George Harrison are among 140 'foreign friends' the government of Bangladesh will honour on Saturday for highlighting the plight of its people during their war of independence 41 years ago.
Others to be honoured posthumously include Bob Dylan,former British Prime Minister
Harold Wilson, Senator Edward Kennedy, Blessed Mother Teresa of Calcutta,
and Indian Army Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw.
Former Conservative prime minister Sir Edward Heath and the late Lord Shore of
Stepney will be honoured at a number of events between now and next March.
The ceremony in the capital Dhaka will not be attended by Bob Dylan and Joan
Baez, but their nominations along with those of the late former Beatles
guitarist and the sitar maestro Ravi Shankar will recall their roles in
staging the celebrated 1971 Concert for Bangladesh in New York's Madison
Square Gardens as Pakistani troops waged a scorched earth assault on the
then East Pakistan to crush its independence movement.
Joan Baez wrote the anthem "The Story of Bangladesh" which lamented
the killings of sleeping Bangladeshi students by Pakistani forces.
The concert, which also showcased some of the Indian subcontinent's finest
classical musicians, is regarded as a template and inspiration for the Live
Aid concerts of the 1980s to raise funds for famine relief in Africa.
The awards are regarded as a long-standing debt in Bangladesh to those who
supported its people in their darkest hours. Several Pakistani figures who
opposed the war against their eastern dominion and a number of leading
Indian politicians, including former Bharatiya Janata Party Prime Minister
Atal Bihari, are also among those whose contributions are being celebrated.
Bangladeshi officials said most of those being honoured are from India and
Britain, which it regards as its greatest supporter in the Western world
during its struggle for independence.
Many of them were alerted to the humanitarian crisis by Sir Mark Tully's BBC
reports.
"Last year on our 40th independence anniversary, we created this project
for those who stood next to us in our war of liberation. While there was a
humanitarian crisis, atrocities and the genocide of Hindu minorities, people
sent their support from throughout the world, particularly from the United
Kingdom and the cultural activists who organised the famous Concert for
Bangladesh at Madison Square Gardens, the two concerts by George Harrison,
Bob Dylan, and Ravi Shankar," said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Muna
Tasneem.
very good link and new! I'm very glad for this, from France, best regards,batoivre ( Senecal Pierre) ♫♫♫♥
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