Fascism in Bangladesh took away all the civil rights of ordinary people. People couldn’t vote or get their food because they didn’t have the right. The horrible politics of murder, disappearance, and oppression made people’s lives unimportant to those in power. This fascism didn’t spare the schools and students of Bangladesh, but by constantly spreading terrorism and cultural fascism in the schools, students’ right to an education was taken away. Every school in Bangladesh has ruined the learning environment and the system of education.
Dictatorship became the sponsor and beneficiary of the politics of division that have been going on for so long in schools. This set the stage for the politics of keeping the smartest and most thoughtful students in the country busy. Young people weren’t allowed to think about their rights and responsibilities in society and the country. From the first day of college, the students’ minds were filled with thoughts of indescribable torture in the guest room. In the July mass uprising, we saw how a large part of the youth took an anti-people stance because they blindly copied the tail’s politics.
Politics in the past has turned students into puppets to protect power by ignoring their own intelligence and morals. Politics in the past has made students forget about the rights of the common people, like farmers and workers in the country. Politics in the past has made it harder for women to fight for their political rights by limiting their chances to think about and talk about politics. In the past, student politics has been limited to ideological politics.
The politics of the past have made the teaching community weak and the education system weak. In this system of education, the basic needs of students and their common demands have been hidden behind the power-sharing veil. This country has not yet figured out how to make sure that students’ rights are respected, even though it has been independent for 53 years. Fascism has silenced every voice that has spoken out against its interests for fifteen years. However, the united force of freedom-seeking students in many areas has brought us the July we wanted. Inspired by July, millions of students across the country want a new kind of politics. A politics that will talk about the fall of fascism, shout slogans that will show the dictator bloodshot eyes, put the country first, and talk about making sure that all students’ rights are respected. We have decided to create a new student organization through discussions and exchanges of ideas with politically, culturally, and intellectually active students from different schools in order to capture the unified revolutionary spirit of the student body and to establish a politics of realizing the rights of students while putting the interests of Bangladesh first.