Kabori craves Hasina’s help again to take another aim at parliament

Sarah Begum Kabori, who has represented Narayanganj in parliament on the back of a glittering presence in Bangla film for around four decades, fancies another tilt at the top public representative job.

Masum Billahbdnews24.com
Published : 14 August 2018, 05:06 PM
Updated : 14 August 2018, 06:25 PM

The ‘sweet girl’ of the silver screen era wants to work from inside the parliament for the new-generation artists with a wider role to take the film industry forward.

The legendary actress sat with bdnews24.com for an interview on Monday to share her thoughts and plans about politics.

Her desire to join mainstream politics began to grow when Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina returned home in 1981 after around six years in exile following the killing of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and most other members of the family on Aug 15, 1975.

Kabori was given the opportunity to contest in an election in 2008 when the Awami League chief Hasina handed her the ticket for Narayanganj-4 parliamentary constituency.

She is now longing for a similar ‘reward’ from the prime minister for the 11th parliamentary polls due by December.

“I had worked with the mainstream politicians during the anti-autocracy movement. I had then wished for nomination,” Kabori said.   

“Finally, when (AKM) Shamim Osman fled, Apa (Hasina) told me, ‘You wish to contest in elections. Here’s a gift for you’, and handed me the nomination papers.

“I am very grateful to her for that,” she said.

Shamim Osman of the influential Osman family in Narayanganj was an MP from 1996, but he left the country after the electoral debacle in 2001.

He returned home and began preparing for standing in election in 2006 by the end of the BNP’s tenure.

He left the country again when the military-controlled caretaker government declared emergency in the beginning of 2007.

Shamim Osman came back once again after the Awami League came to power in 2009, but Kabori, once related to the Osman family by marriage, was already representing the constituency.

The Awami League nominated Shamim again in 2014 and he was elected uncontested amidst a boycott of vote by the BNP.

Kabori does not visit Narayanganj much nowadays.

Asked from where she wants to contest the general election, Kabori said she was thinking about Dhaka’s Gulshan, where she lives now.

But a final decision hinges on Hasina, she added.   

Kabori’s residence is under Dhaka-17 parliamentary seat. SM Abul Kalam Azad of the Awami League’s ally Bangladesh Nationalist Front or BNF is the MP from the constituency now.

“I don’t want to return to Narayanganj. Politics is full of strategies. I am leaving the matter to her (Hasina). She will decide what is best there,” the former MP said.

In her memoirs Smriti Tuku Thaak, published by bdnews24 publishing limited or bpl in last year’s Ekushey Book Fair, Kabori recounts the bitter experience of her relations with the Osman family despite many sweet memories.

“But I didn’t stop, because Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina was the source of my strength. It was Apa who nominated me,” she told bdnews24.com     

Kabori said she was confident of a win if she gets the picked again.

“I myself am enough wherever you put me. I was a member of parliament, but I can dare you to find an honest and brave person like me. I never got involved in corruption, tender business or land-grabbing,” she said.          

“People think becoming an MP opens the way for earning loads of money and getting many other facilities. But I did not see it this way. That’s why I don’t even have the money to make a film,” she added.

The actress of over 200 films dreams of overhauling the film industry if she can make it to parliament again.

“I want to take the film industry forward again, so that it can regain the glory of its golden era through the new generations, so that they can make the cultural arena a big support base for the pro-Liberation War force,” she said.

“I am from the film industry. For me, working in a film is like saying prayers. I want to do many things surrounding cinema and bring changes to the industry by working hard,” she added. 

Kabori said her interest in politics started to increase after the War of Independence against Pakistan.

“The feeling of awareness about my country had worked in me before independence, but I was not involved with politicians or analysts in rallies, processions. My eyes opened after the war in 1971,” she said. 

Once the war started, Kabori fled to India like many other Bangladeshis and started to get in touch with people in politics.

She also worked to build support for Bangladesh’s independence in Mumbai.

“I travelled to Hyderabad with Khan Sarwar Murshid of Rajshahi University, Altaf Hossain of NAP and many others in a team. We as artists and them being intellectuals and politicians shared what we all had seen in a meeting.

“It occurred to me in ’71 that I began seeing the world in a different way,” she said.

Kabori, the founding general secretary of Bangabandhu Sangskritik Jote, was also involved in rallying public support for the trial of war criminals under the leadership of Jahanara Imam in 1992.

She had also worked with Justice KM Sobhan and Dr Nilima Ibrahim in establishing children’s organisation Bangabandhu Shishu-Kishore Mela.