The Centre for Heritage Education Bangladesh

The Centre for Heritage Education Bangladesh CHEB was established in 2014 with motto of an independent, non-profit, non-governmental, non-political, secular, research and education-based organization

The aim and objectives of the Centre shall be as follows:
a) To conduct research in Archaeology, Museum Studies, Cultural Heritage and Education. b) To conduct Archaeological Exploration and Excavation. (Archaeological exploration refers to identifying and locating archaeological sites and collecting more data about known sites. Archaeological excavation covers methodological digging in the sites

to uncover buried culture in its preview)
c) To document archaeological sites and monuments (Most of the archaeological sites and monument are not well documented. Documentation work will be done systematically)
d) To document and research Ethnography, Indigenous knowledge, Education, Folklore, Traditional and cultural life-ways, Games, Rural and urban life, Technologies etc. e) To develop a community based Museum approach at different locations in Bangladesh and help museums to develop public education programs. f) To develop and propose an Art Education curriculum for all grade levels using our culture and heritage sites as centers of learning for the local community and for students throughout Bangladesh. g) To undertake research on social and cultural issues of the country
h) To develop cooperation and collaboration with different organization working with education, culture and heritage. i) To undertake seminar symposium and publication on Archaeology, Museum, Heritage, culture and Education related issues. j) To fight against the illicit traffic of cultural properties in close collaboration with national and International agencies and work for the repatriation of cultural property that has illegally left the country. k) To develop and initiate public archaeology to protect and preserve our culture and heritage including developing a curriculum for the public schools that includes the great diversity of Bangladesh’s cultural heritage.

SAARC Heritage Forum 2025, Colombo, Sri LankaThe SAARC Cultural Centre Colombo, with the support of the Government of Sr...
18/09/2025

SAARC Heritage Forum 2025, Colombo, Sri Lanka

The SAARC Cultural Centre Colombo, with the support of the Government of Sri Lanka, will host the inaugural Annual SAARC Cultural Heritage Forum on 30 September 2025, marking a significant step toward institutionalizing regional cooperation in cultural heritage. The programme will be held from 30 September to 2nd October. Delegates from the SARRC member states will participate in this iconic program of the SAARC Cultural Centre. The Honorable Prime Minister of Sri Lanka kindly accepted the invitation to inaugurate the programme.
The Forum responds to long-standing commitments made by SAARC Heads of State at the 18th summit, in alignment with the SAARC Agenda for Culture adopted at the 14th SAARC Summit in New Delhi (2007). These directives call for the preservation and restitution of South Asian cultural property, the creation of a SAARC Heritage List, and the development of cultural trails, linking significant Buddhist historical sites across the region and modalities of its implementation. Framework to facilitate access to sacred sites of major religions of the region—Islam, Hinduism, Christianity, and other religions.
The SAARC region boasts some of the world’s most iconic tangible heritage: sacred Buddhist stupas, characteristic Hindu shrines, magnificent mosques, Mughal gardens, cultural landscapes, human-made reservoirs, and sacred sites representing many religious traditions. The Forum will collectively recognize and promote these treasures for regional and global appreciation.
As the birthplace of the Lord Buddha, South Asia holds profound spiritual significance for millions. Buddhism has spread across many SAARC member countries, leaving behind a legacy of enduring monuments and pilgrimage sites. The Forum will identify and map these sites to develop transnational cultural trails that support both tourism and spiritual journeys.
Key objectives of the inaugural Forum include formalizing the structure of the Annual Forum, launching the SAARC Heritage List, advancing the proposal for a SAARC Year of Cultural Heritage, and developing frameworks for access and shared experiences, including Buddhist pilgrimage routes and other religious sites
For further information, please contact:
Programme Division
SAARC Cultural Centre, Colombo, Sri Lanka

1. Background SAARC Regional Seminar on Intangible Cultural Heritage for Food Storage in the SAARC Region was approved by the Fourteenth Meeting of the Governing Board of the SAARC Cultural Centre held from 22nd to 23rd October 2024, and at the Sixtieth Session of the Programming Committee Meeting h...

May the Goddess Lakshmi bestow you and your family with the wealth of good health, happiness, love, and compassion for a...
31/10/2024

May the Goddess Lakshmi bestow you and your family with the wealth of good health, happiness, love, and compassion for all living creatures great and small.

Wishing all my Hindu friends a beautiful Durga Puja with family and friends.
12/10/2024

Wishing all my Hindu friends a beautiful Durga Puja with family and friends.

23/09/2024

An extraordinary example of religious tolerance.

"Albania plans to establish a sovereign Muslim microstate within its borders run by a Sufi sect known for promoting "religious harmony and dialogue", Prime Minister Edi Rama announced.

The tiny Vatican-like enclave within Albania's capital Tirana will serve as the political home for Bektashi Muslims -- the fourth largest religious community in Albania after Sunni Muslims, Orthodox Christians and Catholics.

The order was founded in the 13th century in the Ottoman Empire and is regarded as a tolerant, mystic branch of Islam open to other religions and philosophies.

Some of its most important leaders relocated to Albania after being banned in Turkey in the early 20th century by modern Turkey's founding father Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

"Our inspiration is to support the transformation of the Bektashi World Centre in Tirana into a sovereign state, a new centre of moderation, tolerance and peaceful coexistence," Rama said on Sunday at the United Nations in New York.

The Bektashi make up an estimated 10 percent of the country's Muslim population, according to Albania's 2023 census.

The Bektashi Order in Tirana praised the decision.

"The sovereignty of the Bektashi Order is an important step in strengthening the values of inclusion, religious harmony and dialogue in an increasingly divided world," it said in a statement.

Citizenship of the new state of roughly 10 hectares (25 acres) will be limited to members of the clergy and individuals dealing with state administration.

Its government would be headed by the Bektashi's leader and a council that will oversee its religious and administrative functioning, the statement added."

bme/ljv/ds/fg

17/08/2024

Why early childhood drawing and building skills are so important.

Fine motor skills in young children are linked to better GCSE scores and fewer behavioral problems in childhood and adolescence, according to a study from the University of Surrey and Birkbeck, University of London.

The authors of the study, published in Biological Psychiatry, suggest that preschool fine motor skills, including drawing, folding paper and block building, may play an important role in the pathway between infancy and later educational and behavioral outcomes in primary and secondary school.

The study showed that fine motor skills were associated with higher GCSE grades at age 16. Lower fine motor skills during the preschool years were associated with more behavioral problems and more ADHD symptoms during the primary and secondary school years. These links still held when socioeconomic factors, including parent qualifications and employment, were taken into account.
Professor Angelica Ronald of the University of Surrey, the senior author of the study, said, "Activities that fall under fine motor skill development, such as block building and drawing, may often be perceived as simply 'play' by parents, caregivers and education providers."

"But, our study suggests that the development of fine motor skills is part of the pathway that leads to educational outcomes and behavior later on. Parents are sometimes provided with free books for their young children; policymakers should consider supplementing books with blocks or drawing materials."

Related video: From classroom to career: How institutions are adapting to rapid change (India Today)
we do have a little shorter duration,
Current Time 0:05
/
Duration 22:18
India Today
From classroom to career: How institutions are adapting to rapid change
0
View on Watch
View on Watch
The study involved over 9,000 preschool children who were asked to draw, fold paper, and pile up blocks. These skills all require careful manipulation of objects with hands and are referred to as 'fine motor skills.' The children were assessed at ages two, three and four to get a sense of their overall fine motor skills during the preschool period.

The children were then followed up through their childhood and adolescence as part of a longitudinal study, the Twins Early Development Study. The children's GCSE results at age 16 were recorded, as well as their behavior across childhood and adolescence, including traits relating to ADHD.

In a further step, the authors worked with measures of genetic propensity for educational attainment and behavior. These measures of genetic propensity are referred to as polygenic scores. These measures give an indication of a sum of the inherited predisposition for particular traits. Their study reported evidence that the inherited propensity for staying longer in education was associated with better early fine motor skills. The inherited propensity for ADHD was associated with more challenges with preschool fine motor skills.

Aislinn Bowler, the first author of the study, said, "I was surprised by the extent of the results we found. When I set out to do this study, I suspected that early fine motor skills might be important. I was startled to find that fine motor skills have such wide-ranging connections to later outcomes, extending not only into primary school age but into adolescence as well."

The authors are keen to note that further research is needed to ascertain the exact role that fine motor skills play in influencing children's later outcomes. If a causal role was discovered between fine motor skills and later outcomes, it would be important for this to influence public policy and the Government's Early Years Framework to ensure these were evidence-based.

More information: Aislinn Bowler et al, Phenotypic and Genetic Associations Between Preschool Fine Motor Skills and Later Neurodevelopment, Psychopathology, and Educational Achievement, Biological Psychiatry (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2023.11.017

Provided by University of Surrey

This story was originally published on Medical Xpress. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest sci-tech news updates.

09/08/2024

As the new administration takes over in Dhaka, many are wondering whether it will be able to take the country of 170 million people out of what one of the members of the new government called a “dark era”.

