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Muhammad Shahidullah (Bengali: মুহম্মদ শহীদুল্লাহ; 10 July 1885 – 13 July 1969)[1] was a Bengali linguist, philologist, educationist, and writer.[2][3]
Shahidullah was born on 10 July 1885 to a Bengali Muslim family in the village of Peyara in the erstwhile Bengal Presidency's 24 Parganas district. His father, Mafizuddin Ahmed, was the guardian of a mazar, and his mother, Marguba Khatun, was a housewife.
Shahidullah began his career by teaching in Jessore Zila School in 1908. After working as the headmaster of Sitakunda High School for some time in 1914, he practiced law at Bashirhat in 24 Parganas. In 1915 he was elected as vice-chairman of the town's municipality. He was Sharatchandra Lahiri Research Fellow (1919–21) under Dinesh Chandra Sen at the University of Calcutta and joined the University of Dhaka as a lecturer in 1921 in Sanskrit and Bangla. During his period at the University of Dhaka he did research on the origins of the Bengali language. In 1925, he presented his thesis that Bangla as a language originated from Gaudi or Magadhi Prakrit. He was principal of Bogra Azizul Huq College from 1944 to 1948. He then returned to the University of Dhaka, serving as head of the Bangla Department and dean of the Faculty of Arts. He taught part-time at the Law Department (1922–25) and the International Relations Department as a teacher of French (1953–55). He worked as head of the Bangla and Sanskrit Department of the University of Rajshahi (1955–58).[9]
Sindabad Saodagarer Galpa (The Stories of the Merchant Sindbad, 1922)
Bhasa O Sahitya (Language and Literature, essays, 1931)
Bangala Byakaran (Bangla Grammar, 1936)
Diwan-i-Hafiz (Poems of Hafiz, translation, 1938)
Shikwah O Jawab-i-Shikwah (Questions and Their Answers, translation from Iqbal, 1942)
Rubaiyat-i-Omar Khaiyam (Quatrains of Omar Khayyam, translation, 1942)
Essays on Islam (1945)
Amader Samasya (Our Problems, essays, 1949)
Padmavati (Volume I ed, 1950)
Bangla Sahityer Katha (History of Bangla Literature, Volume I in 1953, Volume II in 1965)
Vidyapati Shatak (Collection of Vidyapati's Songs, text analysis, 1954)
Bangla Adab Ki Tarikh (History of Bangla Literature, essays, in Urdu, 1957)
Bangla Sahityer Itihas (History of Bangla Literature, 1957)
Bangala Bhasar Itibritta (History of Bangla Language, 1959)
Amarkabya (Unforgettable Poetical Works, 1963)
Sekaler Rupkatha (Fairy Tales of Ancient Time), 1965[12]
Les Chants Mystiques de Kanha et de Saraha [The Mystic Songs], 1928, Adrien Maisonneuve.[13]
Family
Shahidullah has seven sons and two daughters. Children:
Mohammad Raziullah,
Mohammad Safiyullah,
Mohammad Waliullah,
A K Mohammad Zakiyullah,
Mohammad Taqiullah,
Mohammad Naqiullah,
Mohammad Bashirullah,
Mohzuza Haque (born Khatun),
Masrura Haque (born Khatun).
His third son A.K.M. Zakiyullah established a school named 'Dr. Shahidullah Gyanpith' in Hazi Osman Goni Road, Alu bazaar (Old Dhaka) and a research library named ’Dr. Shahidullah Memorial Library and Language Research Center’ in Senpara Parbata, Mirpur-10, Dhaka.
Another of his sons Abul Bayan M. Naqiyyullah (M.S) studied in George Washington University in Washington DC, USA and settled in Cairo, Egypt after serving as a pathologist in Saudi Arabia.
Another of Shahidullah's sons, A.K.M. Bashirullah – known popularly by his alias Murtaja Baseer – is considered one of the most stylish and foremost painters in Bangladesh.[14]