Few words about Anis Sir

  • Dr. Atiur Rahman
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Professor Anisur Rahman (1933-2025)

Professor Anisur Rahman (1933-2025)

I suddenly got the news that our beloved teacher Professor Anisur Rahman had left this world at an advanced age. For the last ten to fifteen years, he had vowed that he would remain anonymous. He would not come to the public space again. I heard this from his mouth ten years ago from today.

I truly believed in Sir's self-confidence that we would never see him in public again. In reality, that is what happened. Akash and Dr. Kazi Khalikuzzaman Ahmed went to his Segunbagicha flat one evening. I went to convince Sir to accept the Bangladesh Bank Award. In the meantime, we were able to give the Bangladesh Bank Award to Professor Nurul Islam, Rehman Sobhan and Mosharraf Hossain Sir.

বিজ্ঞাপন

Among the four famous professors, Anis Sir could not be given this award. I told Akash that let's try together to see if we can convince him. I also requested Khalik Bhai to come to Sir's house that evening. I finished my office from Motijheel and reached Sir's house in the evening. A very simple house. Not even a working person.

I was afraid to ask Sir to accept the award. Sir said, “You know I like you very much. But I cannot accept this award. I do not want to go in public anymore.” After that, he showed me two books and said that I am busy with this. The two books were about how to prepare for death. After that, all three of us left without saying anything else, inspiring Sir to continue living his life as he did.

বিজ্ঞাপন

After that, I did not have the courage to meet Sir again. I must have felt bad not being able to give the award to Sir. The sadness of not being able to add one of the four star economists to the list remains even today. However, that year, I was able to jointly give the award to Professor Muzaffar Ahmed (posthumously) and Dr. Swadesh Bose, so the sadness decreased a little. After that, I left Bangladesh Bank. That was how our Anis Sir was. He was unparalleled in philosophical knowledge as well as a pioneer in providing life-oriented education.

I got Sir as a microeconomics teacher in the seventies. He taught us limits and derivatives for about a month. He used to say that if you understand these two concepts, you will not have any difficulty in understanding modern economics. Before that, he established the Department of Economics at the University of Islamabad and served as the mentor of many famous economists in their early years.

He started teaching at Dhaka University. He wrote the shortest PhD thesis (probably 65 pages) from Harvard within three years and returned to the country. But due to a lack of rapport with the then Vice Chancellor Ayub-Monayem close, he left his job and went to the East-West Center in Honolulu. He returned to Dhaka University via Islamabad.

The Vice Chancellor at that time was Justice Abu Sayeed Chowdhury. Earlier, when he was at Dhaka University, East Pakistan was a victim of great discrimination. So Professor Nurul Islam, Rehman Sobhan, Mazharul Haque, Dr. Sadeq and Dr. Habibur Rahman he was very active in analyzing the foundations of the two economies with his colleagues. His PhD thesis was also on the economics of inequality.

As economists on the panel formed to prepare the Fourth Five-Year Plan document in Pakistan, they created such a fuss that they had to submit their reports separately in the end. There was no consensus with the West Pakistani economists. The entire politicians, student community and intellectual community of East Pakistan were so excited by their ideas that in the end almost everyone responded to Sheikh Mujib's six-point appeal.

The minds of Bengalis began to be absorbed in the thought of their homeland separately. So when Operation Searchlight began on March 25, Anis Sir was attacked. He crawled out of the campus and crossed the valley of death. With the help of Moidul Hasan and Mukhlesur Rahman Sidhu Bhai, he and Rehman Sobhan somehow crossed the border and reached Agartala.

Some people raised questions on the way, saying they were non-Bengali, but with the intervention of Dhaka University students, they were able to cross over with their lives. From Agartala to Delhi to Professor Amartya Sen's house. Through him, they met another economist, Ashok Mitra. He was in the government at the time. Through him, they spoke to Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's Principal Secretary, PN Haksar. After talking to these two famous economists of Bangladesh, Indira Gandhi had a meeting with Tajuddin and M Amirul Islam. And thus began the Mujibnagar government.

On April 17, 1971, the essence of our declaration of independence was declared. After that, our Anis Sir and Rehman Sir went to the United States as special envoys of the Mujibnagar government. There, they, Professor Nurul Islam and other expatriate intellectuals and economists, created public opinion in favor of Bangladesh in Congress and Senate. As part of that, they were able to stop the World Bank's financial aid to Pakistan.

