In 1963, a
mausoleum and research centre were built at the site of his shrine in
Kushtia, Bangladesh. Thousands of people come to the shrine (known in Bengali as an
Akhra) twice a year, at
Dol Purnima in the month of
Falgun (February to March) and in October, on the occasion of the anniversary of his death. During these three-day song
melas, people, particularly Muslim
fakirs and Bauls pay tribute. Among the modern singers of Baul music
Farida Parveen and
Anusheh Anadil are internationally known for singing Lalon songs. M Shahinoor Rahman's thesis
Bengali poet Fakir Lalon Shah: Oral poetry and tradition in the social context of contemporary Bangladesh on his life philosophy is one of the basic work. The
Lalon Shah Bridge crossing the
Padma River was named after him in 2004. A male student's dormitory in
Islamic University, Bangladesh at Kushtia is named after him as Lalon Shah Hall.
Film and literature Lalon has been portrayed in literature, film, television drama and in the theatre. The first
biopic of Lalon titled
Lalon Fakir (1973) was directed by Syed Hasan Imam.
Lalan Fakir, an Indian
Bengali-language
biographical drama film directed by Shakti Chatterjee released in 1978 and starred Ashim Kumar as Lalon.
Allen Ginsberg wrote a poem in 1992 named "
After Lalon", where he warned people against the dangers of fame and the attachments to the worldly things. In 2004,
Tanvir Mokammel directed the film
Lalon in which
Raisul Islam Asad portrayed Lalon.
Prosenjit Chatterjee portrayed Lalan in the
Moner Manush, a 2010 Bengali film based on the life and philosophy of Lalon. The film was an adaptation of
Sunil Gangopadhyay's
biographical novel of the same name. This film directed by
Goutam Ghose, won award for the "best feature film on national integration" at the 58th
Indian National Film Awards. It also won Best Film prize at the 41st
International Film Festival of India held at Goa from 22 Nov to 2 December 2010. ==Gallery==