Father Bob with reporters during a training in Bangladesh in 2009 |
Father Bob with reporters from Bangladesh, Pakistan, Cambodia, Indonesia, Singapore and Mongolia at UCAN House, Bangkok, Thailand (2009) |
"I speak of legend, I speak of my ancestor, I speak of the restless present, and of the final struggle in future." --- Abu Zafar Obaidullah
Father Bob with reporters during a training in Bangladesh in 2009 |
Father Bob with reporters from Bangladesh, Pakistan, Cambodia, Indonesia, Singapore and Mongolia at UCAN House, Bangkok, Thailand (2009) |
In India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, weddings are often week-long events full of unnecessary grandeur. (Photo: Unsplash) |
A Bangladeshi
Christian couple recently tied the knot at a Catholic church in Gazipur
district of central Bangladesh in the presence of 10 relatives.
The wedding Mass was followed by a simple reception
including lunch attended only by a handful of relatives from both sides. The
whole program came to an end before sunset.
This was a Covid-19-protocoled marriage ceremony allowed
under government-mandated health guidelines. There are many such weddings in
the pipeline. In normal circumstances, it would have been unthinkable.
In South Asian nations including India, Pakistan and Bangladesh,
weddings are often week-long extravagant events full of unnecessary
grandeur. They have little in common with culture and traditions.
It is in striking contrast to the staggering socioeconomic situation in South Asia, home to one third of the world’s poor who survive on less than US$2 per day.
Funeral workers in Bangladeshi capital Dhaka bury a person who died from Coronavirus (Photo by Stephan Uttom/UCA News) |
Migrants from Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Pakistan wait to be taken to a Spanish NGO's boat during the rescue of 65 migrants in the Mediterranean Sea off the Libyan coast on Feb. 10. (Photo: AFP) |
The deadly collapse of Rana Plaza garment factory complex in Bangladesh on April 24, 2013 (Photo: AFP) |
Armenian Apostolic Church of Holy Resurrection in Dhaka (Courtesy: Armenian Church of Bangladesh) |
The two-storied white-colored church sparkles and
stands quietly in the midst of a flurry of high-rise residential buildings in
Armenian Street of Armanitola in the old part of Dhaka.
Dozens of tombs in the adjacent graveyard
recall the Armenians who lived and died in Bangladesh's capital.
Built in 1781, the Armenian Apostolic
Church of Holy Resurrection is not just a historic landmark but also bears
testimony to Dhaka's once-thriving Armenian community, which was credited with
shaping the economic and social life of the city in the 18th and 19th
centuries.
Set up in 1868, Holy Cross Catholic
Church, not far from the Armenian church, has a sizable Christian community.
Armenian Street and the Armanitola area
are testament to a bygone era. However, much of the glorious legacy of
Armenians in Dhaka including the church could have been lost without Michael
Joseph Martin, the last resident Armenian of Dhaka.
Martin was the warden of the church for
more than three decades. His singlehanded efforts were instrumental in reviving
the church from a shambles, literally.
Martin's three daughters — Eleanor,
Christine and Cheryl — settled in Canada years ago, but he stayed in Bangladesh
with his wife, Veronica, to take care of the church.
Veronica passed away in 2003 and was
buried in the church's graveyard, but Martin stayed put until his declining
health forced him to move to Canada in 2014.
Before leaving, he passed on the
wardenship to Armen Arslanian, an Armenian businessman based in Los Angeles in
the US.
Martin died in Canada peacefully on April 10 at the age of 89. His demise brought an end to an era of Armenians in Dhaka that is now part of history.
More than 100,000 followers defy a ban on public gatherings to attend the funeral of Islamic preacher Maulana Zubayer Ahmad Ansari in his home village in Bangladesh on April 18. (Photo Supplied) |
Right: My mother Dolly Regina Costa & Left: My mother-in-law Ruplay Anna Costa |
আর্মেনিয়ান এপোস্টলিক চার্চ অব হলি রেজুরেকশন (Armenian Church of Holy Resurrection) Courtesy: Armenian Church of Bangladesh |
মাইকেল যোসেফ মার্টিন (Michael Joseph Martin) Courtesy: Armenian Church of Bangladesh |
Bangladeshi Christians who account for less than half percent of some 165 million inhabitants in the country pray during an Easter Mass in D...