“The army chief had promised an interim government, but until it was officially established, uncertainty remained due to widespread speculation,” Saifullah Sajib, an employee at a travel agency in Dhaka, told Al Jazeera as he watched a live telecast of Yunus and his 16-member cabinet take their oaths at the presidential palace.

Why was Yunus picked?
The protests in Bangladesh that began last month were led mainly by tens of thousands of university students opposed to a quota system for government jobs that they alleged favoured those close to Hasina’s Awami League party.

The primarily peaceful demonstrators were attacked by both the security forces as well as supporters of Hasina’s party, resulting in nearly 300 deaths and transforming the protests into a larger call for Hasina to quit.

Hours after she resigned and fled to neighbouring India in a military aircraft, the Students Against Discrimination, an umbrella group of student movements that led the protests, proposed 84-year-old Yunus as the head of an interim government.INTERACTIVE-PROFILE-YUNUS-BANGLADESH_AUG8

Yunus, an economist and banker, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006 for his efforts to bring millions of people out of poverty through microloans. He is also a longtime critic of Hasina and hailed the success of the student-led protests as a “second independence day” for Bangladesh.

“I feel so relieved to see Dr Yunus sworn in as the head of the interim government,” Abdullah Al Mamun, a businessman in the garments industry, told Al Jazeera. “I hope that someone with his credentials will be able to guide the country through this crisis.”

‘Freedom to every home’
After his swearing-in on Thursday, Yunus told reporters as he was flanked by student leaders: “Bangladesh is a family. We have to unite it. It has immense possibility.”

He said his government’s “foremost promise is to ensure that everyone can enjoy the fresh air of freedom”.

“We must ensure that the benefits of this freedom extend to every citizen. Otherwise, it would be meaningless. Therefore, we commit to bringing freedom to every home,” he said, adding that those who committed wrongdoing during Hasina’s tenure “will be held accountable”.

Bangladesh
A mural of Hasina vandalised by protesters [File: Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]
Analysts said one of Yunus’s main challenges will be to ensure law and order after days of chaos that saw attacks on the houses of Awami League politicians, sporadic attacks on temples and homes of minority Hindus who were considered close to the ousted Hasina, and a general absence of policing, manifested by students this week managing traffic on the busy streets of Dhaka.

This is a modal window. This modal can be closed by pressing the Escape key or activating the close button.
Share: Young Bangladesh citizens direct traffic in Dhaka
Young Bangladesh citizens have been filmed directing traffic in Dhaka due to a reported absence of police and traffic officers.
Embed Code


Close Modal Dialog
Acknowledging the disorder, Asif Nazrul, professor of law at Dhaka University and member of Yunus’s interim government tasked with running the Ministry of Law and Justice, said it is grappling with multiple challenges due to the unprecedented situation in the country.

“Under [Hasina’s] autocratic rule, it was a dark era, and the people’s profound anger against the regime led to this eruption. However, we can no longer support such outbursts as they have exceeded acceptable limits,” he said.

Who else is in the government?
The interim government is a mix of both experience and youth and includes rights activists, professors, lawyers, former government officials and other prominent members of Bangladesh’s civil society.

But it is the surprise inclusion of two 26-year-old student leaders who spearheaded the recent movement against Hasina that is likely to be a talking point in the coming days.

Nahid Islam, a student of sociology at Dhaka University, has been given the telecommunications portfolio while Asif Mahmud, a student of linguistics at the same university, will look after sports.

“If Bangladesh is led by its youth, the country will stay true to its goals,” Islam said on Thursday.

Bangladesh
Islam, right, and Mahmud being sworn in as advisers in the interim government [Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters]
Mahmud said he was ready for the challenges ahead. “The state institutions were devastated under [Hasina’s] fascist regime. Our goal is to eradicate fascism by reforming these institutions,” he said.

Former army officer M Sakhawat Hossain has been given the Ministry of Home Affairs. He used to be close to Hasina’s Awami League but supported the student protests against her government.

The Ministry of Finance has been given to Saleh Uddin Ahmed, who governed the central bank during the 2001-2006 rule of the opposition Bangladeshi Nationalist Party (BNP). Former diplomat and columnist Touhid Hossain will look after foreign affairs.

Other notable figures in the new government are climate change minister Syeda Rizwana Hasan, a winner of the Ramon Magsaysay Award – often referred to as Asia’s Nobel Prize – for her environmental work; rights activist Adilur Rahman Khan, who will handle industries; electoral reforms activist Sharmeen Murshid, charged with the Ministry of Social Welfare; and women’s rights activist and advocate for biodiversity-based ecological agriculture Farida Akhter, who will run the Ministry of Fisheries and Livestock.

