Mufazzal Haider Chaudhury was a prominent Bengali essayist, prized scholar of Bengali literature, educator and linguist of the Bengali language.
Background
Born in Khalishpur village, in Noakhali in East Bengal to Bazlur Rahman Chaudhury and Mahfuza Khatun, he lost his father when he was nine. Facing financial difficulties, his mother arranged for his education at the Ahmediya High English School, from where he passed his matriculation examination securing fourth place under the University of Calcutta.
Education
Later he moved to the Visva-Bharati University, where he studied Bengali under the syllabus of the University of Calcutta, and passed his honours as a non-collegiate student in 1946.
Career
After passing his intermediate from the Dhaka College, he went to study Bengali honours at the Scottish Church College, in Kolkata. He was awarded "Sahitya Bharati" by the Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan. He topped his class in the master"s examination in Shantiniketan.
He joined the Pakistan Radio in Dhaka in 1949, and was a lecturer at Jagannath College before becoming a teacher at the Bengali department of Dhaka University having actually to sit for another master"s exam because DU wouldn"t accept his Bishwabharati degree and again coming first in his class, in 1953, in Bengali from the University of Dhaka.
He joined DU in 1955. In 1957, he joined the School of Oriental and African Studies to study linguistics for two years.
His research on the works and the philosophy of Rabindranath Tagore was felicitated and in 1970, he became an external examiner for Bengali at the University of Dhaka. He was one of the leading Bengali intellectuals who were killed by collaborators of Pakistan Army on December 14, two days before the end of the Bangladesh Liberation War.
On December 14, which is observed as Martyred Intellectuals Day, a group of First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Badr people took away the eminent intellectual from his house.
The person was Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin.