The history behind the holiday, as explained to me by my grade 7 students, (and verified by a UN sponsored website) is that when Pakistan separated from India, Bangladesh was a part of Pakistan known as East Pakistan. In 1952, Pakistan decided that Urdu would be the only official language spoken and people were not allowed to speak Bengali. Students at the University of Dhaka led a protest and the police opened fire killing 4 students. Eventually Bangladesh became it's own independent country with Bengali as it's official language and every year they honor the martyrs who gave their life to protect their language and culture. In 1999, the UN declared Mother Language Day an international holiday because all people should have the right to speak their mother language and celebrate their culture.
| Our names in Bangla (Bengali) |
| Student drawing mendi (henna) on my hand |
| Look at those crazy beautiful designs! |
It was a great day for school wide community building and we pulled it off-barely-but that's how things are done here-last minute and chaotic. But even with all its imperfections, everyone had a great day and it was all worth it. Especially for moments like this...
Pretty sure our students think we are the coolest teachers ever...wouldn't you?

Im glad I get to share these memories with you. I will carry a piece of you wherever my journey takes me, and I know its the same for you. Countless more adventures await us; Dhaka was just the tip of the iceberg roomie <3
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