Asad Chowdhury

Asad Chowdhury
আসাদ চৌধুরী

Asad Chowdhury in National Poetry Festival, 2010
Born (1943-02-11) 11 February 1943
Ulania, British Raj (now Bangladesh)
Nationality Bangladeshi

Asad Chowdhury (Bengali: আসাদ চৌধুরী; born 11 February 1943) is a poet, writer, translator, radio, TV personality and journalist, as well as a cultural activist in Bangladesh.[1]

He received a Masters in Bengali in 1964 from Dhaka University and is the father of two sons and one daughter. Chowdhury is a former director at the Bangla Academy, Dhaka and worked as an editor at the Bengali service of Deutsche Welle after his retirement. During the liberation war of Bangladesh, Chowdhury was a contributor and broadcaster of Swadhin Bangla Betar Kendra in Kalkata. He started his profession as a lecturer in Bengali language and literature at Brahmanbaria College in 1973. He has also been assistant editor in “The Joybangla” (Kalkata, 1971) and in “The Daily Janapada” (Dhaka, February 1973). He was a correspondent for The Daily Purbodesh from 1968 to 1971.

He is a life member of the Asiatic Society of Bangladesh and a fellow of Bangla Academy, Dhaka, as well as being the ex-Vice President of The Radio and TV Artists Association. He has held many other positions over his life, including:

Publications

Poems

Folk tales

Other

Translations

Chowdhury's publications have been translated into English, French, German, Hindi, Urdu, Malayalam and published in the US, Canada, UK, France, India and Pakistan.

Cassettes

Radio and TV production

He conducted Kathakali, a weekly program from 1973 to 1981, and prepared manuscripts for, conducted and participated in many programmes of Radio Bangladesh.

Other activities

Chowdhury participated in poetry sessions and recitations arranged by Bangla Academy, German Culture Institute, American Culture Centre, Alliance Francaise, Russian Cultural Centre, Iranian Cultural Centre, Islamic Foundation, as well as other cultural organisations of Bangladesh. He delivered a keynote in a seminar, organised by Afro Asian

More recently, he has read poems at a festival organised by the Bangladesh Association in Pittsburgh in 2000, and attended Mukti Judha Uthsab in Agartala, India in January 2001.

References

  1. "Lily Islam’s solo musical soiree". The New Nation. May 25, 2008.


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