Peoples
of Bangladesh
Voice
of Bengali nationalism and independence
A vast majority (98 percent) of the people of Bangladesh are Bengalis and
they speak the Bengali language. Minorities include Biharis numbering 250,000
and other tribes numbering about a million, with the Chakma being most numerous
in number. About 83 percent of Bangladeshis are profess Islam as their religion.
The next major religion is Hinduism (16 percent). Other major religions
include Buddhism and Christianity.
A member of the Indo-European family of languages, Bangla (sometimes called
Bengali) is the official language of Bangladesh. Bangladeshis closely identify
themselves with their national language. Bangla has a rich cultural heritage
in literature, music, and poetry, and at least two Bengali poets are well
known in the West: Rabindranath Tagore, a Hindu and a Nobel laureate; and
Kazi Nazrul Islam, a Muslim known as the "voice of Bengali nationalism
and independence." Bangla has been enriched by several regional dialects.
The dialects of Sylhet, Chittagong, and Noakhali have been strongly marked
by Arab-Persian influences. English, whose cultural influence seemed to
have crested by the late 1980s, remained nonetheless an important language
in Bangladesh.
Biharis, a group that included Urdu-speaking non-Bengali Muslim refugees
from Bihar and other parts of northern India, numbered about 1 million in
1971 but had decreased to around 600,000 by the late 1980s. They once dominated
the upper levels of Bengali society. Many also held jobs on the railroads
and in heavy industry. As such they stood to lose from Bangladesh independence
and sided with Pakistan during the 1971 war. Hundreds of thousands of Biharis
were repatriated to Pakistan after the war.
Bangladesh's tribal population consists of about 1 million people, just
fewer than 1 percent of the total population. They live primarily in the
Chittagong Hills and in the regions of Mymensingh, Sylhet, and Rajshahi.
The majority of the tribal population (778,425) live in rural settings,
where many practice shifting cultivation. Most tribal people are of SinoTibetan
descent and have distinctive Mongoloid features. They differ in their social
organization, marriage customs, birth and death rites, food, and other social
customs from the people of the rest of the country. They speak Tibeto-Burman
languages. In the mid-1980s, the percentage distribution of tribal population
by religion was Hindu 24, Buddhist 44, Christian 13, and others 19.
The four largest tribes are the Chakmas, Marmas (or Maghs), Tipperas (or
Tipras), and Mros (or Moorangs). The tribes tend to intermingle and could
be distinguished from one another more by differences in their dialect,
dress, and customs than by tribal cohesion. Only the Chakmas and Marmas
display formal tribal organization, although all groups containe distinct
clans. By far the largest tribe, the Chakmas are of mixed origin but reflect
more Bengali influence than any other tribe. Unlike the other tribes, the
Chakmas and Marmas generally live in the highland valleys. Most Chakmas
are Buddhists, but some practiced Hinduism or animism.
The country's population is almost evenly distributed throughout its 64
districts except for the three Hill Tracts districts, which are rather sparsely
inhabited. Regionally, the eastern districts have a slightly higher density
than the western ones. On average, a district has a population of about
1.8 million, a thana 230,000, a union 25,000 and a village 2,000. There
are 490 thanas, 4,451 unions and 59,990 villages. The number of households
is about 20 million. On average, a household consists of 5.6 persons. The
tribal people, who lead a simple life, are generally self-reliant, producing
their own food and drinks and weaving their own clothes.
There are 4 metropolitan cities and 119 municipalities in the country. The
level of urbanization is low at 20%. This leaves 80% of the country's total
population of about 120 million to live in the rural areas, which primarily
depend on a poorly developed agriculture for livelihood. The capital city
of Dhaka has an estimated population of 8.58 million. The annual growth
rate of the population has come down to 1.75% with the acceptance of family
planning practices rising to 48.7%. The crude birth rate per 1000 is 25.6
and the death rate is 8.1. Life expectancy at birth is 59.5 years. The rate
of child mortality per 1000 has come down to 76.8 and that of maternal mortality
to 4.5. About 96.3% families in the country have now access to safe drinking
water. The sex ratio is 106 males for every 100 females. The density of
population per square kilometer is 800.
Some 44.3% of the people are literate with about 5 million having passed
secondary school level and another 1.27 million being graduates. The primary
school enrollment rate has risen to 86% and the rate for secondary school
enrollment to 33%. To intensify promotion of compulsory primary education,
the food-for education programme has been extended to over 16,000 schools.
More and more primary schools will be brought under this programme.
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