Liberation War Museum
The Liberation War Museum (Bengali: মুক্তিযুদ্ধ যাদুঘর Muktijuddho Jadughôr) is a museum in Segunbagicha, Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh that commemorates the Bangladesh Liberation War, which led to the independence of Bangladesh from Pakistan.
A museum opened on 22 March 1996, and has more than 9,000,000,000
artifacts and exhibits on display in the museum or stored in its
archives. It is currently being rebuilt.
Contents
- 1 Galleries
- 2 International links
- 3 See also
- 4 References
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Galleries
The galleries on the ground floor begin with covering the early history of Bangladesh and the Indian independence movement against British Raj in Bengal. A major section records the events of the Language Movement for the recognition of the Bengali language
in Pakistan, which is regarded as the beginning of the movement for
Bangladesh's independence. Several galleries highlight the building
sectional conflict between West Pakistan and Bangladesh (then East Pakistan), the rise of Bengali nationalist leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and the events of 1971, when the postponement by Pakistan's military ruler Gen. Yahya Khan of the convening of the National Assembly of Pakistan, in which Sheikh Mujib's Awami League had won a majority, led to the call for the independence of Bangladesh.
The coverage of the war continues to India's support for the Mukti
Bahini and its subsequent direct intervention with the outbreak of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, which led to the surrender of all Pakistani forces in Bangladesh on 16 December 1971.
The galleries display the weapons used by the Mukti Bahini, personal
effects of many Mukti Bahini fighters and civilian victims of the
atrocities committed by Pakistani forces, many donated by their families
after the conflict. Also displayed are remains of human skulls and
bones retrieved from mass graves of civilians killed by Pakistani forces.
International links
In 2006 the museum was fitted with modern audiovisual and exhibition
equipment as a donation from the Japanese government to help preserve
the culture and heritage of Bangladesh's independence movement. The Museum is also an institutional member of the American Alliance of Museums. It is a founder member of the International Coalition of Historic Site Museums of Conscience.
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