Taslima Nasrin Wiki, Age, Boyfriend, Husband, Children, Family, Biography & More

Taslima Nasreen

Taslima Nasrin is a Bangladeshi-Swedish author, secular humanist, feminist, and physician who wrote many controversial novels, columns, and books on Islam, which many Muslims felt disgraced Islam religion and was discarded by Bangladesh and Indian West Bengal Governments. Nasrin acknowledged herself as a secular humanist and activist. Her compositions and write-ups are often related to that of Sir Salman Rushdie (an Indian-born British American novelist and essayist) for contentious intensions. Taslima, in her writings and compositions, bends towards supporting religious segregation and criticism, suppression of women, and forced exile. some of her controversial books are banned in India and Bangladesh owing to rigorous religious remarks.

Contents

Wiki/Biography

Taslima Nasrin was born on Saturday, 25 August 1962 (age 59 years; as of 2021) in Mymensingh, East Pakistan (now Bangladesh). [1]citation Her zodiac sign is Virgo. She completed high school studies in 1976 (SSC) and higher secondary studies in college (HSC) in 1978. She studied medicine at the Mymensingh Medical College, an affiliated medical college of the University of Dhaka. She graduated in 1984 with an MBBS degree. She became a doctor after completing her studies as a physician and worked in a clinic, established by her family in Mymensingh, Bangladesh. In 1990, she received the opportunity to work at a government clinic in Dhaka, Bangladesh. She practiced at the gynecology department of Mitford hospital and at the anesthesia department of Dhaka Medical College and Hospital, Bangladesh. However, in 1993, she left the national medical service.

Physical Appearance

Hair Colour: Black

Eye Colour: Black

Family

Parents & Siblings

Taslima’s father, Dr. Rajab Ali was a physician, and a professor of Medical Jurisprudence in Mymensingh Medical College and at Sir Salimullah Medical College, Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Talisma Nasrin with her family

Talisma Nasrin with her family

Mother– Edul Ara

Yasmin (sister of Taslima), Mother of Taslima (in center), Taslima (on extreme right)

Yasmin (sister of Taslima), Mother of Taslima (in center), Taslima (on extreme right)

Young Taslima Nasrin (on the extreme left) with her mother and siblings

Young Taslima Nasrin (on the extreme left) with her mother and siblings

Husband & Children

Taslima Nasrin was married thrice. Her first husband’s name was Rudra Mohammad Shahidullah and he is a Bangladeshi poet. She was married to him in 1982 and got divorced in 1986.

Taslima Nasrin with her 1st husband, Rudra Mohammad Shahidullah

Taslima Nasrin with her 1st husband, Rudra Mohammad Shahidullah

Taslima was married to Nayeemul Islam Khan in 1990 and get divorced in 1991. Nayeemul Islam Khan is a media personality in Bangladesh who has been active in Bangladeshi journalism since 1982.

Taslima's 2nd husband, Nayeemul Islam Khan

Taslima’s 2nd husband, Nayeemul Islam Khan

Minar Mahmud was Taslima’s third husband with whom she got married in 1991 but divorced him in 1992.

Taslima's 3rd husband, Mina Mahmud

Taslima’s 3rd husband, Mina Mahmud

Religion

Atheist [2]The Hindu

Nationality

Bangladeshi, Swedish, Indian

Signature

Signature of Taslima Nasrin on her passport

Signature of Taslima Nasrin on her passport

Career

Member

Taslima Nasrin is a member of ‘Reporters Without Borders (RWB)’ (an international non-profit and non-governmental organization) and a member of the Emeritus Board.

Movements

The movements Nasrin is often seen involved in are basically related to the influential issues of eugenics, women’s equality, human rights, freedom of speech, atheist, scientism, and tolerance.

Literary works

At college in Mymensingh, Nasrin published and edited a literary magazine, Senjuti (“Light in the dark”), from 1978 to 1983. She published her first collection of poems in 1986. Her second collection, Nirbashito Bahire Ontore (“Banished within and without”) was published in 1989. Nasrin succeeded in attracting a wider readership when she started writing columns in the late 1980s, and, in the early 1990s. She cites Virginia Woolf and Simone de Beauvoir as influences, and, pushed to think of one closer to home, Begum Rokeya. In all, she has written more than thirty books of poetry, essays, novels, short stories, and memoirs, and her books have been translated into 20 different languages.

Columns and essays

In 1989, Nasrin began to contribute to the weekly political magazine Khaborer Kagoj, edited by Nayeemul Islam Khan, and published from Dhaka, Bangladesh. She wrote columns in a volume titled Nirbachita Column, which in 1992 won her first Ananda Purashkar award, a prestigious award for Bengali writers. She contributed a weekly essay to the Bengali version of The Statesman, called Dainik Statesman. Taslima has always advocated for an Indian Uniform civil code and said that criticism of Islam is the only way to establish secularism in Islamic countries. Taslima said that Triple talaq is despicable and the All India Muslim Personal Law Board should be abolished. Taslima used to write articles for the online media venture ‘The Print in India.’

Novels

Taslima highlighted her career at the beginning of the 1990s by writing essays, columns, and novels on feminism; however, she was brutally criticized when she mentioned this feminism as a preconception against women.

Taslima’s successful and famed novel Lajja (Shame) was published in 1993 (In six months’ time, it sold 50,000 copies in Bangladesh before being banned by the government that same year and it attracted wide attention because of its controversial subject matter). Her other famous novel is French Lover, published in the year 2002.

Autobiographies

Amar Meyebela (My Girlhood), the first volume of Nasrin’s memoir, was banned by the Bangladeshi government in 1999 for “reckless comments” against Islam and the prophet Mohammad. Utal Hawa (Wild Wind), the second part of her memoir, was banned by the Bangladesh government in 2002. In 2003, Ka (Speak up), the third part of her memoir, was banned by the Bangladeshi High Court. The book, which was published in West Bengal as Dwikhandita, was banned by the government of West Bengal, India. Sei Sob Ondhokar (Those Dark Days), the fourth part of her memoir, was banned by the Bangladesh government in 2004. A total of seven parts of her autobiography have been published so far including “Ami bhalo nei tumi bhalo theko priyo desh”, “Nei kichu nei” and “Nirbashito.”
In 2000, Nasrin received her second Ananda Purashkar award, for her memoir Amar Meyebela (My Girlhood, published in English in 2002).

Poetries

1982- Shikore Bipul Khudha (Hunger in the Roots)

1989- Nirbashito Bahire Ontore (Banished Without and Within)

1990- Amar Kichu Jay Ashe Ne (I Couldn’t Care Less)

1991- Atole Ontorin (Captive in the Abyss)

1992- Balikar Gollachut (Game of the Girls)

1993- Behula Eka Bhashiyechilo Bhela (Behula Floated the Raft Alone)

1996- Ay Kosto Jhepe, Jibon Debo Mepe (Pain Come Roaring Down, I’ll Measure Out My Life for You)

1996- Nirbashito Narir Kobita (Poems From Exile)

2000- Jolpodyo (Waterlilies)

2004- Khali Khali Lage (Feeling Empty)

2005- Kicchukhan Thako (Stay for a While)

2007- Bhalobaso? Cchai baso (It’s your love! or a heap of trash!)

2008- Bondini (Prisoner)

2018- Golpo(stories)

Nasrin’s works in adaptation

In order to applaud the initiatives taken by Nasrin for raising her voice for women and human rights all over the world, the Swedish singer Magoria sang the “Goddess in you, Taslima” song for her. The French band Zebda composed “Don’t worry, Taslima” as an homage to her. Jhumur was a 2006 TV serial based on a story written especially for the show by Taslima Nasrin. Bengali singers like Fakir Alamgir, Samina Nabi, Rakhi Sen sang her songs to support and back her spirit. Steve Lacy, the jazz soprano saxophonist, met Nasrin in 1996 and collaborated with her on an adaptation of her poetry to music, and a “controversial” and “compelling” work called ‘The Cry,’ was performed in Europe and North America by Steve lacy.

Life amid eviction

Since 1994, Taslima Nasrin has been living in eviction. For more than a decade, she lived in  Sweden, Germany, France, and the United States and moved to India in 2004. Nasrin waited for six years from 1994 to 1999 to get an Indian visa. During her stay in India, Nasrin was assaulted by her opposers when she went to Hyderabad to deliver a speech on the Telugu translation of one of her novels, Shodh. This protest was led by legislators from the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (an Indian Muslim political party) and consequently, she was forced to live under house arrest in Kolkata. In Hyderabad, Taslima was attacked by three MLAs and party members named- Mohammed Muqtada Khan, Mohammed Moazzam Khan, and Syed Ahmed Pasha Quadri, when she released her book that was translated from her Telugu writings.