Bangladesh
Members of the new cabinet are sworn in [Rajib Dhar/AP]
The other members of the cabinet are former Attorney General Hasan Ariff (local government affairs), Yunus’s longtime associate Nurjahan Begum (health) and Muslim leader and academic Khalid Hossain (religious matters).

The portfolios of the remaining three members – psychiatrist Bidhan Ranjan Roy from the minority Hindu community, former diplomat Supradip Chakma from the Indigenous Chakma community, based in the Chittagong Hill Tracts, and independence fighter Faruk-e-Azam – have not been declared.

Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia Program and senior associate for South Asia at the Woodrow Wilson International Center in the United States, told Al Jazeera that “on paper”, the interim government with its “wide array of leaders from all walks of life looks remarkably diverse”.

“But how everything fits together and whether a consensus is possible is unclear. This is where Yunus’s leadership will be essential,” he said.

Challenges ahead
One of the biggest allegations against Hasina’s long rule was her abuse of the security apparatus, mainly the police and a paramilitary force, which she used against political adversaries and is also accused of using to manipulate elections to help her hang on to power.

Most recently, the police were employed against the antigovernment protesters in clashes that killed dozens of people as police officers fired live ammunition on demonstrators, intensifying the people’s anger against them.

Since Hasina’s fall, an absence of law enforcement officials on the streets have seen people set up nighttime patrols to protect their neighbourhoods and the property of vulnerable minorities, mainly Hindus.

People keep guard in front of a police station which was vandalised on Monday, in Dhaka
People guard a police station in Dhaka [File: Fatima Tuj Johora/AP]
After taking his oath, Yunus told reporters those “instigating anarchy” will face the “full force of law enforcement” and made assurances that “both the triumphant students and the public will work together to ensure their failure”.

Khan, who now runs the Ministry of Industries, said the most complex task before the new administration will be to “dismantle the remnants of Hasina’s autocratic rule”.

“This will involve making new appointments across nearly all positions in various departments and divisions, including law enforcement, the judiciary and different ministries,” he said.

He said the new government will investigate all instances of human rights violations that occurred during Hasina’s tenure. “Upholding human rights will be a primary focus of the interim government,” he said.

Play Video
Video Duration 10 minutes 50 seconds
10:50
Ali Riaz, distinguished professor of politics and government at Illinois State University in the US, told Al Jazeera the interim government “possesses both strengths and weaknesses, as is typical with any group”, and said he hoped more people will be brought into the government as it begins its work and assesses its needs.

He said having younger individuals, especially students, in the cabinet was a positive development. “They should be able to reflect the perspectives of the younger generation and may offer innovative approaches and challenge traditional methods of governance,” he said.

Riaz identified three immediate challenges before the interim government. The first is to establish a clear direction for the future. People have differing expectations, and some may demand immediate elections while others may call for structural reforms, he said.

The second challenge, he said, is the economy. He said the government should implement “measures that benefit the general public” and demonstrate that “this government is distinct from its predecessors”.

And the third challenge, Riaz said, is to reassess Bangladesh’s relationships with regional and global powers. “Over the past 15 years, these relationships, especially with India, had been shaped in ways that may have been detrimental to the country’s national interests,” he said.

Many in Bangladesh fear Hasina’s close ties with New Delhi may force the new administration to take an anti-India stance, which analysts said could be detrimental to improving the economy.

Will elections be held?
Journalist and commentator Shayan S Khan told Al Jazeera the primary mandate of the interim government will “clearly be to conduct free and fair elections”. He said conducting polls should be a relatively straightforward task for a nonpartisan interim government with no vested interests.

“However, the circumstances of the Awami League’s departure might require additional time for it to regroup and prepare for the election, which could pose a challenge for the interim government. Without the Awami League, the election could lack a certain level of credibility,” he added.

Kugelman, on the other hand, anticipated a long haul for the interim government and even the emergence of a new party, “perhaps led by Yunus and the protest leaders”.

The main opposition BNP wants immediate elections, which Kugelman said could be a spoiler in the coming days. “The key question is how the BNP, by virtue of its size and clout as the biggest beneficiary of Hasina’s ouster, adjusts to a new reality that won’t necessarily defer to the BNP’s power,” he said.

BNP politician Amir Khashru Mahmud Chowdhury said that while the interim government faces the “tough task of building the country from the ruins of the Awami League’s massive corruption, systematic destruction of the judiciary and bureaucracy”, it should also think about elections.

