A.K. Nazmul Karim
Abul Khair Nazmul Karim (1 August 1922 – 18 November 1982) was a Bangladeshi sociologist and academic.[1] He was posthumously awarded Ekushey Padak for his contribution to education by the government of Bangladesh in 2012.[2] Personal lifeKarim was born in the Noakhali/Comilla area, now known as Lakshmipur. His parental residence was at Falgoonkora village in the Comilla District. He was the seventh of eight children of Abu Rashid Nizamuddin Mahmood Ahmed and Mossammat Shamsun Neda Khatun. He came from an educated family of school inspectors, private tutors, diwans, and magistrates. His mother came from a zamindari family. Karim was married to Syeda Jahanara Begum, former principal of Begum Badrunnesa Government Girls' College. They had three daughters - Yasmin Hagen, Nasreen Karim and Lamia Karim.[3] Lamia became a professor and the head of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Oregon.[3] Karim died on 18 November 1982 from complications brought on by diabetes. EducationKarim passed his Entrance examination in 1939 in First Division from Thakurgaon High, English School. Later in 1941, he passed IA (Intermediate in Arts) Examination again in First Division from Dhaka College.[citation needed] Karim graduated from University of Dhaka in 1944 with a B.A. (Hons), and an M.A. in 1946 with distinction in political science. He won the East Pakistan State Scholarship, which enabled him to go to the United States for higher studies. He studied simultaneously "Government" and "Sociology", and earned a master's degree separately in both disciplines from Columbia University in 1953. He studied under Herbert Marcuse, Seymour Lipset, Ajit Kumar Sen, Robert Morrison MacIver, C. Wright Mills, Debendro Nath Banerjee, Morris Ginsberg, Raymond Firth and others. He believed in the Aristotelian philosophy that a teacher should always be available, so his students were welcomed in his office, as well as, in his home. For his scholarly performance, he won a Rockefeller Scholarship to go to the London School of Economics & Political Science, where he was awarded a doctoral degree in sociology under the supervision of Professor T. B. Bottomore in 1964.[1] His thesis' title was, "The Modern Muslim Political Elite in Bengal" which was later published in extended version under the title, "The Dynamics of Bangladesh Society" by Vikas Publishing House Private Ltd. in 1980.[citation needed] CareerKarim's earliest teaching experience was as a lecturer at Feni College and Dhaka College. Later, he became professor of both the Political Science and Sociology Departments at Dhaka University. He was the founder and chairman of the Sociology Department at University of Dhaka. He authored articles, books, and short stories, sometimes under the pen name of Ibn Rashid. Throughout his life he encouraged learning, patronized the arts and the anthropological study of Bengal and belonged to many civic, cultural, and anthropological societies.[citation needed] LegacyKarim was nominated for the Ramon Magsaysay Award in 1983. The Nazmul Karim Study Centre at the University of Dhaka is named after him. In February 2012, he was posthumously awarded Ekushey Padak. His family has set up two scholarship funds at Dhaka University. Since 1983, Dr. Nazmul Karim Memorial Gold Medal has been awarded to the student who stood First Class, First, in M.A. in sociology. From 2014, two scholarships were set up in his wife's name, Principal, Mrs. Syeda Jahanara Karim Scholarships for disadvantaged female students, one in economics and one in anthropology, at the University of Dhaka.[citation needed] Publications
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