As the flames spread, our caretaker Mizan ran from our home in Dhanmondi to Road 32. Intuitively remembering that my academic research was in the history archives, he went inside, rescued a few scraps of paper and called me to say he had Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s handwritten letters. After he sent me images over WhatsApp, I had to let him know that he had risked his safety for a mirage. The dates on these letters, under cursive Bengali, were 1992–in that chaotic scene of arson, Mizan had actually wandered into the caretaker’s office. The actual museum inside the house had already been burnt to embers, and every piece of historical ephemera was destroyed.>
Attacks on state buildings after the dramatic collapse of the Awami League government are understood as the expression of people’s fury at an oppressive state and its endless circumnavigation around one-name history. Given the very recent insensitive expressions of government mourning for infrastructure but not student lives, it is challenging to now explore empathy for state structures facing the wrath of those mourning their dead. But I wonder if any of the arsonists at Road 32 paused to think that they may be burning down their own history as well.>
When future generations want to hear the story of the birth of Bangladesh, how will we navigate all those moments that centered around this house in the late 1960s and 1970s? A history that involved all people of this geography, not only members of a single political party. Contemporary historians propose that architecture and objects are the second draft of history, and we are a fragile nation with always vanishing archives. Now that the physical house had been destroyed, how will young researchers explore, for example, Beg Art Institute’s iconic photograph of Sheikh Mujib on 25 March 1971, after negotiations with General Yahya Khan had failed, raising an early flag of Bangladesh (the red circle had a map inside in that first draft)>