“I think the people would definitely prefer to exercise their democratic rights of voting, which in the Awami era was not possible,” Chowdhury told Al Jazeera. “So I would urge the government to give people the scope of exercising their democratic rights.”

Play Video
Video Duration 2 minutes 10 seconds
2:10
But there is also a lack of clarity among experts over whether an interim government must hold elections within 90 days of taking charge.

Supreme Court lawyer Shahdeen Malik told Al Jazeera an “extraordinary government” has been formed in Bangladesh under “extraordinary circumstances”.

“It is called an interim government, or some even call it a caretaker government with Dr Yunus as its chief adviser, but the fact is there is no provision in our constitution for the formation of such a government after the 15th Amendment [to the constitution], which removed the provision for such a government,” he said.

In June 2011, during her first of four consecutive terms, Hasina’s government introduced the 15th Amendment to prevent any “unelected government” from assuming power. The move followed a Supreme Court ruling that had declared a caretaker government formed by the military from 2006 to 2008 was illegal because it remained in office for more than two years without calling elections within the mandated 90 days.

Malik said that since there is no longer a constitutional provision, the interim government under Yunus is not obliged to hold elections within 90 days. He added, however, that the functioning of the new government could be legalised by making another amendment to the constitution.

“General Ziaur Rahman did that through the Fifth Amendment, and General Hussain Mohammad Ershad did that through the Seventh Amendment. So this government will likely do the same,” Malik concluded.

Badiul Alam Majumder of Citizens for Good Governance, a civil society group campaigning for political reforms, told Al Jazeera the Awami League’s unilateral passage of the 15th Amendment in a “majoritarian fashion effectively weaponised” the constitution and undermined the political establishment.

He demanded the abolition of the caretaker government system, which he said had led to three “failed” elections in the country, in 2014, 2018 and 2024. He also called for amendments instead to include provisions that ensure free and fair elections in a “deeply divided and fractured country”.

Source: Al Jazeera

05/05/2024

Dear JU student friends,

I need some tapes of students gathered in a residence hall room singing traditional Bangla folk songs. The video quality does not have to be great, just fair, but the singing has to be wonderful, and if there are a few accomplished musicians with instruments accompanying the singers, even better. I want to add a few such tapes to a website I am creating on "Preserving Living Traditions" I the names of the participants and the videographs can be shared for credit, this would be wonderful. This is for a self financed education website so I can't offer any compensation other than that you have contributed to preserving your culture. Thank You

The final day Museum Studies hands-on art project for families searching for crowns in the art of a museum while I was t...
15/03/2024

The final day Museum Studies hands-on art project for families searching for crowns in the art of a museum while I was teaching in the Archeology Department at Jahangirnagar University in Bangladesh.

Wishing my Tamang and Tibetan friends a very beautiful Losar New Year's celebration and my friends in China and the othe...
10/02/2024

Wishing my Tamang and Tibetan friends a very beautiful Losar New Year's celebration and my friends in China and the other counties in South East Asia who follow the Chinese calendar a very Happy New Year.

20/01/2024
15/01/2024

"In other words, as al-Tamimi points out, Israel is now “killing the environment.” And in many ways, it all started with the destruction of Palestine’s lush olive groves."

Illegal Jewish settlers in Palestine have been destroying the Olive groves of the Palestinian farmers near their settlements for years now as the settlements have expanded into every corner of Palestine. Many of the olive groves were centuries old and a primary source of income for the villages.
'In other words, as al-Tamimi points out, Israel is now “killing the environment.” And in many ways, it all started with the destruction of Palestine’s lush olive groves.

Olives No More
During an average year, Gaza once produced more than 5,000 tons of olive oil from more than 40,000 trees. The fall harvest in October and November was long a celebratory season for thousands of Palestinians. Families and friends sang, shared meals, and gathered in the groves to celebrate under ancient trees, which symbolized “peace, hope, and sustenance.” It was an important tradition, a deep connection both to the land and to a vital economic resource. Last year, olive crops accounted for more than 10 percent of the Gazan economy, a total of $30 million."

Olives No More
During an average year, Gaza once produced more than 5,000 tons of olive oil from more than 40,000 trees. The fall harvest in October and November was long a celebratory season for thousands of Palestinians. Families and friends sang, shared meals, and gathered in the groves to celebrate under ancient trees, which symbolized “peace, hope, and sustenance.” It was an important tradition, a deep connection both to the land and to a vital economic resource. Last year, olive crops accounted for more than 10 percent of the Gazan economy, a total of $30 million.

Address

Department Of Archaeology
Dhaka
1342

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when The Centre for Heritage Education Bangladesh posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to The Centre for Heritage Education Bangladesh:

Share