Abul Kasem Fazlul Huq (Bengali: আবুল কাসেম ফজলুল হক;
October 1873—27 April 1962);[1] popular with the title Sher-e-Bangla
(Urdu: شیر بنگاله Tiger of Bengal), was an eminent Bengali nationalist,
social democrat, politician and statesman during the first half of the
20th century. He founded the Krishak Praja Party, which championed the
rights of the Bengali peasantry. Huq served twice as the Prime Minister
of Bengal in British India and was a key figure of Hindu-Muslim unity.
After the end of colonial rule, he became one of the leading statesmen
of East Pakistan, serving as its Chief Minister and Governor, and was
instrumental in pushing through the first major land reforms in the
subcontinent. Huq supported the Bengali Language Movement of 1952 and
established the landmark Bangla Academy in Dhaka in 1954. He was
dismissed from public office by the Governor-General of Pakistan on
charges of inciting secession, and was later banned from politics by the
military junta of General Ayub Khan. His legacy endures as one of the
most respected Bengali statesmen of the twentieth century, and he is
popularly honored as the Tiger of Bengal.
He
was a senior figure of the Indian National Congress, but later joined
the Muslim League in 1920s, under the leadership of Muhammad Ali Jinnah.
He played a crucial role in drafting and presenting the Lahore
Resolution. After the establishment of Pakistan, he was appointed as
Chief Minister of East Bengal in 1952, and in 1955 became the Interior
Minister of Pakistan. In 1954, he was appointed Governor Governor of
East Pakistan as part of the United Front platform and presided the
provisional state until 1958.[2] After a brief illness, he died in Dacca
in 1962 and is buried at a mausoleum at the Suhrawardy Udyan in
Shahbag, Dhaka.
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