Zahir
Raihan at a Film Festival with awards in 1965.
Raihan, Zahir (1935-1972?) filmmaker and writer, born
19 August 1935 in the village Majupur of Feni district. Zahir had
his early education in Mitra Institute and later, he studied in
Calcutta Alia Madrasah, where his father was a professor. After the
Partition of Bengal in 1947, he along with his parents returned
back to their own village. Zahir passed the Matriculation in 1950
from Amirabad High School and was then admitted to Dhaka College,
from where he passed ISc Examinations. He obtained BA (Hon) in
Bangla from the University of Dhaka.
In his early years, Zahir was attracted by the
communist movement. When Communist Party was banned and the leaders
of the party went underground, he worked as a courier to carry
letters and messages for them from one place to another. He got the
name Raihan from underground leaders and thus his original name
Zahirullah was changed to Zahir Raihan. He took an active part in
the language movement. He was one of the
first 10 students to go out in a procession on 21 February 1952
despite there was a ban on such activities. He and many others were
arrested and then taken to prison.
In his student life Zahir devoted himself to
literature. His first book Surya Grahan, a collection of
stories, was published in the 1362 BS. Other books written by him
are Shesh Bikeler Maya, Hajar Bachhar Dhare, Arek Falgun, Baraf
Gala Nadi and Ar Kata Din. He was one of the initiators
in publishing the English Weekly Express in 1970. He was
also associated with some other journals of literature. Zahir was
honoured with the Adamjee Literature Award for his novel Hajar
Bachhar Dhare and the Bangla Academy Award in
1972.
In 1952, Zahir went to Calcutta to learn photography
and was admitted to Pramatesh Burua Memorial Photography School. He
entered the film world in 1956. Kakhono Asheni, the first
film directed by him, was released in 1961. Then came, one after
another, his other films Kajal, Kancher Deyal, Behula, Jiban
Theke Neya, Anwara, Sangam and Bahana. Jiban Theke
Neya depicted the autocratic rule of Pakistan and inspired the
people to protest against the Pakistani rulers. He started making
an English film Let There Be Light, which he could not
finish because of the break out of the war of liberation. After 25 March
1971, he went to Calcutta and produced a documentary film Stop
Genocide highlighting the massacre done by the Pakistani Army.
This film created a sensation all over the world.
Zahir's Urdu film Sangam was the first coloured
film in Pakistan. His another Urdu film Bahana was a
cinemascope. He received many awards for his Kancher Deyal.
Both his wives, sumita devi(married 1961), and
Suchanda (married 1968) were film actresses.
In December 1971, some unknown miscreants took away
Zahir's elder brother shahidullah kaiser, an eminent writer
from his residence at the University of Dhaka. Within days, on 30
December 1971, someone informed Zahir about an address, somewhere
at Mirpur, where he might find his brother. Accordingly, Zahir left
home to get his brother back. He never returned and until today,
the day is observed as Zahir's Disappearance Day. People remember
him as a great figure in film and literature of
Bangladesh.