সোমবার, ০১ জুন ২০২৬, ১১:৪৮ অপরাহ্ন
Sometimes history poses questions whose answers cannot be found in columns of numbers. They must be sought in a mother’s tears, in a widow’s silence, or in the eyes of a child who still gazes at the door, hoping that his father might somehow return.
The turbulent days of July and August 2024 remain one of the most painful chapters in Bangladesh’s history. The streets echoed not only with slogans but also with gunfire, the wail of ambulance sirens, the cries of anxious relatives rushing through hospital corridors, and the sight of lifeless young bodies whose dreams were never given the chance to be fulfilled.
It is this bloodstained chapter that has once again returned to public discussion following a legal letter submitted on behalf of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. In the letter sent to the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, London-based barrister Steven Powles KC questioned the death toll cited in the UN investigative report. He argued that the reported figure of approximately 1,400 deaths does not align with the information compiled by the Government of Bangladesh and therefore warrants a fresh investigation.
Yet amid this debate over numbers, the human story seems to be fading away.
The United Nations says that approximately 1,400 lives were lost.
The Government of Bangladesh’s verified draft list contains 858 names.
The two figures are different.
But the real question is this: what difference do 858 and 1,400 make to a mother whose child never returned home?
Which number is correct to the wife who spends her nights clutching her husband’s bloodstained shirt?
Does the language of statistics carry any meaning to the child who stands beside his father’s grave and weeps on Eid day?
There may be debates about numbers.
There may be disagreements about investigations.
But there is no disagreement among the graves.
The soil of a grave never lies.
Nor does the blood spilled on the streets understand the politics of numbers.
Those who lost their lives that day were never mere statistics. They were someone’s son, someone’s father, someone’s brother, someone’s dream. One may have aspired to become a doctor, another an engineer, and another a teacher. But the sound of gunfire silenced their futures before their time.
Today, as the death toll remains the subject of international debate, the air of Bangladesh seems once again filled with the cries heard in hospital wards, the sighs from morgues, and the silent lamentations of graveyards.
Some critics argue that while the letter challenges the figures, it does not entirely deny the gravity of the events themselves. Supporters, on the other hand, insist that it merely seeks factual correction. Yet perhaps people on both sides of the debate can agree on one thing:
Human life is never just a number.
Whether 858 people died or 1,400, every death represents the loss of an entire world.
With every body buried, a family’s laughter was buried as well.
Beneath every grave lies an unfinished story.
One day, the court of history may reveal all the facts. There may be investigation after investigation. The discrepancies in the numbers may eventually be resolved. But can any commission truly judge the heart of a mother who still keeps her child’s bloodstained shirt carefully folded in her wardrobe?
As evening falls, somewhere in a village in Bangladesh, a mother may still look toward the sky and whisper, “If only my son could come back one more time…”
Before such a cry, the figures 858 and 1,400 seem equally insignificant.
For the greatest truth of history is this:
The accounting of blood can be written on paper, but the pain of bloodshed can never truly be written.
Debates over numbers may continue, but a mother’s tears have no number.