Belayet Hossain (Bengali: বেলায়েত হোসেন, died November 14, 1971) was a heroic Freedom Fighter of the Bangladesh Liberation War. For his bravery in the war of independence, the government of Bangladesh awarded him the title of Bir Uttam.
Belayet Hossain | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | November 14, 1971 |
Nationality | Bangladeshi |
Citizenship | Pakistan (before 1971) Bangladesh |
Known for | Bir Uttom |
Birth and education
editThe house of martyr Belayet Hossain is in Gachua village of Sandwip Upazila of Chittagong District. His father's name is Majed Mia and mother's name is Bibi Mariam. His wife's name is Tafsila Begum. He has one son and one daughter.[1]
Belayet Hossain served in the 4th East Bengal Regiment of the Pakistan Army. In 1971, this regiment was stationed in Comilla Cantonment. He was in Brahmanbaria from the beginning of March. When the liberation war started, he played an important role in revolting and joining the war. At the end of the resistance war, he fought in the Salda river sub-sector of Sector 2.[2]
Role in the liberation war
editOn 14 November 1971, it occupied most of the area of Salda River in Kasba Upazila of Brahmanbaria District. The freedom fighters of Salda River sub-sector of Sector 2 divided into several groups and attacked the defensive position of the Pakistan Army earlier on the night of November 12. November 14 at one o'clock, A strong contingent of Pakistani troops marched through the godown area west of Monowara village to retake the Salda River. Belayet Hossain with his team attacked the advancing Pakistani army. The Pakistani army was devastated by the fierce attack and after a while they start fleeing. Then Belayet Hossain chased them with his comrades while he was leader some of the fraction war. With his extraordinary heroism, the Pakistani army started fleeing. The frightened soldiers then began to retreat, firing back. But he was not a man to give up. His wish was to capture one or two enemy soldiers alive. He continued to move forward with courage and quickness but his wish couldn't get fulfilled. A bullet fired by the enemy came at his head. He fell to the ground and died in battle.[1]
Tomb
editWith the help of the villagers, Belayet was buried along with other martyred freedom fighters on a hill in Kullapathar village. This cemetery is now known as Kullapathar Shaheed Memorial.[3]
Awards and honors
editGallery
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Belayet's grave at Kullapathar Shaheed Memorial (front and center)
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"List of names of heroic freedom fighters at Kollapathar Cemetery during the Great War of Liberation in 1971" Name of Martyr Belayet on plaque (Serial No.26)
Footnotes
edit- This article has been translated from the original report titled "তোমাদের এ ঋণ শোধ হবে না" published on 29 March 2012 in The Daily Prothom Alo. The Daily Prothom Alo has released a Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike 3.0 international license on Wikipedia (Permitted). The reports were written by Rashedur Rahman (also known as Tara Rahman) on behalf of The Daily Prothom Alo Liberation War Trust.
References
edit- ^ a b Rahman, Rashedur. তোমাদের এ ঋণ শোধ হবে না. Prothom Alo (in Bengali). Archived from the original on 2012-05-01. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
- ^ একাত্তরের বীরযোদ্ধা, খেতাব পাওয়া মুক্তিযোদ্ধাদের বীরত্বগাথা (প্রথম খন্ড) (in Bengali). Prothoma. 2013. p. 48. ISBN 9789849025375.
- ^ "কুল্লাপাথরের যে টিলায় শায়িত ৫০ যোদ্ধা". banglanews24.com (in Bengali). Retrieved 2020-08-06.