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Abdul Jabbar (activist)

Abdul Jabbar was a Bengali protester who was killed during the Bengali language movement in 1952 that took place in what was then East Pakistan. He is considered a martyr in Bangladesh.

Background
Abdul Jabbar was born on 11 October 1919 in Pachua under the Gaffargaon, Mymensingh, East Bengal, British Raj. Although he received his primary education in the local educational institution called pathsala (Dhopaghat Krishtobazar Primary School), he failed to continue his education owing to poverty. == Career ==
Career
Abdul Jabbar worked with his father farming in his village. He decided to travel to the river port town of Narayanganj by train. He got a job in Burma through an Englishman he met in Narayanganj. He worked there for 12 years before going back to Burma. He came to Dhaka, East Pakistan in 1952 with his wife for the medical treatment of his mother-in-law in Dhaka Medical College Hospital. == Personal life ==
Personal life
In 1949, Abdul Jabbar married Amina Khatun, one of his friends' sister and settled down. One and a half year after the marriage, Amina had a baby boy, who was named Nurul Islam Badol. ==Events==
Events
On 21 February 1952 the students in Dhaka bought a procession demanding Bengali be made a state language defying the Section 144 (curfew) imposed by the police. Abdul Jabbar joined the rally when it reached Dhaka Medical college. Police fired on the rally, injuring Abdul Jabbar. He was admitted to Dhaka Medical College where he died. ==Legacy==
Legacy
The government of Bangladesh awarded Abdul Jabbar the Ekushey Padak in 2000. Shaheed Rafiq-Jabbar Hall, a dorm of Jahangirnagar University is also named after him and fellow language activist Rafiq Uddin Ahmed. ==Gallery==
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