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Travel in
Bangladesh
Bangladesh
is
in South
Asia sometimes
converging with Southeast
Asia, bordering the
Bay of Bengal to the south,
mostly surrounded by India and
bordering Myanmar in
the southeast.
British
India was partitioned by
joint leaders of the
Congress, All India-Muslim
League and
Britain
in the summer of 1947,
creating the commonwealth
realms of the Islamic
Republic of Pakistan and a
Republic
of
India
.
Bangladesh
came into existence in 1972
when Bengali-speaking East
Pakistan seceded from its
union with Punjabi dominated
West Pakistan after
a 9 month bloody war.
Although
Bangladesh
emerged as an independent
country only in 1972, its
history stretches back
thousands of years and it
has long been known as a
crossroads of history and
culture. Here you will find
the world's longest sea
beach, countless mosques,
the largest mangrove forest
in the world, interesting
tribal villages and a wealth
of elusive wild life.
Although relatively
impoverished compared to its
burgeoning South Asian
neighbour
India
, Bangladeshis are very
friendly and hospitable
people, putting personal
hospitality before personal
finances.
Ready-made
garments, textiles,
pharmaceuticals,
agricultural goods, ship
building and fishing are
some of the largest
industries. The gap between
rich and poor is
increasingly obvious and the
middle-class is
fast-shrinking, as in the
rest of Asia, especially in
cities such as Dhaka and
Chittagong as you move
around between the working
class old city and affluent
neighborhoods like Gulshan
and Baridhara.
Climate
in
Bangladesh
Bangladesh
has a sub tropical monsoon
climate. There are six
seasons in a year; Winter
(Dec-Jan), spring (Feb-Mar),
Summer (Apr-May), Monsoon
(June-July), Autumn
(Aug-Sep) and Late Autumn
(Oct-Nov). The average
temperature across the
country usually ranges
between 9 C - 29 C in winter
months and between 21 C - 34
C during summer months.
Annual rainfall varies from
160 cm to 200 cm in the
west, 200 cm to 400 cm in
the south-east and 250 cm to
400 cm in the north-east.
Cyclones above category
three/four are uncommon
(especially in the deep
winter January through
March)-- but while rare, can
still bring widespread
disruption as expected to
infrastructure and power
outages, especially in the
coastal areas. The weather
pattern is akin to the
Gulf
Coast
in the
United States
(
Alabama
,
Mississippi
and
Louisiana
).
The
current weather can be seen
by hitting the 'play' button
on the following interactive
map, Current Bangladesh
Satellite Weather Radar.
Landscape
The
country is primarily a
low-lying plain of about
144,000 km2,
situated on deltas of large
rivers flowing from the
Himalayas: the Ganges unites
with the Jamuna (main
channel of the Brahmaputra)
and later joins the Meghna
to eventually empty into the
Bay of Bengal
. It’s fertile and mostly
flat farmland and, with the
exception of Chittagong
Hill Tracts, rarely
exceeds 10 meters above sea
level, making it dangerously
susceptible to a rise in sea
level.
Highest
point: Bijoy (1,231 meters).
Holidays
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Ramadan
dates
2010
(1431): Aug 11 - Sep 9
2011
(1432): Aug 1 - Aug 29
2012
(1433): Jul 20 - Aug
18
The
festival of Eid
ul-Fitr is held after
the end of Ramadan and
may last several days.
Exact dates depend on
astronomical
observations and may
vary from country to
country.
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Pohela Boishakh -
The most widely celebrated
secular national festival of
the country. Here people
from all walks of life
participate in various
cultural shows called
Boishakhi Mela,wearing
national dress (kurta or
Shari
), eating sweets and wishing
every one happy new year.
Ekushey
- National Mother Language
Day -
February 21. This day marks
the anniversary of the
martyrs that died in 1952
while protesting the
imposition of Urdu, in the name ofIslam,
as the mother-tongue. The
uprisings to supportBangla as
the mother language fueled
the movement towards secular
nationalism that culminated
in independence in 1971. The
holiday is marked by (one of
the most colourful events in
Asia) tributes to the
martyrs by political
leaders, intellectuals,
poets, writers, artisans and
singing beginning at one
minute after midnight on the
21st. Government offices are
closed, and expect traffic
disruption from February 20.
Independence day -
March 26th- On this day
'Father of the Nation'
Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman proclaimed country's
independence.
Victory day -
December 16th- On this day
Pakistani occupied forces
surrendered to joint
Bangladeshi & Indian
forces.
Eid-ul-Fitr -
the largest muslim holiday
of the year, it celebrates
the end of the holy month of
Ramazan. Food is the
highlight, and if you're
lucky you'll be invited into
a private home for a feast.
Businesses close for at
least a couple days if not a
week.
Eid-ul-Azha -
is the second largest muslim
festival.
Durga Puja -
October 5th-9th, 2008. The
largest Hindu festival in
the country, it goes on for
several days with
festivities varying each
day.
Christmas -
December 25th, This is the
largest Festival of
Christian Community in the
country which is declared as
a Goverment Holiday.A prayer
is held at
Tejgaon
Church
at 11 PM (Local Time) in
24th December. Also some
other church in
Dhaka
also arrange prayer at 24th
December. By
Stanley
Dipu Mazumdar
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