Mustafa Majid

Mustafa Majid

Mustafa Majid, born on April 14, 1955, in the Patuakhali district of Bangladesh is an researcher and writer. He is best known for his work on aboriginal tribes of the country.[1]

Contents

Life and career

He studied public administration at the Dhaka University for his Bachelors and Masters. Later he obtained M. Phil and Ph.D. degrees from the same university for his research on the Rakhaine aborigines of Bangladesh. Currently a senior executive in Bangladesh Bank, the central bank of the country, he worked as a journalists in different newspapers including the weekly Kishore Bangla. In addition to research, he writes poetry and has published a number of anthologies. Mustafa Majid is known for his scientific positivism, imbibed with the ideals of Marxism, Leninism and thoughts of Mao Zedong. He is an organizer of children's organisation 'Kanchi-Kanchar Mela', a life member of Bangla Academy and an executive member of National Poetry Council of Bangladesh. He is also a member of the National Press Club. In 1971, he has took part in the liberation war of Bangladesh. Dr. Mustafa Majid is the General Manager of the Department of Public Relations and Publications, of Bangladesh Bank.[citation needed]

Works

Dr. Mustafa Majid has carried out extensive on research on public administration, after graduation from the Dhaka University from the department of Public Administration. His endless curiosity about the small ethnic minorities living far away from the main stream has produced pioneering books on ethnic communities like Manna, Garo, Hajong and Tripura as well as the Rakhaines. His research on the existence of Mongoloid community in Bangladesh is revealing.

The Rakhaines

In 2005, the Ph. D. thesis of Mustafa Majid was published under the title The Rakhaines. He worked on the Rakhaines for over twenty years. The Rakhaines of inhabiting in the coastal areas of Patuakhali, Borguna and Cox's Bazaar migrated to what is now Bangladesh from Burma about two hundred years ago and turned the uncultivable deep forests of the coastal belt into a habitable area. Mustafa Majid informs that the Rakhaines are a small Mongoloid who have many probelsm including tyranny by the mainstarem population, but being peace-loving they never choose to go for a protest or struggle. However, some have left the country in search of security. The book has seven chapters in which the author deals with theories of administration, identities of the Rakhaines and a chronicle of Patuakhali district, the anthropological identity of the Rakhaines, their land problems and the unsympathetic role played by the llocal administration in relation to their persistent problems. He suggested for planned governmental effort for their inclusion in the mainstream.

Publications

Mustafa Majid has published 34 books so far (2007) including 13 books on aboriginals of Bangladesh and 4 on public administration. He has 8 titles to his credit that are poetry and memoirs. Some of the important titles are: Theory of Public Administration, Bureaucracy of Bangladesh, Military Bureaucracy in Bangladesh and Nature of Leadership in Bangladesh, Present Day Monologues and Time and Nation in Transformation, The entity of Manna Garo, Hajong and Tripura and The entity of Mongoloid Ethnic Minority in Bangladesh. He has published six books of verse, one of them being Diary of a Nepalese Maoist Guerrilla. He has also edited the Bangla version of the collection of Mao Zedong Poems. He also wrote a biographical book on General Ataul Gani Osmani who was the Commander-in-Chief of Bangladesh liberation war in 1971. He has also produced some books for the children.[2]

Citations

  1. ^ Haque, Junaidul (10 November 2007). "The story of a distressed people". Daily Star. http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=10951. Retrieved 24 December 2010. 
  2. ^ Boi-Mela -List of Books

References

  • Lekhok Ovidhan, 1999, Bangla Academy, Dhaka.
  • Mustafa Majid, The Rakhaines, 2005, Mawla Brothers, Dhaka.

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Mustafa — For other uses, see Mustafa (disambiguation). Mustafa Pronunciation Arabic: [ˈmusˤtˤɑfaː], [musˤˈtˤɑfaː] Egyptian Arabic: [mosˈtˤɑfɑ] English: /mʉˈstɑːfə/, Turkish:  …   Wikipedia

  • Mustafa Ben Halim — مصطفى أحمد بن حليم Prime Minister of Libya In office 12 April 1954 – 25 May 1957 Preceded by Muhammad Sakizli …   Wikipedia

  • Majid Khan (detainee) — Majid Khan Arrested early 2003 Pakistan Citizenship Pakistan Detained at Pakistan, CIA black sites, Guantanamo ISN 10020 Charge(s) No charge …   Wikipedia

  • Mustafa al-Hawsawi — Born August 5, 1968 (1968 08 05) (age 43) Jeddah, Saudi Arabia Detained at CIA black site …   Wikipedia

  • Mustafa Ben Halim — مصطفى بن حليم Mandats Premier ministre libyen Prédécesseur Mohammed al Sakizli Successeur …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Mustafa Ben Halim — مصطفى بن حليم Primer Ministro de Libia abril de 1954 – mayo de 1957 Predecesor …   Wikipedia Español

  • Mustafa Kemal Atatürk — Atatürk redirects here. For other uses, see Atatürk (disambiguation). Mustafa Kemal Atatürk …   Wikipedia

  • Shukri Mustafa — ( ar. شكري مصطفى) was an agricultural engineer who would rise to lead the extremist Islamist group known as Takfir wal Hijra. He began his path toward Islamist thought by joining the Muslim Brotherhood in the 1960s. After being arrested for… …   Wikipedia

  • Abdul Majid Koobar — Abd al Madschid Kubar (arabisch ‏عبد المجيد كعبار‎ ʿAbd al Madschīd Kuʿbār, DMG ʿAbdu l Maǧīd Kuʿbār; * 1909; † ?) war Premierminister von Libyen. Kubar war vom 26. Mai 1957 bis zum 17. Oktober 1960 Premierminister von Libyen. Zusätzlich war er… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Abdul Majid Kubar — Abd al Madschid Kubar (arabisch ‏عبد المجيد كعبار‎ ʿAbd al Madschīd Kuʿbār, DMG ʿAbdu l Maǧīd Kuʿbār; * 1909; † ?) war Premierminister von Libyen. Kubar war vom 26. Mai 1957 bis zum 17. Oktober 1960 Premierminister von Libyen. Zusätzlich war er… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”