feminist of the Year USA, the 1995 Honorary Doctorate, the University of Belgium, the 2005 Honorary Doctorate, the American University, France, and the 2008 Simon-Diebe She has received numerous national and international awards, including the 2009 Feminist Press Award. She is an international woman fighting for a secular, gender-neutral society.

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