Dr Abdul Alim Chaudhury lived a life shaped by medicine, intellect, and uncompromising patriotism. Born in Kishoreganj in 1928 into a zamindar family, he chose not to inherit privilege but to question it—envisioning a society where dignity and justice were shared by all. After earning his MBBS from Dhaka Medical College and completing further medical training at the Royal College in England, he could have pursued a secure and prosperous career abroad. Instead, he returned home, determined to serve his own people.
From his student days, Dr Alim was politically conscious and unafraid of authority. He marched during the Language Movement of 1952 and was imprisoned in 1954, experiences that only deepened his resistance to Pakistani repression. His activism extended beyond the streets and into the world of ideas. His pen, as incisive as his scalpel, found expression in journals such as Jatrik and Khapchhara, and later in his efforts to establish a branch of the Bangla Academy in London.
When the Liberation War erupted in 1971, Dr Alim transformed his medical chamber into a place of refuge. He treated wounded freedom fighters, sheltered those in hiding, and supplied medicine and financial support to resistance networks operating in secrecy. Friends warned him repeatedly of the danger he faced, urging him to leave. He refused. "If everyone leaves, who will work from within?" he asked.
On December 15, 1971, Al-Badr men abducted him from his home. Days later, his body was discovered in the Rayerbazar mass grave. He was killed in the final hours before victory—one of the brightest medical minds and bravest consciences extinguished just as freedom arrived.
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