In November 2007, she was forced to leave West Bengal Kolkata, when the state witnessed a violent protest against Nasrin by Muslims. This protest was organized by the militant Islamist “All India Minority Forum” which caused chaos in the city. The Local government of West Bengal deployed  Indian Army personnel to restore order and Nasrin was compelled to live under house arrest for 3 months in Delhi by the government of India.

Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasrin when escorted out of the press club by the Indian Police after she was manhandled by angry Muslim protesters in Hyderabad, India, Thursday, Aug 9, 2007

Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasrin when escorted out of the press club by the Indian Police after she was manhandled by angry Muslim protesters in Hyderabad, India, Thursday, Aug 9, 2007

On 21 November 2007, she moved to Jaipur and to New Delhi the following day. However, in 2008, when she had no other alternative left, she was finally deported from India.

After these riots, Nasrin said to the media reporters that she was observing everything that the shops and hospitals were broken down by a mad crowd. She explained,

I was seeing and observing everything. Hindus were being targeted. Their shops were being broken down by mad crowds of people and so many Hindu patients were in hospitals telling their horror stories. I visited many places to see what was happening. I gave shelter to some of the Hindus. I just thought that nobody should be oppressed or tortured because of some buildings being destroyed. It was not the fault of Bangladeshi Hindus.”

Muslims in Kolkata demonstrate, demanding the deportation of the Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen

Muslims in Kolkata demonstrate, demanding the deportation of the Bangladeshi author Taslima Nasreen

During this tense situation in 2007, Nasrin was supported and defended by Mahasweta Devi (an Indian writer and activist). Theatre director Bibhas Chakrabarty, poet Joy Goswami, artist Prakash Karmakar, and Paritosh Sen (a leading Indian artist) also supported Talisma for her writings. Kabir Chowdhury, a Bangladeshi writer-philosopher, supported her with great power.

Taslima while kept under house arrest in New Delhi

Taslima while kept under house arrest in New Delhi

In 2006, Nasrin bore the brunt of the Indian religious fundamentalists, when she criticized the religion Islam in her writings. Syed Mohammad Noor ur Rahman Barkati, the imam of Kolkata’s Tipu Sultan Mosque, offered money to anyone from the general public who would “blacken” Ms. Nasrin’s face. In 2007, her writings put her in the worst of these bad circumstances when the president of “All India Muslim Personal Board (Jadeed),” Tauqueer Raza Khan offered 5 Lakh rupees for Nasrin’s beheading. although, later on, he announced publically that this reward would be uplifted if Nasrin would apologize to the Muslim community and burns her books and writings.

In 2007, in an interview, Nasrin said that she was forced to flee from Bangladesh, therefore she called Kolkata, India her home. She was allowed to live in India on a periodic basis by the government of India as the Indian government refused to grant her permanent citizenship. During her stay in India after 2007, Nasrin regularly wrote for Indian newspapers and renowned magazines including ‘Anandbazar Patrika’ and ‘Desh.’ She came up with many column writings for the Bengali version of ‘The Statesman.’

In 2007, in India, when Nasrin was under house arrest in Delhi, renowned and prominent writers Arundhati Roy and Girish Karnad defended Nasrin and appealed to the Indian Government through a written and signed letter to provide Nasrin permanent residency and citizenship in India.

Nasrin now lives in New Delhi, India on a long-term residence permit, multiple-entry, or ‘X’ visa as she has been unable to return either to her adopted home in West Bengal to her home in Bangladesh.

Controversial Novel “Lajja”

In 1993, Taslima Nasrin published and released her novel ‘Lajja’ globally and the controversial statements in the book disturbed her life to a large extent. Lajja, translated as ‘Shame,’ was a written protest against the violence on women and the emerging fights between different religious sections of Bangladesh. Lajja focussed and raised the incidence of the slaughter of Hindus, following the demolition of Babri Masjid in India. It stressed the split and partition of religious, social, and economic lines in Bangladeshi society as a whole. Many protests, unrest situations, and violent campaigns were driven against her in Bangladesh and in India. Severe section violence between the Hindus and Muslim communities of India and Bangladesh prevailed the tense situations in the countries.

In 1997, Lajja was published in English as “Shame.” In its narration, Taslima described the fate and destiny of a small Hindu community family in Nasrin’s country. This novel angered the Muslim community leaders in India and Bangladesh. The anger in Muslims was so severe that it led to declare a ‘fatwa’ against Taslima Nasrin that would offer thousands of dollars to anyone who would kill Nasrin for writing such a novel against Islamic rules. According to Muslim Fundamentals, the book plots the conspiracy against the Muslim community and the Bengali government booked her for committing a sin to say and write against Koran.

Novel “Shodh”

Marathi author Ashok Shahane translated ‘Shodh’ a novel written by Nasrin. This translated book was called ‘Phitam Phat.’ In 2000, after the publication of the novel Shodh, Nasrin promoted the book in Mumbai, India. Some secular atheist groups in India celebrated the inauguration of this book and called it freedom of expression whereas the fundamental groups threatened to burn her alive.

Novel “Ka”

Nasrin was condemned by various writers and intellectuals in both Bangladesh and West Bengal for targeted scandalization. In 2013, Syed Shamsul Haq, the Bangladeshi poet-novelist filed a defamation case against Nasrin for “obnoxious, false and ludicrous” comments in Ka (a novel written by Taslima) in Bangladesh High Court. He stated that this novel was written with the intention to harm his reputation. In this novel, Nasrin mentioned that Syed revealed to Nasrin that he had a relationship with his sister-in-law.

The book ‘Dwikhondito’

A book that raised controversy in Kolkata and created riots issues in the state in 2003.

In 2003, in West Bengal High Court, Hasmat Jalal, a West Bengali poet, filed a case against Nasrin to ban the book ‘Dwikhondito,’ and in defamation, he demanded 4 million dollars from Nasrin. To ban this book, West Bengal High Court and Government were continuously pressured by 24 literary intellectuals of India. Nasrin while giving her clarification, said that she wrote about the people who were known to her and defended herself against all allegations and blames. She denied the rumors that she wrote the book merely for publicity and fame. She said that she wrote to reveal her sexual activities in the book and it is her life story narrated in the book, not others.’ Annada Shankar Ray, Sibnarayan Ray, and Amlan Dutta, the renowned Bengali writers and intellectuals, supported Nasrin on this controversy.

In 2008, in an email interview, while Nasrin was house arrest in New Delhi, she replied to the answers and said that she was under heavy stress and was living in loneliness, uncertainty, and deathly silence. Under pressure, Nasrin deleted some paragraphs from ‘Dwikhandito.’ She canceled the sixth edition of her autobiography ‘Nei Kichu Nei’ (“No Entity”).

Memoir ‘My Girlhood’

In the memoir ‘My Girlhood,’ Taslima Nasrin narrated the story that what happened when her brother married a Hindu woman. This book included the real-life events and situations faced by Nasrin from her birth to the dawn of womanhood at the age of fourteen. This book featured the scenes of the rise of religious fundamentalism in Bangladesh, the violence she faced in childhood, the trauma she went through because of molestation she faced in girlhood, the memories of her pious mother that redefined and changed her world.

The book ‘Nirbasan’

In 2014, Nasrin’s book ‘Nirbasan’ was canceled at the Fair and it happened after a year of its launch. However, Nasrin feels nothing much had changed in West Bengal and she had no hope of returning to Kolkata. She stated in an interview that she had tweeted to announce it publically to buy this book who wanted to buy it as the Kolkata government would ban it and her freedom of expression would be buried. She said,

The situation in West Bengal is exactly like Bangladesh. Bengal government has also made me a persona non grata as they are not allowing me to enter, banning my books besides the TV drama series scripted by me. They are not allowing me to participate in the ongoing Kolkata Book Fair. It happened during the CPM regime and I thought the situation would change when Mamata Banerjee comes to power but that did not happen.”

She further commented that,

I am so apprehensive about it that I tweeted that those who want to buy it, buy early. They are banning my books or release of my books which is the real death of a writer. They have done it in 2012 and can again do it. If it continues like this, then Bengal will be like another Bangladesh or Pakistan where there is almost no freedom of expression for those who have different opinions.”

She concluded her statement and said,

It is strange that I have been writing on women’s issues for the last three decades but three women (Sheikh) Hasina, Khalida (Zia), and Mamata (Banerjee) have made my life difficult. There is no hope for Bangladesh. And I miss Kolkata because culturally I connect with the city. But I have now given up all hopes of returning to the city.”

An anti-war poem titled ‘America’

In 2005, Nasrin was blown out of the stage when she read an anti-war poem titled ‘America’ in front of a large Bengali crowd in New York City at Madison Square Garden.

Controversies

  • Taslima Nasreen had landed in controversy several times in the past. One of the main reasons would be her comments on religion. The other is about her sexual life. Taslima was married thrice. Her first marriage was in the 1980s and the next two marriages were between 1990 and 1992. There are a lot of controversies regarding her sexual partners and her sexual relations outside marriage were never hidden. Reportedly, Taslima Nasreen had a relationship with George Baker who belongs to a Greek family in Assam, India. Baker worked in several Bengali and Hindi films along with theatre and television in India. In 2014, Baker joined Indian politics and fought from the Howrah constituency in West Bengal, but was defeated by the rivals. After getting permission from the then President of India, he became a member of the Lok Sabha as an Anglo-Indian. In October 2019, Ankita Bhattacharya, daughter of George, who is a resident of Burdwan’s Narayanpur village under the Bhatar police station claimed that Talisma Nasrin is her mother. She revealed her childhood photographs with Taslima Nasrin as proof and the related information about her birth.

  • On 14th April 2021, Taslima created controversy all around the world by posting about England cricketer Moeen Ali on her Twitter account. She Commented on the cricketer Moeen Ali and wrote that if Moeen Ali were not stuck with cricket, he would have gone to Syria to join ISIS. After some time, Moeen’s England teammates and cricketers re-tweeted Taslima’s tweet and in one of the comments, the cricketer Jofra Archer took the side of Moeen and wrote, “Are you okay? I don’t think you’re okay. Sarcastic? No one is laughing, not even yourself, the least you can do is delete the tweet.” Lancashire and England fast bowler Saqib Mahmood penned, “Can’t believe this. Disgusting tweet. Disgusting individual.”
Taslima Nasrin's tweet on Cricketer Moeen Ali in 2021

Taslima Nasrin’s tweet on Cricketer Moeen Ali in 2021

Awards, Honours, Achievements

  • Ananda Award or Ananda Puraskar from West Bengal, India in 1992 and in 2000 for “Nirbachita Kolam” and “Amar Meyebela”
  • Sakharov Prize for freedom of thoughts from European Parliament, in 1994
  • Simone de Beauvoir Prize in 2008
  • Human Rights Award from the Government of France, 1994
  •  Edict of Nantes Prize from France, 1994
  • Kurt Tucholsky Prize, Swedish PEN, Sweden, 1994
  • Feminist of the Year from Feminist Majority Foundation, US, 1994
  • Scholarship from the German Academic Exchange Service, Germany, 1995
  • Distinguished Humanist Award from International Humanist and Ethical Union, Great Britain, 1996
  • Erwin Fischer Award, International League of non-religious and atheists (IBKA), Germany, 2002
  • Freethought Heroine Award, Freedom From Religion Foundation, US, 2002
  • Fellowship at Carr Centre for Human Rights Policy, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, US, 2003
  • UNESCO-Madanjeet Singh Prize for the promotion of tolerance and non-violence, 2004
  • Honorary doctorate from American University of Paris, 2005
  • Grand Prix International Condorcet-Aron, 2005
  • Woodrow Wilson Fellowship, US, 2009
  • Feminist Press award, US, 2009
  • Honorary doctorate from Universite Catholique de Louvain, Belgium, 2011
  • Honorary citizenship from Esch, Luxembourg, 2011
  • Honorary citizenship from Metz, France, 2011
  • Honorary citizenship from Thionville, France, 2011
  • Honorary doctorate from Paris Diderot University, Paris, France, 2011
  • Universal Citizenship Passport. From Paris, France, 2013
  • Academy Award from the Royal Academy of Arts, Science and Literature, Belgium, 2013
  • Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society, 2012

Favorite Things

  • Food: Fish, ‘muri’ (puffed rice), and ‘mishti’ (sweets)
  • Game: Chess & cricket
  • Cricketer: Shakib Al Hasan
  • Poet: Rabindranath Tagore
  • Singer: Britney Spears & Michael Jackson
  • Destination: The United States, Coxbazar(Bangladesh), and India
  • Perfume: JAR Bolt of Lightning
  • Colour: Black, White, Red
  • Author: Humayun Ahmed
  • Painter: Zainul Abedin
  • Book: Da Vinci Code

Facts/Trivia

  •  Nasrin was born into a Muslim family; however, she became an atheist over time.
  • A poetry journal called Shenjuti was written and edited by Nasrin while studying at college in Dhaka, Bangladesh. She took a feminist approach in the course of writing the columns and journals. She inclined towards feminism when she saw girls around her in the hospital, who had been raped and she heard the crying voices of the women who delivered baby girls in the operation theaters of the hospital.
  • In 1994, Nasrin lived in Paris during her eviction period and met French President Francois Mitterrand. He said that he respected her work.

  • Nasrin wrote Meyebela, My Bengali Girlhood, her biographical account from birth to adolescence in 1998.
  • According to Nasrin, ‘her soul lived in India.’ In 2005, Nasrin pledged her body to India and awarded it for posthumous medical use to a Kolkata-based NGO, Gana Darpan.
  • In 2006, reportedly, Nasrin received a one-year extension on her Indian visa; however, Nasrin is also seeking permanent residency in India but no decision has been taken on it by the Home Ministry of India.
  • In January 2008, Nasrin was selected to receive the Simone de Beauvoir award for her writings on women’s rights; however, she denied going to Paris to receive the award. The reason to deny the award was explained by her in an interview. She said she wanted to fight for her rights and freedom while living in India and she further stated that she did not want to leave India. Later on, Nasrin was hospitalized for three days due to various body complaints.
  • In 2008, the house arrest of Nasrin at New Delhi came to international knowledge immediately and India’s former foreign secretary Muchkund Dubey, in a written letter appealed to Amnesty International (A London-based human rights organization) to pressure the government of India to return Nasrin safely to Kolkata.
  • In 2008, India’s former foreign secretary Muchkund Dubey wrote a letter to Amnesty International (a London-based human rights organization) and appealed to pressurize the Indian government to return Nasrin safely to Kolkata.
  • In 2008, during her house arrest in New Delhi, Nasrin said that she was writing a lot but not about Islam. She said,

    I’m writing a lot, but not about Islam, It’s not my subject now. This is about politics. In the last three months, I have been put under severe pressure to leave [West] Bengal by the police.”

    Muslims burn an effigy of author Taslima Nasrin during protests in Kolkata in 2008

    Muslims burn an effigy of author Taslima Nasrin during protests in Kolkata in 2008

  • In 2008, Nasrin worked as a research scholar at New York University.
  • In an interview in 2012, Nasrin said that Islam was not compatible with women’s rights, human rights, secularism, and democracy. She added that the Muslims and all Muslim fundamentalists all around the world hate her. She stated that the Muslim fundamentals did not like that she was fighting for women’s rights all over the world.
  • In 2012, Taslima Nasrin actively participated in the protest against violence against women during the Nirbhaya Delhi Gang rape case.
    Taslima at Delhi protest in 2012 (Nirbhaya Gang Rape case)

    Taslima at Delhi protest in 2012 (Nirbhaya Gang Rape case)

  • In an interview in 2012, Nasrin said that Islam was not compatible with women’s rights, human rights, secularism, and democracy. She added that the Muslims and all Muslim fundamentalists all around the world hate her. She stated that the Muslim fundamentals did not like that she was fighting for women’s rights all over the world.
  • In an interview in 2012, Nasrin said that the Muslims and all Muslim fundamentalists all around the world hate her. She stated that Islam was not compatible with women’s and human rights, secularism, and democracy.

  • In 2014, in an interview with a newspaper in India, Nasrin said that there should be an ‘Aam Aurat Party’ to fight for women-related issues and which would work for the upliftment of women globally. She said,

    It will be good if Aam Aadmi Party can bring changes but I think there should be an Aam Aurat Party also to fight against issues like rape, domestic violence, hatred against women and men can also be a part of it.”

  • In 2014, while talking to a media person in an interview, Nasrin said feels she was a victim of vote bank politics in India. She narrated,

    Fundamentalists are after me but the West Bengal government did not support me either. They did all this to woo Muslim voters. This vote bank politics is not good for a society or country. There should be healthy democracy.”

  • In 2015, Al Qaeda linked extremists, threatened Nasrin with death. She fleed to the US where the Center for Inquiry (a US nonprofit organization) assisted her in traveling on 27 May 2015. The Center for Inquiry (CFI) officially declared that this assistance was temporary and if Nasrin could not reside in the U.S. in the future, they would provide her food, housing, and safety, wherever she would live.

  • In 2015, Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasrin said in a newspaper interview that she lived in exile in India and she would not be silenced by fundamentalists. She further stated that she would continue to fight against fundamentalists and to protest against them as a woman and she would raise her voice against all other evil forces until her death. She said,

    I think fundamentalists may want to kill me, but I want to protest against them. If I stop writing, it means they will win and I will be defeated. I don’t want to do that. I won’t be silenced. I will continue to fight against fundamentalists, evil forces until my death.”

    Taslima while speaking to the news reporters in 2015

    Taslima while speaking to the news reporters in 2015

  • On 8 July 2016, Tariq Bukhari, General Secretary of the Muslim Majlis-e-Amal organization denied a debate on NDTV with Taslima Nasrin. Tariq walked out and refused to share the podium with exiled Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasrin on the show ‘The Big Fight’ on NDTV (an Indian News channel). The exiled Bangladeshi writer had to face the ire of clergies and had also received threats from religious rights fundamentalists in India.

  • Taslima often shares pictures of her young age, when she was in Dhaka, on her social media accounts.
    Taslima ( on extreme right) at a birthday event in Dhaka

    Taslima ( on extreme right) at a birthday event in Dhaka

  • Taslima is an animal lover. She loves her pet cat and often posts pictures of the cat on her social media account.
    Taslima with her pet cat

    Taslima with her pet cat

  • In 2017, Taslima gave an interview to an Indian News channel and said that women should fight for their rights and she was always standing against the cruelty of patriarchy and the triple talaq system in the Muslim religion.

  • On 11 October 2018, in an exclusive interview with Indian News Channel, famous Bangladeshi-Swedish author Taslima Nasreen revealed her life incidents and experiences of sexual harassment and misconduct during her teenage. She was seen supporting the Me Too Movement in India.

  • On 9th July 2019, Taslima Nasrin shared her excitement on her Twitter handle and wrote that she completed 25 years of exile life.
    Taslima Nasrin celebrates completing 25 years of living in exile abroad in 2019

    Taslima Nasrin celebrates completing 25 years of living in exile abroad in 2019

  • In 2020, on the demise of Late Shushant Singh Rajput (an Indian actor), Nasrin claimed nepotism was not the reason behind the suicide of Shushant and he should not have discontinued prescribed medicines for his clinical depression and she wrote on her Twitter account,

    I don’t think nepotism was the reason for Sushant’s suicide. He was a talented actor, &  signed many movies. He should not have discontinued prescribed medicines for his clinical depression.”

    Taslima Nasrin’s tweet on Shushant Singh Rajput’s suicide case in 2020

    Taslima Nasrin’s tweet on Shushant Singh Rajput’s suicide case in 2020

  • In May 2021, Taslima caught COVID-19 disease and posted it on Twitter. She said,

    Misfortune had always found its way with me. If I start listing everything that has happened with me, all those things which weren’t supposed to, then the list would be so long no one would find an end to it! For now, let Covid-19 be the only tragedy.”

    Taslima’s twitter post when she caught COVID-19 during pandemic outburst

    Taslima’s twitter post when she caught COVID-19 during pandemic outburst

  • Taslima’s new book ‘Ekala Book’ was released in Hindi, on 25 January 2021. She announced this news on her social media account.
    Taslima’s new ‘Ekala Chalo’ book in Hindi published on 27 January 2021

    Taslima’s new ‘Ekala Chalo’ book in Hindi published on 27 January 2021

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