After the liberation war, they joined the Planning Commission of independent Bangladesh. There, Anis Sir also spoke in favor of the government's cost-saving programs, land reforms, and various works of building the country through voluntary labor to establish socialism. At one point, he returned to Dhaka University and started working as the chairman of the economics department. At this time, he tried to implement the work that he could not do while in the government with his students. He started working with his students in the village of Jirabo in Ashulia, near Dhaka, to cultivate rice as a volunteer. To deal with the famine he took the initiative to distribute relief in the village of Brahmanbaria in a model manner with students. He introduced us to the humanitarian initiatives that Nur Mohammad Mondal had taken around education and development through a cooperative program in Kunjipukur village of Rangpur.

He has been struggling all his life to see how it is possible to improve the common people by standing next to the people and participating in them. Under the ILO's participatory planning program, he took various initiatives in various countries in Asia and Africa. He inspected the desired land reforms in India through the 'Land Army' program. In the light of that experience, he also played a role in the formation of the Research Initiative in Bangladesh or RIB. He also sat in on our meetings.

He sincerely supported the participatory research through which we were trying to give an alternative human definition of poverty. He also wrote an article on our work in the holiday. At that time, he asked me to think about the environment and nature with all my heart. Fritz Capra's two books gave us a new perspective on the environment (Fritz Capra is an Austrian-born American writer, physicist, systems theorist, and deep environmentalist. One of his books is 'The Web of Life: A New Scientific Understanding of Living Systems', 'Hidden Connections', 'Green Politics'). We have tried to look at nature and the environment from a human perspective. I am very grateful to Sir for giving me this perspective.

At one time, he practiced mainstream economics. He used to write about capitalism, inequality, and technology preferences in the world's best economics journals. But gradually he gave up traditional economics. Rabindranath's songs and rural development ideas started attracting him more. He practiced Rabindra Sangeet with great attention, just like him.

In the mid-eighties, I went to Silaidah in Kushtia for the Rabindra Sangeet Sammilan Parishad conference. Sir also went. I read a long article titled Rabindranath Tagore's Rural Development Philosophy. Sir listened very attentively. Sir preferred to listen more. He did not want to talk. Later, however, he asked me to continue working on Rabindranath Tagore's development philosophy.

I tried, sir...you have left the light and air of this world. Who else will encourage us in these creative works?

However, he has sown many seeds of his creative thoughts in various writings. He was truly a multi-dimensional genius. Who can be called a Renaissance personality. A little stubborn. A rebel. But a humanist in his heart and soul. He was born with a silver spoon in his mouth. But he remained dedicated to the welfare of the underprivileged throughout his life.

He wrote not only in theory but also in practice how to work for the betterment of this backward community. Just by mentioning the names of some of the books he wrote, it is understood that he thought deeply about the marginalized. We can see the reflection of all those thoughts in the books he wrote.

For example, he has left behind for the development of our mental world - 'Development Enquiry', 'Abducted Bangladesh', 'People's Self Development', 'The Infinite Pulse - Rabindra Sangeet Understanding and Pursuit', 'The Fire That Lit - Spontaneous Expression of the Spirit of the Liberation War', 'Songs of Tagore, Philosophy, Selected Translations, Paintings', 'Participation of the Rural Poor in Development', 'My Story of 1971', 'Ekushey and Independence: The Economy and Social Reality of Bangladesh', 'What I Found on the Way-1', 'What I Found on the Way-2', 'The Lost Moment: Dreams with a Nation Born Through Fire' etc. These books are not only valuable for students of sociology and economics and Rabindra devotees. These books will touch the hearts of any reader. I don't know how much it will be possible for the young generation who are immersed in social media to find these books. But our Anis Sir will live on in these books.

I was very lucky that he and Mirza Nurul Huda Sir interviewed me in the seventies for admission to the Economics Department. Since I was among the top ten in the SSC and HSC examinations in the Science Department of Dhaka Board, Huda Sir asked me why I was trying to come to Economics instead of Physics or Chemistry. I was young. Still, I said that I hope to do well in Economics because it has a scientific basis.

Anis Sir was smiling. In the end, I studied Economics with them all my life. Anis Sir used to tell me to look at Economics and Development from a humanitarian perspective. I don't know how much I have been able to fulfill his expectations. However, I have tried my best to make development a friend to the marginalized through the eyes of Rabindranath Tagore all my life. The huge void that Anis Sir's departure has created in my mind cannot be filled immediately. May his soul rest in peace, I pray to God.

Author: Emeritus Professor, Dhaka University and former Governor, Bangladesh Bank