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Mr. Ali is a bricklayer by profession. Although his first wife’s family disbanded while making sculptures based on the liberation war, he did not give up the sculpture-making work.
He has made 6 sculptures based on the liberation war to inspire the new generation in the spirit of freedom. It is not a grant, this illiterate man has done a great job selling his property. The remaining 5 sculptures are under construction and require funding. Countless people gathered at his village house to see this Sahib Ali handicraft.
Saheb Ali, son of the late Abdul Aziz from Ajpara Gai, District 3, Auliapur, Patuakhali Sadar Upazila. He is 57 years old with his second wife Piara and sons Hasan, Hossain, daughters Nilima and Nilufa.
A child is disabled in a traffic accident. In 1996, while working at a rice mill in Munshiganj, he was inspired to make a sculpture based on the liberation war after hearing a story from his colleague Birangana Rahima about the 1971 disappearance.
In addition, he tried to make a silent struggle to present the history and tradition of independence to the new generation. But in addition to selling Basat-Vita to shape his different industrialization, his first wife Hanufa abandoned him. However, he did not stop sculpting.
Sometimes half starved, sometimes hungry, he dedicated himself to sculpting. Mr. Ali’s family had to work hard to make a sculpture instead of making a living. Today the family members live making sheds with old tin.
They live in extreme fear in a catastrophic climate. He stated that if the government or any donor organization supports the artwork, there is an opportunity for the new generation to better present the unknown history and legacy of independence.
Saheb Ali further said that when he first started making sculptures, the family’s income stopped. Hanufa, the first wife, left him angry and went to his father’s house.
It can be seen first-hand that 20 concrete posters have been made on the side of the house with illustrious figures of the country, photographs of independence and the unforgettable meaning of 1971. Some phrases of civic awareness are also exhibited.
He had to take a loan from an NGO to build 6 sculptures based on the liberation war over a long year selling 16% of the 30% of the land found in the ancestral sources for 480,000 tak. Except for the dochala tin ghartuku made in the old tin plating, it has been exhibited in all places except the thunderbolt of the father of the nation Bangabandhu, all of Bangladesh has been exhibited on the thumb of Bangabandhu, the infantrymen of the heroic warrior (Pak army ) Kal Nag, A total of 6 sculptures including the language movement of March 26, 1952.
It is as if the skillful touch of this illiterate hand has revealed the achievements of the entire Bengali nation and that bloody memory of independence. The entire area is covered with a mixture of sand and cement. Not only the villagers, but also many people from the city go to see these sculptures based on the liberation war carried out by Mr. Ali himself.
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